28 Wis. 685 | Wis. | 1871
Action to recover the possession of a certain lot in the village of Belmont. The plaintiff claims title under a conveyance purporting to have been executed by Daniel Webster and wife to Cope and Taylor, the grantors of the plaintiff through certain mesne conveyances. The right of the plaintiff to recover depends upon this deed to Cope and Taylor. On the trial, the plaintiff offered in evidence the record thereof ; but the circuit judge directed the juiy to disregard it, for the reason that the record fails to show that the deed was properly acknowledged and certified so as to entitle it to be recorded, and hence that the record could not be received as evidence of the existence of the deed. A verdict for the defend
Tbe deed in question purports to have been acknowledged by Webster and wife on tbe 30tb day of August, 1842, in tbe district of Columbia, before tbe Hon. Wm. Crancb, tben tbe' chief judge of tbe circuit court for that district. Tbe certificate of acknowledgment is as follows:
“Distriot of Columbia. — County of Washington.
“ Be it known that on tbe 30tb day of August, in tbe year of our Lord 1842, before tbe subscriber, Chief Judge of the-cbcuit court of tbe District of Columbia, which court is a circuit court of tbe United States, and a court of record and of law of said district, personally appeared Daniel Webster, tbe party grantor of tbe within instrument, and acknowledged tbe same to be bis act and deed; and at tbe same time personally appeared Caroline Le Roy Webster, tbe wife of tbe said Daniel Webster, and acknowledged tbe said instrument to be also her act and deed.”
Tbe balance of tbe certificate relates to tbe separate examination of Mrs. Webster, which it is unnecessary to set out more fully. Tbe certificate is signed by Judge Crancb, and properly authenticated.
Under tbe statutes of tbe tben territory of Wisconsin, tben in force, tbis deed was entitled to record, provided tbe same was executed, acknowledged and certified in accordance with tbe laws tben in force in tbe District of Columbia, and not otherwise. R. S. of 1839, p. 180, sec. 14.
Tbe law tben in force in that district required tbe officer or officers taking the acknowledgment of a conveyance of land, to certify in tbe certificate of acknowledgment, “ that tbe grantor or grantors was or were known to bim or them, or, that bis, her or their identity bad been satisfactorily proved.” 4 U. S. Stats, at Large, 520, cb. 112, seá 1.
It must be conceded, in respect to tbe form of these certifi
The question is, therefore, whether the certificate of Judge 'Cranch is a substantial compliance with the law under which it was made. It certainly is not a literal compliance therewith, for it does not state expressly that Mr. and Mrs. Webster were known to him, or, not being known to him, that their identity was satisfactorily proved. And we think that it is not a substantial compliance with the requirements of the law in those respects. True, the certificate describes Mr. Webster as the party grantor named in the deed, and Mrs. Webster as his wife. But this is not sufficient. The law required that the certificate should show whether Judge Cranch knew them personally, or whether their identity was proved to him by satisfactory evidence. The identity of a person who acknowledges the execution of a conveyance of land, is matter of substance; and when the law requires, as it did in this case, that the means by which such identity is known to the officer before whom the conveyance is acknwledged, shall be stated in his certificate, the omission to do so must necessarily destroy the validity of the acknowledgment. We have examined'all of the authorities cited by counsel for plaintiff upon this point, and many others; but we are unable to find any rule of construction established by them sufficiently broad and liberal to justify us in holding that the certificate of Judge Cranch is a substantial compliance with the law under which it purports to have been made.
We must hold, therefore, that the deed from Webster and wife, to Cope and Taylor was entitled to be recorded in the then territory of Wisconsin.
The record thereof, not being in aceordanee with the laws of the territory then in force, is a mere unofficial copy, and cannot be received as primary evidence to prove the existence of the original conveyance. 2 Phillips on Ev., 583 (4th ed., notes), and cases cited.
Tbe evidence failing to show that tbe plaintiff bad any title to tbe lot, to recover which tbe action was brought, and there being no error in tbe ruling of tbe circuit court rejecting tbe record of tbe alleged conveyance to Cope and Taylor, tbe judgment of tbe circuit court must be affirmed.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.