129 S.W. 595 | Tex. | 1910
This is an action by Mrs. Veeder, joined by her husband, to recover two lots in the town of Orange. Judgment was given for defendant on his defense of three years limitation, and affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. The judgments of both courts below were in accord with an opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals given *461
in a former appeal (Veeder v. Gilmer,
"That the privy examination, acknowledgment and declaration before the officer as required by the statute is the essence and foundation of the obligation of a married woman's deed is certainly true. Cross v. Evarts,
And on page 363 occurs a passage too lengthy to copy, which really states the substance of the entire decision. These passages show that Judge Stayton throughout the opinion treated the statute as supplying a new way of obtaining evidence of the fact which before could be shown only by the certificate of the officer and he nowhere asserted a proposition that would have been in the face of some of the decisions cited by him, viz.: that the facts constituting the privy examination and acknowledgment could be shown by parol, so as to make a deed, the proper acknowledgment of which was not shown either by the certificate as written by the officer or by a judgment correcting that certificate, operative to transfer the title of a married woman. To the contrary, on page 365, he says expressly that the statute must be complied with to pass such title. In sustaining the power of the Legislature thus to provide a means of evidencing the validity of deeds which otherwise would have been invalid, with his usual care and at great length, he states the things which the law had made it incumbent on the parties to a deed themselves to do as the things essential to a conveyance of the property of the feme covert, and points out that the statute under discussion dispenses with none of them, that it does not make a contract *463 of any kind where there was none before, but simply gives effect to what the parties themselves had done by providing an additional kind of evidence of their action to that formerly required. Some of his expressions in developing this thought seem to have given rise to the erroneous impression that we are discussing. Speaking of the fact of examination and acknowledgment he says on pages 363-4: "When this was in good faith willingly done with the full knowledge of the import and meaning of the instrument, acquired in the manner prescribed, insofar as it was possible for her to do, the power was fully exercised and the act of transfer accomplished. What remained to be done in no manner affected her free and voluntary consummation of the contract, but consisted, the officer up to that time having discharged his duty, solely of the then formal act which the officer was required to perform in the making of the certificate required by the statute, the sole purpose of which was to evidence her assent, uninfluenced by her husband or any other person after having been fully informed by the officer of the character and effect of the instrument.
"No act or free exercise of will by the married woman, necessary to be performed or exercised by her in order to pass her title, required by the law in force at the time the deed was made, is dispensed with by the law under consideration."
This seems to explain itself. It certainly does not mean that the law had not required the certificate as the only evidence of the facts constituting the acknowledgment before the statute was passed, nor that the statute allowed parol evidence for any other purpose than to correct the certificate. It means simply that that which the law had previously required as the only evidence of the prescribed facts was a thing the Legislature could have dispensed with and the place of which the Legislature could therefore permit to be supplied by other evidence, since it did not consist of anything the parties to the conveyance must have done. Everything said in the opinion must likewise be interpreted in its bearing upon the question in mind as to the power of the Legislature to pass the statute. If any statement made in such an argument is found to be too broad it, of course, has no binding force as authority. The statement several times made that the acknowledged but uncertified deed is not void means no more than that it forms a just basis for legislative action to give what the parties had done the legal effect they intended it should have, and that a law for that purpose did not create rights where none previously existed, but only permitted the establishing by legal evidence of that to which the parties have fully assented, by other evidence than that before required. One has only to read some of the many discussions of questions as to the legislative power to cure such defects in deeds and the like, to understand the significance of Judge Stayton's language. Differently interpreted his opinion would state contradictory propositions.
In Hayden v. Moffett,
Another of the cases on which the contention under examination is based is that of Williams v. Ellingsworth,
All that is decided in Norton v. Davis,
If it was meant to hold in Taylor v. Johnson, as some of these subsequent observations seem to assume, that without correction of the certificate in the statutory mode the deed could be sustained by parol proof of the facts which the certificate should state, but omits to state, it is passing strange that Judge Stayton thought it necessary to make so elaborate an argument to prove the power of the Legislature to authorize that to be done which could have been done without the statute.
In Building Loan Association v. Goforth,
We have discussed the question at some length, not because of any doubt as to the true rule, but because counsel and, to some extent the Court of Civil Appeals, have been misled by some things said in opinions of the court which, taken without qualification or explanation, lend some countenance to the position taken. In so doing we have purposely addressed ourselves to the question as to the efficacy of a defectively certified deed of a married woman to pass her title, although the decision we are reviewing held with us on that question, because we think the decision of it controls the other in which we differ with the courts below. If such a deed does not pass the title it purports to pass, it can not be either title or color of title for the purposes of limitation. The question as to the intrinsic fairness and honesty of the document is not reached. It fails in the first requisite, in that it is not a "transfer." Either title or color of title must be a "consecutive chain of transfer," the one regular, the other not. When there is irregularity — color of title — it must not be such as to "extend to or include the want of intrinsic fairness and honesty." But the quality of intrinsic fairness and honesty in an instrument or in the transactions involving it, does not necessarily make it color of title. It must be a "transfer" — something capable of passing from one to another the title it purports to convey. We need no authority for the proposition besides the statute, but the question is expressly decided in Berry v. Donley, supra, and the principle stated is supported by many decisions upon the three years statute. In Berry v. Donley there was, it is true, no certificate at all, but it is impossible to make a distinction, in this connection, between no certificate and a void one. There may be an important difference in corrective proceedings under the statute; but the question here being whether or not the deed as produced was sufficient as a transfer, the answer to it must be the same as in Berry v. Donley, for equally with the instrument in that case, that in this fails to pass any title.
The defendant in error by cross-assignment complains of the holding of the trial court that the cross-action, filed in 1905, to correct the certificate of acknowledgment to the deed in question made in 1871, was barred by limitation, the reason urged to avoid the statute *466
being that plaintiffs have all the time been nonresidents of Texas. That did not prevent the running of the statute, as it is construed, whether such an action could have been brought and jurisdiction over defendants therein obtained in the State or not. Wilson v. Daggett,
The trial judge, although rendering judgment for the defendant, made findings of the facts involved in the claim for improvements in good faith. He held, however, in his conclusions of law that the defendant, if losing the land, would not be entitled to compensation for improvements for two reasons: (1) he knew when he made them he had no title, and (2), in his plea he alleged the improvements to consist of two houses of the value of $6000, while the evidence showed four houses of that value. The first reason seems to be based wholly on the defects in the acknowledgment to the deed and the opinion that it charged defendant with knowledge of want of title as matter of law and made him a possessor in bad faith. The decisions hold otherwise. Hill v. Spear,
The holding of the Court of Civil Appeals on the former appeal that the deed from Veeder and wife to David Gilmer was color of title, necessarily led to judgment for defendant for the land under the undisputed facts. This probably induced the parties as well as the trial court to give less attention to the question of improvements than it might otherwise have received. We think it proper, therefore, after reversing the judgment, to remand the cause for further trial of that issue alone. The judgments are reversed and the cause remanded to permit the defendant to amend his pleadings as to improvements if he desires, and with instructions to try that issue and to render judgment for the plaintiffs for the title to the land, with such further orders as may become proper under the statute as the result of the findings on the issue of improvements.
Reversed and remanded with instructions.