15 Iowa 238 | Iowa | 1863
The property covered by the trust deed was owned by and held in the name of the wife. At the time of the execution of said deed, and subsequently, said property constituted the homestead of the grantors. In the acknowledgment the certifying officer fails to state that the wife “ was personally known ” to him, “ to be the identical person whose name was affixed to the deed as grantor.” Nor does he state anything that either in tenor, form or substance amounts to the same thing. The deed was made in August, 1858, after the taking effect of chapter 33, Laws of 1858. The second section of that act is -retrospectively curative, and does not affect deeds made after that time. This being true, upon the authority of Brinton v. Seevers, 12 Iowa, 389, the deed was defectively acknowledged, and the recording of the same imparted no notice of its contents to subsequent purchasers. 'A certificate of acknowledgment is good, though not in the language of the statute, provided the words used substantially comply with the object and meaning of the law. Cavender v. Heirs of Smith, 5 Iowa, 157. It is sufficient if the words used have the same force and import. Wickersham v. Reeves and Miller, 1 Id., 413. Not so, however, where the certificate is wanting in language which approximately or otherwise meets the requirements of the statute.
There is no pretense that Stone had actual or other than constructive notice of this trust' deed. As we have seen that he had no constructive notice, it follows that he took the property divested of any lien, and that in this respect there was no error in the action of the District Court. And
Affirmed.