Harkins v. Forsyth
Harkins v. Forsyth
Opinion of the Court
Among the errors assigned in this case is the shortness of time allowed by the decree for redemption ; the regular allowance, according to the practice of the court, it is contended, being six months. Although, in the view I have taken of this point, it would be unnecessary to give an opinion as to the general rule, yet as it relates to the every day’s practice of the court, I think it not amiss to say that I know no such inflexible rule in our courts. According to my recollections, both at the time I was at the bar where chancellor Carr presided, and when I afterwards succeeded him, the court adopted and pursued the opinion of chancellor Kent in Perine v. Dunn, 4 Johns. C. R.
A second ground of complaint is, if well founded, of much greater importance. It is said that no sale should have been decreed, unless the profits were inadequate to indemnify the mortgagees.
During the argument, it struck me that the conveyance partook somewhat of the character of a welsh mortgage, or of the vivum vadium. I am satisfied I was mistaken. In the welsh mortgage, the rents and profits go against the interest only, (Coote on Mortg. 9,) which would not be the effect of the clause in this deed. And as to the vivum vadium, that is a conveyance to the mortgagee, to hold until, out of the rents and profits or otherwise, his principal and interest are paid. But here there is an absolute conveyance of the fee, with a defeazance in case of payment; which is precisely of the character of a mortgage. And the clause providing for the entry of the mortgagees after default, is no more than that which is now inserted in many mortgages, except that the words “for their indemnity” have been unnecessarily added in this. See 3 Powell on Mortg. 1120 a., 1116 a. for the form. The *effect of this clause, then, is not to limit the mortgagees to the perception of the rents and profits for their indemnity, but merely to invest them, in terms, with the right to enter and hold the premises until redemption. Hence it follows that the right of the mortgagees to foreclose cannot be impaired by it, nor can there be any error in decreeing the foreclosure, whether the profits were or ' were not adequate, in a succession of years, tot indemnify the mortgagees.
The other error assigned is, if well founded, vital to the plaintiffs’ demand. It presents a question of great importance, and of the first impression here. It is contended that the mortgage was void as to the feme, for want of that explanation of its nature which the act of assembly requires. The certificate of the privy examination, it is admitted, is in due form ; but it is alleged that that certificate is false in the point referred to ; and the depositions of the justices have been taken to prove its falsity. Let us then consider the character of the act, and the meaning and intent of the statute which prescribes it, in order to discover whether it is susceptible of contradiction by any proof whatever.
By the common law, a married woman could not, by joining her husband in a deed, bar herself, or those claiming under her, of her own estate. In process of time, however, fines were adapted to this end, and by them the rights of a wife might successfully be passed. 5 Cruise’s Dig. J15, 116. But to prevent imposition upon her, it was at length provided by a statute, that where a feme covert was one of the parties to a fine, she should be privily examined, and if she refused her assent, the fine should not be levied. Ibid. This proceeding is the prototype of our privy examination. But though the privy examination was positively enjoined by statute, yet if a feme was allowed to acknowledge a fine without examination, it nevertheless bound her,'and could not be reversed; for she could not *contradict the record, which set forth her examination. Ibid.
According to the british system of jurisprudence, then, we see that certain safeguards were thrown around the feme for her protection; but we also see that if those safeguards failed, she was left without a remedy; except in cases of fraud in the conusee, whom equity would in such a case consider a trustee for her.
In Virginia, as a substitute for the fine, a deed, accompanied by a privy examination of the feme, has been adopted. This privy examination, it is provided, may be taken either before a court of record, or before two justices of the peace. In both cases the same identical requisitions exist. In both it is required that the deed be shewn and explained to her, and that she shall acknowledge it as her act and deed, and declare that she had freely and willingly signed, sealed and delivered it. Where this examination has been made in court, it must be conceded that it is altogether conclusive, and that no allegation can be admitted to contradict the entry upon the record, however much that may be ait variance with the real fact. Though the judge or justice who examined her may have disregarded every requisition of the statute, yet when the term is once ended, the truth of the record never can be questioned, but the examination must be taken to have been in truth what by the record it appears to have been. Thus then it would seem, that like our ancestors, we have, in this provision, been content to throw around the feme covert a certain safeguard, which nevertheless may fail to fulfil the just and benevolent intention of the lawgiver. We have not indulged the vain expectation that we have provided against every possible mischief, since we know that perfection is not attainable in human legislation. But we rest upon the assurance that with these guards the rights of married women are substantially secured, and that there is much less danger of their suffering by *the ignorance or corruption of the courts, than there would be of shaking all confidence in the titles of the country, if femes covert were permitted, at the remotest period, to call in question what has been solemnly recorded in a court of justice.
The second mode of privy examination
We have already seen that the object of the law was to provide a substitute for the proceeding- by fine, whereby the rights of the feme on the one hand might be fenced around, and a sure, indefeasible and unquestionable transfer of her right secured on the othep. While the legislature were protecting the wife, can it be believed that they had no regard to the importance of giving confidence to the title ? Can they have been insensible to the ruinous consequences to the prosperity of any commonwealth, of doubt and uncertainty as to land titles ? Could they have conceived of any measure more calculated to create these doubts, than the liberty, at any remote period, of alleging and proving that the magistrates’ certificate is false ? When they have entrusted the performance of this duty tq a magistracy in whom is even the power of life and death ; when they have prescribed the mode of fulfilling it, with a minuteness that one might think would have defied mistake ; when they have commanded the act, when completed, to be placed upon the public records ; when the act itself is substituted (merely for convenience) for one which, as we have seen, never can be contradicted, — can we believe that it ever was contemplated to permit *this Solemn certificate to be falsified by the testimony of witnesses, and even by that of the very magistrates who, under the sanction of their official oaths, have signed and returned the certificate of privy examination ? I cannot think it. If such be the law, who will ever resort to this mode of privy examination ? Who will not insist upon the examination before the court, however inconvenient to the parties, or onerous to the courts of justices ? Who will sit down content with a title in all respects complete upon its face, when, upon the death of his vendor, his widow and her magistrates may undo what they have solemnly done by their act, and without the possibility of contradiction, since they alone are permitted to be privies to it ? With these startling considerations presenting themselves in opposition to the doctrine, now for the first time, I believe, advanced in our courts, it ceases to be a wonder that, for upwards of a century, no one has ever been found sufficiently adventurous to insist upon such a construction of our statutes.
But if the door be once opened to contradictions of the magistrates’ certificates, where is the point at which we shall stop ? The writing must be explained ; and if the certificate that it was explained can be contradicted, what shall ' prevent enquiry whether it was truly explained ? for if not truly explained, the condition of the feme is surely not better than if the deed were not explained at all. And if, in the complicated provisions of a settlement, the justices become entangled, what shall prevent the proof by the feme, that she has in truth executed a deed altogether different in effect from the explanations which were given to her of that which she had signed ? And if these enquiries are to be permitted, and that too when the feme has lain by during the lifetime of her husband, and rakes up these objections at a remote day, of what value will your privy examinations be? Who will take a title depending *upon, or which can be traced through them ? No one. To me indeed it seems that the demon of mischief could not suggest a notion better calculated to throw all things, in relation to titles, into their original chaos, than the establishment of the principle here contended for.
With these preliminary views of the spirit and meaning of the statute, let us look to its terms. The first part of the clause provides that if the wife, being examined, shall acknowledge the deed, and such examination and acknowledgment be certified, and such certificate be offered for record, it shall be recorded. Here the clause loses the hypothetical if, and proceeds — “ And when the privy examination, acknowledgment and declaration of a married woman shall have been so taken in court, and entered of record, or certified by two magistrates and delivered to the clerk to be recorded, and the deed also shall have been duly acknowledged or proven as to the husband, and delivered to the clerk to • be recorded, pursuant to the directions of this act, such deed shall be as effectual in law to pass all the right, title and interest of the wife, as if she had been an unmarried woman.” Here then it is expressly provided, that when the examination shall have been certified and delivered to the clerk, &c. the deed shall be as effectual as if the maker were sole. The deed then is made to depend, not upon the truth of the certificate, but upon its existence, and its delivery to the clerk ; and if so, the en-quiry whether it be true or false is an immaterial enquiry.
It remains but to qualify the foregoing remarks by observing, that notwithstanding the conclusiveness of the certificate at law, the feme may be relieved in equity, where it has been obtained by the fraud of the party claiming under the deed. Such was the law as to fines, and such must doubtless be the law in reference to this *substitute for the fine. Nothing of. that kind is pretended here ; so that the deed, I think, stands unimpeached.
It may not be amiss, before concluding this opinion, to examine what are the common law principles applicable to the case. And here two enquiries present themselves ; first, as to the authenticity attributed by the law to the act itself ; and secondly, as to the competency of an officer of the law to unravel a solemn act done by himself in pursuance of its directions. After a very diligent search, I have been unable to find a case in point, and am therefore compelled to resort to general principles and analogies. Now, in relation to the act itself, it has been'long the received doctrine, that where the law appoints any person for any specific purpose, it must trust him as far as he acts under its authority. Buller’s N. P. 229. And it would seem that “ where a written instrument is
Nor is it a new principle in the law, to deem the certificates or returns of a public officer, in the execution of his duty, conclusive of the facts which they contain. Thus the official return of an execution by a sheriff is usually conclusive between the litigating parties, though not as between them and himself; for he is liable for his false return ; as in this case the certifying justices may be liable for theirs. So I presume that when the clerk of a court has certified in his deed book, or upon *a deed, that it was duly acknowledged by the parties thereto, the certificate is conclusive of the acknowledgment, and cannot be contradicted. By the same reason the certificate of the justices, who are equally trusted by the law, must be held unassailable by the testimony of witnesses.
Still less consistent with reason or principle would it be, to permit the officer himself to unravel what he has solemnly done. Can the clerk be permitted to undo a deed acknowledged before him, after the purchaser has paid his money or fulfilled the consideration, by swearing that his certificate was false ? And if the clerk cannot do so, upon what principle can the justice? Upon what principle, in short, could the law permit a contract, closed and consummated by the act of the justice or the. clerk, to be opened up and avoided by their testifying to their own official perfidy ? I can see none ; nor do I perceive that we violate the principle of Jordaine v. Lashbrooke, 7 T. R. 601, in rejecting the testimony of the justices in this matter. Though a mere witness may' be admitted to defeat his own attestation, it by no means follows that a public officer should be permitted to defeat a solemn and public act, by contradicting his own certificate of the manner in which he has performed it.
On the whole, I am of opinion to affirm the decree in all things.
The other judges concurring, the decree was affirmed.
Reference
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- Harkins v. Forsyth and Others
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