Coryell v. Holmes
Coryell v. Holmes
Opinion of the Court
Opinion.—To determine the question presented it will be proper to review our statutes upon the subject of registration before and at the time when this instrument was recorded. The first act passed by the Bepublic of Texas, changing the rule in the conveyance of land, is found in the act of December 20, 1836, entitled “An act organizing the inferior courts and .defining the powers and jurisdiction of the same.” The thirty-fifth, thirty-eighth and fortieth sections of said act are as follows:
“ Sec. 35. The clerks of the county courts shall b.e the
“Sec. 38. All titles, liens, mortgages or other color of title, before they can be admitted upon record, must be proven by at least two subscribing witnesses, if living in the county, and if not so living in the county, then the handwriting shall be proven, either before some county judge or before the clerk of the county court in whose office such record is proposed to be made; and in all cases the certificate of any county judge, that the said witness appeared before him and acknowledged his signature, or that the handwriting of the same was duly proven, shall be sufficient evidence to authorize the clerk of the county court to enter, such title, lien, mortgage or other color of title upon record; and the said clerk for recording the same shall be entitled to charge and receive the sum of twenty cents for every hundred words.”
“ Sec. 40. Ho deed, conveyance, lien or other instrument of writing shall take effect as regards the interest and rights of third parties until the same shall have been duly proven and presented to the court, as required by this act, for the recording of land titles.”
The next statute we have upon the subject is that of January 19, 1839, which provides: “That it shall be the duty of the clerks of the county courts to record all deeds, conveyances, mortgages and other liens affecting the titles to land and immovable property situated within the same, which shall be presented to them for record; provided one of the subscribing witnesses shall swear to the signature of
On the 16th of March, 1840, the act adopting the common law of England went into effect, and on the same day, also, went into effect the act concerning conveyances, “ That no estate of inheritance or freehold, or for a term of more than five years, in lands and tenements, shall be conveyed from one to another, unless the conveyance be declared by writing sealed and delivered. And any instrument to which the person making the same shall affix a scroll, by way of seal, shall be adjudged and holden to be of the same force and obligation as if it were actually sealed; provided, the person making the same shall, in the body of the instrument, recognize such scroll as having been affixed by way of seal; nor shall such conveyance be good against a purchaser for valuable consideration not having notice thereof; nor any creditor, unless the same writing be acknowledged by the party or pártíes who shall have sealed and delivered it, or proved by two witnesses to be his, her or their act before the county court of the county in which the land conveyed, or some part thereof, lieth; or in the manner hereinafter directed, and be lodged with the clerk of the county court to be recorded.”
By the third section of this act it is provided: “ That in no case shall livery of seizin or the placing the purchaser in possession be necessary to pass any freehold estate in lands.” By the fourth section it is provided that all bargains, sales and other conveyances whatever of any lands, etc., shall be void as to creditors and subsequent purchasers for value without notice, unless acknowledged or proved
And the twenty-first section of the act provides: That every grant, deed or instrument, mentioned in the twentieth section of this act, hereafter to be made and recorded, shall be duly registered in the office of the proper county, upon the acknowledgment of the parties or party signing the same, before the register, or clerk of the county court of
These are all the provisions of our laws which were in force previous to and at the date of the execution of the deed from Officers to Bump and which affect the questions involved in this case.
From an examination of these provisions of the statutes we think these conclusions fairly deducible:
1. That at that date any instrument in writing purporting to convey lands, sealed and delivered, or using a scroll for a seal and recognizing it to be used as such in the body of the instrument, was a valid conveyance of lands, good against the grantor and his heirs, and against purchasers for valuable consideration who have notice thereof, whether registered or not.
2. That no witnesses were necessary to give validity to the same as a conveyance at common law7, and under the statutes of uses the common forms of conveyance were' feoffment, gift, grant, lease and release and bargain and sale.
"Witnesses were not necessary to any of these forms of conveyance. Rodgers v. Worthington, 11 Minn. 438; 1 Serg. & Rawle, 72; 1 Haywood, 205; 3 Washburn, 247, 358, 275; 2 Blackstone’s Com. 307; Comyn’s Dig., Fact, B. 4; Thatcher v. Finney, 7 Allen, 149; Fitzhugh v. Cochrane, 2 Wend. 429; Greenleaf’s Cruise on Real Property.
A feoffment conveyed the largest estate in lands; there were no subscribing witnesses to the deed, but it was accompanied with livery of seizin, and by the third section of our statute livery of seizin was abolished. By the first section of the same statute a deed signed, sealed and delivered is clearly recognized ats a good conveyance without witnesses, valid against the grantor and his heirs and
It is true that by the same act “ a form or purport of a release55 is given which, if executed with two subscribing witnesses, should be a good conveyance in fee, but it is expressly provided, as we have seen, “that any other form, not contravening the laws of the land shall not be invalidated.” This provision is not imperative or exclusive in its terms. It must be read in connection with the system of laws adopted at the same instant which effected so radical a change in the jurisprudence of the country which recognized other modes of conveying lands, and it was doubtless designed simply to furnish, in the new state of things, a form of conveyance for ready reference and use which would certainly, in cases, be effective. While the first and other sections of the act were copied from the Virginia code, this section of our “act concerning convejmnces” ivas taken almost verbatim from the South Carolina act of 1796; with this significant change, that while the South Carolina act concludes: “This act shall not be so construed” as “to invalidate the forms heretofore in use in this state,” our statute uses the words quoted: “Any other form not contravening the laws of the land shall not be invalidated.”
In Craig v. Penson, 1 Cheves, 280, it was held b)r the court, O’Neal, J., dissenting, that a deed with only one subscribing witness was not a valid deed to convey land; but it will be seen that the decision “ turned upon the usage of the country.” The opinion says: “ It would seem that according to the laws of England subscribing witnesses are not essentially necessary to the validity of a deed;” but it continues: “I have examined many forms of deeds presented by conveyances, and all of them, without exception,
It is to be noted that the South Carolina statute, so far as we have been able to find, contains no such provision as the first section of an “act concerning conveyances;” and without this wre cannot perceive that the decision of that courtis applicable here as of controlling wreight; and wTe think it will be found that in those states in which subscribing witnesses are held to be essential, it is because of some statute which, like our Revised Statutes, now prescribes it to be necessary.
But if wre admit that Officer’s deed to Rump is not in all respects a regular conveyance, it is certainly a contract respecting lands evidencing the equitable title to the same in Rump. It could be recorded and so have all the incidents and effects as notice of the most regular deed. Sec. 7. It was such an instrument as equity wrould decree a specific performance of. Under the statute of limitations it would constitute color of title and would avail as a link in a regular transfer under the sovereignty of the soil.
As said by Chief Justice Wheeler in Martin v. Parker
If we are correct in these conclusions it would seem to follow that we must look upon the several provisions of our statutes respecting subscribing witnesses to deeds, not as affecting the "validity of the instrument, but simply as regulations prescribing the mode to be observed in their registration so as to charge third parties with notice. For this purpose at one time it was necessary to the valid registration of a conveyance of lands that it should be proved by two witnesses before the county court. At another it was required that it should be proved by one of the subscribing witnesses. And at the time of the execution of the deed from Officers to Rump it was sufficient that it be acknowledged by the grantor before some officer authorized by law to take acknowledgments, in which case there need be no subscribing witnesses, or proved by a subscribing witness before such officer and certified by him. The exact words of the act are, “ proved by a subscribing witness.” Officers’ conveyance was attested and proved by a subscribing witness, and we think, coming within the exact terms of the law, it was sufficiently proven to be entitled to registration.
But it is insisted by appellees that from the use of "the words “subscribing witness, and one of the subscribing witnesses,” in the same act in connection with the registration, xve must infer that there must be txvo witnesses. It may be said that this is the most natural construction of the language, and we may even concede that this was probably the common understanding, but we do not think we are driven of necessity to such an interpretation. The custom had, perhaps, been to secure the attestation of txvo witnesses; the form given in the statute seems to render it proper, if not indispensable, and the plural, in speaking of witnesses to deeds, xvould naturally enough have been
But, however this may be, we entertain no doubt that, proven as it was and recorded (if it was imperfectly proven and recorded), it was validated as a recorded deed, and properly admissible in evidence under the provisions of the act of 9th of February, I860, article 5022. That article reads as follows:
“Art. 5022. All such instruments which shall have been acknowledged or proven before any officer named in the foregoing section of this act, and which shall afterwards be recorded in the proper county, or certified copies thereof, shall be evidence in the courts of this state as full and sufficient as if such acknowdedgment had been taken, or proof made, in accordance with existing laws. This act shall not be so construed as to affect or bind in any manner any person or party with constructive notice of the existence of any deed, or other instrument of writing, as a recorded deed or instrument, except in the future and after, the taking effect of this act, unless such person or party would have been so affected or bound with such notice had this act never been passed.”
We conclude that the Officer deed was a valid convey- ' anee of the lands; that it was properly admitted in evidence as a recorded instrument.
The judgment of the court below was therefore erroneous, and will be reversed and the cause remanded.
26 Tex., 254.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.