Alt v. Stoker
Alt v. Stoker
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of ejectment, for forty acres of land situate in Cape Girardeau county. The land is a portion of a body of swamp land donated by the United States to the state of Missouri and by the state conveyed to said county by patent dated November 4, 1871..
Plaintiff claims title under a deed by John R. Henderson, commissioner of said county, duly appointed and authorized to act by the county court. This deed, when offered in evidence, on objection by defendant, was excluded by the court, on the ground that it was not properly sealed. No objection is made to the sufficiency of the deed in other respects. The attesting clause of the deed is as follows:
“In witness whereof, the said county of Cape Girardeau, party of the first part herein, hath executed these presents by the said John R. Henderson, special agent and commissioner aforesaid under the hand of him, the said commissioner, under the seal of the county court of said county, attested by the clerk of said court, as and for the seal of the said county of Cape Girardeau in this behalf, the erasures on the eleventh and fourteenth pages of said deed being made before signing. Done at the town of Jackson, in said county of Cape Girardeau, the day and year first aforesaid.
“(Signed),
“County oe Cape Girardeau,
CAPE GIRARDEAU COUNTY COURT SEAL, MO. *_*
“By John R. Henderson, Special Agent and Commissioner. “Attest: GabrielC. Pepper, Clerk of the County Court, Cape Girardeau, County, Mo.”
This seal is to the left of, and just below the signature of the commissioner, and consists of a round,
“Be it remembered that on this twenty-ninth.day of March, A. D. 1875, at the county and state aforesaid, before the undersigned, clerk of the circuit court in and for said Cape Girardeau county, personally came John R. Henderson, who is to me, the undersigned, personally known to be the same person whose name is subscribed to the foregoing instrument as special agent and commissioner for said Cape Girardeau county, for and in behalf of said county, and the said John R. Henderson acknowledged the said conveyance to be the act and deed of the said county of Cape Girardeau as such special agent and commissioner thereof and acknowledged the seal of the county court of said county thereunto affixed and attested by the clerk of said court to be the seal of Cape' Girardeau county, by him adopted and affixed, in this behalf for the purposes in said deed mentioned, and that the erasures .in the eleventh and fourteenth pages were made before signing.
* * SEAL OP CIRCUIT COURT CAPE GIRARDEAU COUNTY, MO. *_»
“In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said circuit court, at office in said county of Cape Girardeau, the day and year last above written.
“Nathan C. Harrison,
“Clerk Circuit Court, Cape Girardeau Co., Mo.”
Section 6 of said act of the general assembly of Missouri, dated March 10, 1869, under which said land was patented to the county, provides: “The several
The “general statutes,” in relation to the sale by county courts of “other real estate belonging to their respective counties,” was at that time as follows: “The county court may, by order, appoint a commissioner to sell and dispose of any real estate belonging to their county; and the deed of such commissioner, under his proper hand and seal, for and in behalf of such county, duly acknowledged and recorded, shall be sufficient to convey to the purchaser all the right, title, interest and estate which the county may then have in or to the premises so conveyed.” Gen. Stat. 1865, p. 444, sec. 4; 1. R. S. 1879, sec. 671, p. 110.
As to the sufficiency of sealing instruments the statute provided: “Every instrument of writing expressed on the face thereof to be sealed, and.to which the person executing the same shall affix a scrawl by .way of seal, shall be deemed and adjudged to be sealed.” 1 Wag. Stat., 269, sec. 5.
I. An objection was made to the sufficiency of the sale and deed, on the ground that the commissioner had no power to sell, at private sale, as was done in this instance. The point has been decided otherwise and we do not understand that defendant now insists upon it. Pool v. Brown, 98 Mo. 684.
II. The sole question, then, is whether .the deed was properly signed and sealed by the commissioner, so as to make it effective to pass the title from the county. There was no statutory scrawl, by way of seal, but a
One of the definitions of a seal is “an impression upon wax, wafer or some other tenacious substance capable of being impressed. ’ ’ In later years the courts, to effectuate the intention of due execution, have been liberal in respect to the nature of the substance and the character of the impression necessary to constitute a seal. So it has been held, in this state, that a piece of colored paper, affixed as a seal to an instrument by mucilage, is a good seal, though no impression upon it is discernible. Pease v. Lawson, 33 Mo. 39. “It is the seal which authenticates, and not the substance on which it is impressed; and where the court can recognize its identity, they should not be called upon to analyze the material which exhibits it. ’ ’ Pillow v. Roberts, 13 How. 474.
The statute making a mere scrawl sufficient requires, also, a recital on the face of the instrument that it is sealed. So, instruments without such recital have been held not to be valid deeds, though the statutory scrawl was attached. Cartmill v. Hopkins, 2 Mo. 220; Grimsley v. Administrators, 5 Mo. 280; Walker v. Keile, 8 Mo. 301.
Where there is a real seal the requirement as to recital does not obtain. In such case “the fact, and not the assertion, fixes the nature of the instrument.” Taylor v. Glaser, 2 S. & R. 504; Dingee v. Kearney, 2 Mo. App. 525.
A seal of one of several signers of an instrument may be adopted as the seal of the others, though the only seal used is. that of the statutory scrawl, and when I-the instrument purports on its face to be sealed by-each, an adoption will be presumed. Lunsford v. La Motte Lead Co., 54 Mo. 436.
But it is said that, by the testimonium clause of the deed, the commissioner did not assume to use or adopt the seal of the county court, as and for his own, but, on the contrary, it is expressly declared that the instrument was executed under the hand of the commissioner and “under the seal of the county court,” ■ thus conclusively negativing an intention to adopt that seal. But it will be observed that section 671, Revised Statutes, 1879, requires that a deed by a commissioner shall not only be “under his proper hand and seal” but shall be “duly acknowledged and recorded.” The acknowledgment is made a part of the due execution of the deed, and we think it may fairly be taken in determining the intention of the commissioner in the use of the county seal. The certificate of acknowledgment declares that the commissioner “acknowledged the seal of the county court of said county thereunto affixed and attested by the clerk of said court to be the seal of Cape Girardeau county, by him adopted and affixed, in this behalf for the purposes in said deed mentioned.”
The deed was actually signed, sealed, acknowledged and delivered, and this was a good sealing at common law, though no mention was made of it in the body of the writing. Taylor v. Glaser,2 S. & R.,supra. As the body of the writing shows, without explanation, that the seal of the county court was used, we can properly refer to the acknowledgment, which is a part of the execution, as an aid in determining the purpose
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