This is a bill in equity brought by the three children of one McOuatt to set aside a transfer of real estate made by him to the defendant, his wife and the stepmother of the plaintiffs, on the ground that he wаs of unsound mind and that the transfer was procured by the undue influence of the defendant. The plaintiffs appealed from an interlocutory decree confirming the report of the master after a paragraph therein had been struck out, denying the plaintiffs’ motion for a final decree in their favor, and allowing the defendant’s motion to confirm the master’s report as modified. They also have appealed from a final decree dismissing the bill.
It is not now contended that the master was wrong in finding that the plaintiffs had not sustained the burden of proving that McOuatt was of unsound mind when he executed the deed, and we need not consider that question.
All the subsidiary findings of the master upon the issue of undue influence and upon which he based his ultimаte conclusion are set forth in his report. It is our duty to draw our own inferences from those findings. Soltman v. Smith,
A wife has the right to discuss with her husband the advisability of giving her an interest in his property, and to request and, if necessary, to persuade him to make some provision for her benefit. The findings here go no farther than to show the making of such a request by her and fall far short of proving that the husband was induced by any undue influence of his wife, even if the transfer omitted any рrovision for his children, one of whom he was fond of, and even though it comprised all his property, which appears to be worth only a few thousand dollars. Maynard v. Tyler,
During the hearings before the master, evidence bearing on the issue of undue influence was properly introduced to show the circumstances attending the execution of the deed. This evidence now gives rise to the question whether this deed was duly acknowledged. In addition to the findings already recited on the issue of undue influence and which now must be considered with reference to the acknowledgment of the deed, the master found that, after the deed was
Title to real estate may be transferred by a deed which has not been acknowledgеd or which contains a certificate showing a defective acknowledgment, and the deed is good against the grantor and his heirs and those having actual notice, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 183, § 4, as appearing in St. 1941, c. 85, Dole v. Thurlow,
It follows that ordinarily an acknowledgment is not an
But the usual relationship existing between an acknowledgment and an instrument of conveyance of real estate may be changed by the Legislature. An acknowledgment may be made an essential part of a deed transferring interests in community property, or in a homestead estate, or in transfers between husband and wife, and in other instances; and unless there is a compliance with the provisions of the statute regulating such transfers, the conveyance is void. Joiner v. Firemen’s Ins. Co. 6 Fed. Sup. 103. Hutchinson v. Stone,
General Laws (Ter. Ed.) c. 209, § 3, provides that “conveyances оf real estate other than mortgages, between husband and wife, shall be valid to the same extent as if they were sole, except that no such conveyance of real estate shall have any effect, either in passing title or otherwise, until the deed describing the property to be transferred is duly acknowledged and recorded” in the proper registry of deeds. In the absence of such a statute, one spouse could not make a conveyance of real estate directly to the other. See Thatcher v. Omans,
This brings us to the question whether the findings of the master are sufficient to show that the deed was “duly acknowledged,” as the judge impliedly found it was.
An acknowledgment is the formal statement of the grantor to the offiсial authorized to take the acknowledgment that the execution of the instrument was his free act and deed. No particular words are necessary as long as they amount tо an admission that he has voluntarily and freely executed the instrument. Kelly v. Calhoun,
The relief now sought on the ground that the deed was not acknowledged goes beyond the allegations of the bill and relief cannot bе ■ granted, even though the question appears to have been fully heard before the master, without an amendment to the bill. Donohue v. White,
There was no error in the interlocutory decree as the
So ordered.
