Bratton v. Burris
Bratton v. Burris
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The case contains the following statement of facts: “The above entitled action was commenced in the probate court of York Couuty, on the 24th day of January, 1896, by the personal service of petition on the defendant, for the purpose of having dower assigned to the petitioner in certain lands of the defendant, formerly owned by S. E. Bratton, the husband of the petitioner, in his lifetime, and by him conveyed to George Steele on the 1st day of January, 1859. That petitioner, Mrs. E. A. Brat-ton, intermarried with S. E. Bratton and became his wife on the 7th day of September, 1847, and the said S. E. Brat-ton died intestate on the 12th day of September, 1893; and that during the married relations between said parties, S. E. Bratton was seized and possessed of the tract of land described in the petition, and that the appellant, R. Walker Burris, is the owner of the said tract of land and has been since the death of the said S. E. Bratton. The defendant answered the petition, and the issues came on for trial' before the probate judge of York County. At this hearing it appeared that the petitioner had appeared before one V. E. McElhaney, a notary public in and for the State of South Carolina, and residing in the county of York, where the land was situated, and where the petitioner lived, on the 8th day of January, A. D. 1859,” and signed a renunciation of her dower in the form prescribed by the statute, except there was no seal of the officer before whom it was executed. When the deed is unfolded, the seal of the grantor and the name of V. E. McElhaney, the notary public before whom the renunciation of dower was executed, are in close proximity, but divided by the crease in the paper caused by its being folded. The deed was recorded on the 10th of January, 1859. The decree of the probate court was as follows: “In this case the petitioner applied to have dower set off in
The defendant appealed from said decree to the Circuit Court, and upon hearing the case his Honor, Judge Watts, signed the following order: “The above entitled cause came up before me for a hearing on appeal from’ the probate court
The defendant appealed from said order on the following exceptions: “1st. Because his Honor erred in overruling defendant’s exceptions and sustaining the judgment of the probate court. 2d. Because his Honor erred as a matter of law in holding that petitioner’s renunciation of dower was fatally defective, in that the officer taking the same failed to attach his seal. 3d. Because his Honor erred in not finding as a matter of law that petitioner had renounced dower in appellant’s lands and premises. 4th. Because his Honor erred as matter of law in not finding that the petitioner was estopped from claiming dower in the lands in question. 5th. Because his Honor erred as a matter of law in not finding that the notarial seal, if omitted and if necessary, would be presumed from lapse of time. 6th. Because his Honor erred as a matter of law in not finding that the notary before whom the renunciation of dower was taken, is presumed to have done his duty, and affixed his seal, or adopted the seal of the grantor as his own. 7th. Because his Honor erred in not finding as a matter of law that the omission of the- notarial seal from the form of renunciation, if omitted at all, was the merest technicality, and did not vitiate the renunciation. 8th. Because his Honor erred in not finding as a matter of law that if the notarial seal was omitted, it could be supplied by a court of equity. 9th. Because his Honor erred in not finding as a matter of law that the petitioner having done everything required of her in law in the renunciation of her dower in the lands in question, she was effectually estopped from setting up a claim of dower in the
• At the time the renunciation of dower was executed, the law which provided for the mode of barring a married woman of her estate of inheritance, required, amongst other things, that a certificate, signed by the woman and under the hand and seal of the officer before whom it was released, should then be immediately indorsed upon the said release, or a separate instrument of writing to the same effect, in the form or to the purport of the certificate prescribed when dower was renounced. Revised Statutes (1873), page 430. It thus appears that the requirement as to the seal was the same when a married woman released her estate of inheritance as when she renounced her dower. Since the renunciation herein was executed, a statute was enacted which provides that the absence of the seal shall not render the acts of a notary public invalid if his official title is affixed, but it has no application in this case. Rev. Stat. (1893), 580. At the time the petitioner attempted to renounce her dower, the only rights which she had in such cases were conferred by statute. It is, therefore, a question of power and not of intention. After a careful review of the authorities, especially the case of McCreary v. McCreary, 9 Rich. Eq., 34 (which involved the power of a married woman to release her inheritance in the absence of a seal to the certificate of the officer taking the release), this Court is constrained to decide that the failure of the notary public to affix a seal to his certificate rendered the renunciation fatally defective.
It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- BRATTON v. BURRIS
- Cited By
- 2 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. “Case” — Bindings oe Pact — Appead.—Where the testimony is not set out in a “Case,” all questions of fact will be presumed to have been correctly settled by the Circuit Judge. 2. Doweb. — Estopped.—In 1859, a renunciation of dower by a married woman before a notary public, who did not affix to his signature his official seal or scroll, is not a legal renunciation, and does not estop her from obtaining dower in the lands conveyed by her husband.