6 Neb. 368 | Neb. | 1877
On the twenty-eighth, day of July, 1870, Louise M. Merrill, a married woman, residing with her husband in Lancaster county, and owning a considerable tract of land therein, executed and delivered to her husband a power of attorney authorizing him in her place, name, and stead, to execute and acknowledge for her and in her nam,e, all and every instrument in writing, deed, or mortgage, giving and granting unto Herman W. Merrill, her said attorney, full power and authority to do and perform all and every act and thing whatsoever requisite and- necessary to be done in and about the premises, as fully to all intents and purposes as she might or could do if personally present, etc. There was an incumbrance on the lands owned by her in Lancaster county. In December, 1873, Merrill, under the above power of attorney, exchanged the lands owned by his wife in Lancaster county for lands owned by A. S.
The decree in -the court below was in favor of Mary W. Brown for the amount claimed in the petition and against McMurtry, the court holding that the mortgage given to him, executed by Merrill in his wife’s name, was void. McMurtry brings the case into this court by petition in error.
The character of a power under which an agent may execute a deed for another depends upon the presence or absence of the principal. If it is signed in his presence, by his direction, an oral request to do the act is all that is required. But when the deed is to be made in his absence the authority must be given by an instrument under the hand of the principal and duly acknowledged. The statute of 1871 removed,the disability of the wife, so far as her separate property is concerned, and she is now capable of acting in respect thereto, not only for
But in the view we take of the law, Mrs. Merrill is bound by the acts of her husband in this transaction so far at least as her estate has been benefited, no matter whether her husband was legally authorized to execute the note and mortgage in question or not. The finding of the referee that the execution of said notes, deeds, and trust deed, and the surrendering and cancelling of said notes and chattel mortgage were each and all parts of one and the same transaction and in pursuance of the agreement as an entirety, is conclusive on that point.
It is clearly shown that she has ratified the exchange of lands, that she has ratified the note and mortgage made to Hohmann, and she has ratified the note and mortgage made to Edgerly, and required their assignment to Sessions. The referee finds that $450 of this claim of the plaintiff was used for the benefit of the estate. This sum she is in justice bound to pay. She accepted the release of the chattel mortgage which was effected by the money loaned by the plaintiff, and must have known how the money was obtained.
In Wamsley v. Crook, 3 Neb., 352, this court say: “The receipt of the purchase money with the knowledge that the purchaser is paying it upon an understanding that he is purchasing a good title, touches, the conscience, and binds the rights of the parties as effectually in a void as in .a voidable sale.” The same principle applies in this case. The money to’release the chattel mortgage was obtained by the execution of the note and mortgage in question. She has ratified other portions of the transaction, why not this? She
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Judgment accordingly.