David v. Whitehead

79 P. 19, 13 Wyo. 189, 1904 Wyo. LEXIS 38
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 79 P. 19 (David v. Whitehead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David v. Whitehead, 79 P. 19, 13 Wyo. 189, 1904 Wyo. LEXIS 38 (Wyo. 1904).

Opinions

Corn, Chiee Justice.

Plaintiff in error brought this suit to enjoin the foreclosure of a mortgage and the sale of certain real estate described therein. It appears that defendant in error, Whitehead, prior to September 15, 1898, was the owner of the property, being- the patentee from the government. On that date plaintiff in error purchased the land at a sale for delinquent taxes, and he claims title by virtue of a tax deed issued to him by the County Treasurer. On February 13, 1901, Whitehead gave the mortgage in question to the defendant in error, Elizabeth Wilson, to secure the payment of the sum of three hundred dollars.

By the statute, real property sold for taxes may be redeemed at any time before the expiration of three years from and after the date of the sale. And the statute further provides that immediately after the expiration of three years from the date of the sale of any lands for taxes, which have not been redeemed, the treasurer then in office shall make [200]*200out a deed for the land sold and deliver the same to the purchaser. On the trial, plaintiff offered in evidence his tax deed dated September 14, 1901, and, upon objection to its admission, the court excluded it upon the ground that it was void because prematurely issued. Counsel for plaintiff offered to prove the various steps taken by the taxing officers and the plaintiff preliminary to the execution of the deed, .and, further, to prove that the deed in question was acknowledged and delivered to the plaintiff on September 21, 1901, and that there was no delivery of the instrument up to that time. This evidence was objected to by the defendant as immaterial, incompetent, improper and irrelevant, and the objection was sustained. The defendant then made a tender of the amount shown to be necessary to redeem the land from the sale for taxes and the court gave judgment decreeing plaintiff’s deed to be void and dismissing his suit.

Plaintiff in error relies upon two of his assignments of error; that the court erred, first, in excluding his tax deed, and, second, in refusing to permit him to make the offered proof.

It is apparent that the sale having been made upon September 15, 1898, the three years for redemption would regularly expire upon September 15, 1901. But the latter date came on Sunday and by our statute is excluded in the computation. The last day for redemption was, therefore, September 16, and a deed executed and delivered to plaintiff prior to September 17 was premature, without authority of law and void. Counsel for defendant in error contends, and the court seems to have held, that the date of September 14, written in the deed, is conclusive proof that it was prematurely executed and is, therefore, void. We are unable to concur in this view of counsel, and we are not cited to any authorities which sustain it.

In defining the word “execute,” Anderson’s Law Dictionary says that, referring to a conveyance or other document, it may mean, as in popular speech, to sign, or to sign and deliver; but in strict legal understanding, when said [201]*201of a deed, or bond, always means to sign, seal and deliver. And we are of the opinion that the mere fact that the date written in the deed was prior to the expiration df the time for redemption is not in itself conclusive proof that it was prematurely executed, and that it does not make the deed necessarily void upon its face.

A deed takes effect from the time of its delivery. (9 Ency. Law (2d Ed.), 152; 1 Devlin on Deeds, 264.) And the date is no part of the substance of a deed and not necessary to be inserted. The real date of a deed is the time of its delivery. (Jackson v. Schoonmaker, 2 Johns., 229; McMichael v. Carlyle, 53 Wis., 504.)

In the absence of any proof, or offer to prove, the time of delivery, it might be necessary to resort to such presumptions as might arise from the date inserted in the instrument, the date of the acknowledgment or registration or otherwise. But in this case the plaintiff offered to prove that the deed was acknowledged and delivered to the plaintiff on the 21st of September, and that there was no delivery prior to that time. So that there was no necessity for resorting to presumptions, as it is always competent to show when the instrument was delivered and that the date inserted was not the true date of its delivery. In McMichael v. Carlyle, supra, the court say: “Prof. Washburn, in his work on real property, says: ‘There is usually a date inserted in the deed, as indicating the time when the same was executed and delivered, and the law presumes that the deed was executed on that day; and this is so even if the date do not agree with the date of acknowledgment, for that may have been made after the delivery of the deed. In indentures this is commonly at the beginning of the instrument; but in single deeds or deeds poll it is generally inserted at the close. But though a presumption would arise that the deed was delivered and took effect on the day of the date, if there was nothing offered in evidence to control this, it is always competent to show that the date inserted was not the true date of its delivery. Besides, it is immaterial whether a deed [202]*202has any date or not; nor would it be affected though the date was an impossible one, like the 30th of February. Dates have, however, been in general use since Edward II and Edward III.’ (3 Washb. Real Prop. (4th Ed.), Sec. 19, p. 577.) In his notes the learned author cites a great many authorities, all of which I have examined, and find that they-support the doctrine laid down in the text. These authorities show beyond all question that a date is not essential to a deed; that it is not necessary one should be inserted in order to -make the instrument valid. ‘The real date of a deed is the time of its delivery.’ Kent, C. J., in Jackson v. Schoonmaker, 2 Johns., 234.” (53 Wis., 506.) And the Wisconsin court use the language just quoted in considering the necessity for a date in a tax deed.

In 3 Devlin on Deeds, Sec. 1409, the author, in discussing tax deeds, says: “The real date of the deed is the time at which it is delivered.” And Blackwell on Tax Titles, p. 370, says; “The date of the deed may be proved by parol, and in the absence of evidence, it will be presumed to have been made at the proper time. This is in accordance with the general rule: the date is regarded as non-essential, the deed taking effect from its delivery, and when the date becomes material, in the course of litigation, an omission may be supplied, or the deed contradicted where a wrong date is given, by extrinsic eivdence.” And, so far as we have been able to ascertain, the authorities are entirely uniform on these propositions that the insertion of a date in a deed is non-essential, that the true date is the time of delivery, and that it is always competent to show the time when it was in fact delivered. If, as a matter of fact, therefore, the deed in this case was delivered on September 21, it was not prematurely executed and was not void for that reason, and the court erred in excluding it and in excluding the evidence of the time when it was actualfy delivered.

Counsel for defendant in error dwells upon the principle that the treasurer was not authorised to exercise the power conferred upon him by law to make the deed until after the [203]*203expiration of the time for redemption, and contends that this is the controlling principle in the case.

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David v. Whitehead
79 P. 19 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
79 P. 19, 13 Wyo. 189, 1904 Wyo. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-v-whitehead-wyo-1904.