Baze v. Arper

6 Minn. 220
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 6 Minn. 220 (Baze v. Arper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baze v. Arper, 6 Minn. 220 (Mich. 1861).

Opinion

By the Court

Flandeau, J.- —

“When the Territory of Minnesota was organized, the laws of the Territory of "Wisconsin, which were in force at the date of the admission of the State of Wisconsin, were extended over it by the Organic Act, sec. 12. By these laws the only officers authorized to take the acknowledgment of deeds were Judges and Commissioners of the Supreme Court, Notaries Public and Justices of the Peace. (laws of Wisconsin in force at the organization of Minnesota Territory, published with the laws of the first session of the Legislature of Minnesota Territory of 1849, by James Goodhue, p. 134, sec. 10.) By section 1 of chapter 3, of chapter 20 of the laws of 1849, which took effect on the first day of December, 1849, Courts of Probate were erected and made Courts of Record, but the power to take acknowledgments was not conferred upon them or the Judges thereof. This continued to be the law until September 1st, 1851, when the Revised Statutes went into effect. R. S., p. 578, sec. 1. [229]*229By the Revised Statutes other officers were authorized to take acknowledgments, among whom were designated “ any Judge of a Court of Record.” Id., p. 211, sec. S. But the Revised Statutes at the same moment they conferred their authority upon “Judges of a Court of Record,” repealed the previous act of 1849, which made Probate Courts Courts of Record, and created new Probate Courts, which were not Courts of Record. R. S., p. 57S, sec. 1; Id., p. 71. Neither Probate Courts or Probate Judges therefore had the power to take acknowledgments up to the fist of September, 1851. The deed from Eish to Willoughby & Powers of date of November 9, 1850, which was acknowledged before the Judge of Probate of Ramsey county, on the day of its date, was not entitled to be recorded, nor could it be read in evidence under such acknowledgment.

On the sixth day of March, 1852, the Legislature passed an act which declared the existing Courts of Probate to be Courts of Record, and gave them a seal and a clerk. Laws and Reports of 1853, p. 40; Comp. Stats., 495. Erom this time the Judges of Probate were empowered to take acknowledgments, by virtue of see. 8, p. 211, R. S. p. 398, Comp. Stats. Therefore the deed from "Willoughby & Powers to the Plaintiff of date of May 31, 1852, was properly received in evidence under the acknowledgment of the Probare Judge, so far as his competency to act was concerned. The objection went also to the absence of a seal to his certificate.

It is not necessary that these official certificates of acknowledgment should be under seal unless the statute authorizing them expressly requires it. 2 Cow. & Hill's Notes to Phil. Ev., p. 462. if the certificate styles the officer taking it as an officer authorized by statute to perform the act, it will be prima faeie evidence of his official character. Id., 461-2-3. No seal was required by our act.

But it is contended by the Plaintiff that the defect in the acknowledgment of the deed from Eish to Willoughby & Powers is cured by the statute of 1856 ; p. 406 of the Comp. Slot. The language of this act is as follows: “The acknowledgment, &c., * * * heretofore made and taken before any clerk of either the Supreme or District Courts and Judges of [230]*230Probate of tbis Territory, and the certificate of any such acknowledgment made by any such clerk,” shall, &c. The language is a little obscure ; but the latter part of it refers to the clerks exclusively and does not include the Judge of Pro'bate. In order to determine what was meant, whether the Judge of Probate, or the clerk of the Judge of Probate, we can take into consideration that the Judge had possessed the right previously, and since the sixth of March, 1852, and the clerk had never enjoyed it. It would seem more probable therefore that the curative law was aimed at the acts of officers who had never been authorized, than those who had been entitled to act for several years past. But what relieves the statute - from its apparent uncertainty of expression and makes it clear that the clerks and not the Judges were intended, is the second section, which employs the exact language used in the first in another sense. It is as follows :

The several clerks of the District Courts and Judges of Probate of this Territory are hereby authorized to take acknowledgments of all deeds,” &c. The words as here used, “ Clerks of the District Courts and Judges of Probate,” must certainly refer to the clerks of the Judges, and not the Judges themselves, because wé cannot suppose the Legislature intended to confer a power upon the Judges which they then possessed, and had enjoyed and exercised since 1852, which would be senseless, while we may well conclude that they did intend to bestow it upon the clerks who had not previously been invested with it. The Legislature had undoubtedly discovered that the clerks of these courts had been exercising this power in an unauthorized manner, and designed to save their acts already done, and prevent further mischief by empowering them to act in future.

The counsel for the Respondent says there is no such officer as the clerk of a Judge of Probate. That the office created is clerk of the Probate Court, and not of the Probate Judge. This is technically correct, but the expressions, Probate Court and Judge of Probate, are frequently used as convertible terms by laymen, and the framers of such a statute should not be accused of knowing the difference. It means what we [231]*231have said, or it has nothing to operate upon; we must therefore adopt that construction in preference to a total rejection of that part of it. The deed therefore is not aided by the act.

The nonsuit with the evidence then in the case was properly denied. The certificate oí entry by Eish, under whom the Plaintiff’s grantor held, is declared by our statute to be prima facie evidence that the tide to the lands is in the person named therein or his heirs or assigns. Comp. Stats., 686, sec. 88; Camp vs. Smith, 2 Minn. R., 155.

It does not appear from the case at what point in the testimony of the witness Powers the cross-examination began, but as he was called by the Plaintiff, and the question as to the value of the land at the time of the purchase from Eish was put by the Defendant, we are to suppose that it occurred on cross-examination. The witness had testified in the early part of his examination all about the consideration of the sale from Eish to Willoughby & Powers; the question of fraud in that transaction being directly in issue, the value of the land was clearly material, and also apposite as a cross-examination. We think the Court erred in excluding it.

The next ruling of the Judge it is unnecessary to consider; we do not think however that he erred in excluding the evidence.

It was a material point for the defence to prove that the deed from Willoughby & Powers to the Plaintiff was in consideration of a pre-existing debt, and not for a new and valuable consideration advanced by the grantee at the time oí the purchase. The theory of the defence was that the transaction between Eish and Willoughby & Powers was fraudulent.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Minn. 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baze-v-arper-minn-1861.