9 Pa. 14 | Pa. | 1848
There was not even a plausible objection to the evidence proposed, except the supposed impolicy of allowing the certificate of a wife’s separate examination to be falsified by parol evidence. Such evidence is undoubtedly attended with a greater or less degree of risk in every case; but it is indispensable to the detection of fraud, even in a record against which the law allows of no direct averment. Our statutory provision for a wife’s conveyance by joinder with her husband, and acknowledgment on separate examination, is a substitute for a fine, by which alone the common law allowed her to part with her land; and it is true, as we read it in Sheppard’s Touchstone, p. 9, that “ if there be any woman that hath a husband (and) that doth join with her husband in the conveyance, the judges or commissioners must take
Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.