Dentzel v. Waldie

30 Cal. 138
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 30 Cal. 138 (Dentzel v. Waldie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dentzel v. Waldie, 30 Cal. 138 (Cal. 1866).

Opinion

By the Court, Sanderson, J.:

Three points are made by counsel for appellant:

1. The power of attorney from plaintiff to Grass was null and void at the time it was made, because at that time married women had no legal capacity to make instruments of that character.

2. Being invalid ft was not subsequently made valid by the Act of 1863, authorizing married women to execute powers of attorney, because that Act is unconstitutional so far as it acts, or was designed to act upon past transactions.

3. The power, if not wholly void for the foregoing reasons, is nevertheless fatally defective, because it is not a joint power of the husband and wife and does not therefore authorize the attorney therein named to sign the name of the husband as wrnll as the wife to the deed which he subsequently executed, or in other words does not authorize him to make a joint deed in the name of both husband and wife.

1. That the first point is well taken is demonstrated by a series of cases wh'ere it has been held, either expressly or by necessary implication, that a married woman could not, prior to the Act of the 3d of April, 1863, sell and convey her separate estate by an attorney in fact, but must do it in propria persona. (Selover v. The American Russian Commercial Company, 7 Cal. 266 ; Barrett v. Tewksbury, 9 Cal. 13 ; Morrison v. Wilson, 13 Cal. 494; Mott v. Smith, 16 Cal. 533 ; Macly v. Love, 25 Cal. 367.) In view of the foregoing cases any discussion of the question in this place is deemed unnecessary. It was because such was understood to be the law that the [143]*143Act of the 3d of April, 1863, was passed. But be that as it "may, the question becomes unimportant under the view which we take of the second point made by counsel for the appellant.

Constitutionality of retrospective remedial laivs.

2. The fourth section of the Act of the 3d of April, 1863, (Statutes of 1863, p. 165) reads as follows:

“ Sec. 4. All powers of attorney heretofore made and executed by any married woman, with her husband, and acknowledged and certified in the manner provided in section one of this Act, and all conveyances heretofore and hereafter executed under and by virtue of such powers of attorney, and acknowledged and certified in the manner provided for in section two of this Act, shall be valid and binding; provided, that no right already vested in third persons shall be affected by anything in this section contained.”

Chancellor Kent, in speaking of retrospective statutes, says : “A retrospective statute affecting and changing vested rights, is very generally conceded, in this country, as founded on unconstitutional principles, and consequently inoperative and void. But this doctrine is not understood to apply to remedial statutes, which may be of a restrospective nature, provided they do not impair contracts, or disturb absolute vested rights and only go to confirm rights already existing, and in furtherance of the remedy by curing defects, and adding to the means for enforcing existing obligations. Such statutes have been held valid, when clearly just and reasonable, and conducive to the general welfare, even though they might operate in a degree upon existing rights, as a statute to confirm former marriages defectively celebrated, or a sale of lands defectively made or acknowledged. The legal rights affected in those cases by the statute were deemed to have been vested subject to the equity existing against them, and which the statute recognized and enforced. But the cases cannot be extended beyond the circumstances on which they repose, without put[144]*144ting in jeopardy the energy and safety of the general principle.” (1 Kent’s Com. 455.)

In 1835, the Legislature of Ohio passed an Act to cure defective conveyances previously made by married women. In 1843, in the case of the Lessee of Christian Good v. Elizabeth Zercher, 12 Ohio, 364, the Supreme Court of that State held the Act to be unconstitutional upon the grounds urged in the brief of counsel for the appellant in this case; but in 1847, in the case of Chestnut v. Shane’s Lessees, 16 Ohio, 599, the same Court, composed in part of different Judges, overruled Good v. Zercher and held that the Act in question did not divest vested rights nor impair the obligation of contracts and was therefore free from all constitutional objection.

A similar statute was passed by the Legislature of Pennsylvania in 1826, and was held to be constitutional by the Supreme Court of that State in several cases. (Barnet v. Barnet, 15 Serg. and Rawle, 72; Tate v. Stooltzfoos, 16 Serg. and Rawle, 35; Mercer v. Watson, 1 Watts, 355.) The case last cited was taken by writ of error to the Supreme Court of the United States, where it was held that the Act did not impair the obligation of contracts within the meaning of the Federal Constitution. (8 Peters, 110.)

Statutes which operate to divest vested rights, or in other words, which take the property of one citizen and, without compensation or his consent, bestow it upon another, are opposed to natural right and subversive of any government founded upon fixed laws. But it is a misapplication of terms to say that statutes designed to validate and confirm contracts made in good faith, but not made in the precise mode prescribed by the existing law, operate to divest vested fights; for, as was said by Mr. Justice Duncan in Tate v. Stooltzfoos, supra, “ It is not intended by a vested right that it shall be a right to do wrong; to take advantage of a mere slip in form where the transaction is a bona fide one.”

Smith, in his Commentaries on Statutory and Constitutional Law, at section two hundred and sixty-seven, says : “ The Legislature may constitutionally enact laws to render valid [145]*145and legal the doings of public officers who have exceeded their authority, although by such laws individuals may be deprived of rights previously vested; and the objection that they impair the obligation of contracts does not apply to them. The Legislature may also make provision by statute curing or obviating defective forms of acknowledgments of deeds to pass real estate, and give to such acknowledgments the same efficiency as if they had originally been taken in the proper form ; and such Acts, although they extend retrospectively to deeds acknowledged previous to their passage, do not impair the obligation of a contract, and that for the reason that they do not touch any title acquired under the deed. They assume the title to be good, and prevent the contract from being impaired by reason of a defective acknowledgment; or, in other words, their legal operation goes to confirm and not to impair the contract.”

The Act in question does not divest the plaintiff of her title to the land in controversy. On the contrary it gives effect to the contract made by her fairly and in good faith by which she intended but failed to pass the title to another merely because the proper legal forms were not observed. The same will which prescribed those forms has said that a non-compliance therewith shall be waived or excused, and the Act held valid notwithstanding, and we find no constitutional impediment in the way.

3.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Cal. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dentzel-v-waldie-cal-1866.