Downs v. Blount

170 F. 15, 31 L.R.A.N.S. 1076, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 4657
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 3, 1909
DocketNo. 1,802
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 170 F. 15 (Downs v. Blount) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Downs v. Blount, 170 F. 15, 31 L.R.A.N.S. 1076, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 4657 (5th Cir. 1909).

Opinion

SHELBY, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The land in controversy was, conveyed to Martha R. Jones, the wife of James A. Jones, on March 27, 1854. Both parties to the suit deraign title from her. She and her husband conveyed the land on October 15, 1854, to James Vaughan, and the deed was filed for record April 15,* 1855, and duly recorded. The chief controversy in the case relates to defects in the certificate of acknowledgment to this deed. James Vaughan and those who succeeded to his rights, including Downs, the plaintiff in error, claimed the land under this deed for more than a half century, no one else during that time asserting any adverse claim to it. Martha R. Jones and her husband lived in Arkansas when they made the deed, but they afterwards moved to Texas, and lived there till he died in 1864. She continued to live in Texas after his death, and died there in 1897. They had received $3,000 for the' land. He lived 10 years, and she 42 years, after making the deed and receiving the purchase money, and neither of them ever repudiated the contract. The first original petition in this case was filed February 27, 1904. E. A. Blount, the defendant in error, on May 6, 1907, after the institution of the suit, and with knowledge of the claim of Downs to the land, purchased it from the surviving children and heirs of Martha R. and James A. Jones. The purchase of the timber was also made with notice of Downs’ claim and pending the suit. Blount bought the land and timber relying on — and he now relies on— the defective certificate to the deed made by Martha R. Jones and her husband to Vaughan in 1854.

It may be conceded that the authorities cited by the learned counsel for the defendant in error are conclusive on the point that the certificate to the deed was not such as was required by the laws of Texas, and that the conveyance in question did not at the time of its execution and delivery convey the legal title.

■ Whether or not- the written - attempt to convey the title, for the [19]*19recited consideration, was absolutely void, is a question to be considered later.

The plaintiff in error contends that the Jones deed was admissible in evidence notwithstanding the defective certificate of acknowledgment, because of the curative statute passed by the Thirtieth Legislature and approved April 12, 1901 (Laws 1907, p. 308, c. 165). This statute was an amendment of article 2312 of the Revised Statutes of Texas of 1895. The article, as amended, is as follows, the amendment being shown by italics:

“Art. 12. Every instrument of writing which Is permitted or required by law to bo recorded in the office of the chirk of the county court, and which has boon, or hereafter may be so recorded, after being proven or acknowledged in the manner provided by the laws of this ,ítalo in force at the time of its registra ¡ion, or at the time it -was proved or acknowledged, or every instrument which has been or hereafter may be actually recorded for a period of ten years in the book used by said elerls for the recording of such instruments, whether proved or aclsnoioledged in such manner or not, shall be admitted as evidence in any suit in this state without the necessity of proving its execution; provided no claim adverse or inconsistent to the one evidenced by such instrument shall have been asserted during that ten years; provided, that the party who wishes to give (it) sueh instrument in evidence shall file the same among the papers of the suit in which he proposes to use it, at least three days before the commencement of the trial of such suit, and give notice of such filing to the opposite party or his attorney of record; and unless such opposite party, or some other person for him, shall, within three days before the trial of the cause, file an affidavit stating that he believes such instrument of writing to be forged. And whenever any party to a suit shall file among the papers of the cause an affidavit stating that any instrument of writing, recorded as aforósaid. has been lost, or that he can not procure the original, a certified copy of the record of any such instrument shall be admitted in like manner as the original could be. And after such instrument shall have been actually recorded as herein provided for a period, of ten\ years, it shall be no objection to the admission of same, or a certified copy )hereof, as evidence, that the certifícale of the officer who took such proof, or acknowledgment is not in form or substance such as required, by the laws of this state, and said, instrument shall be given the same effcoljis if it were not so defective.”

The contention of the defendant in error is that, if the act is so construed as to make it applicable to this case, it would be in violation of the provision of the federal Constitution against impairing the obligation of contracts and of the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment; and that it would also be in violation of article 1, '§ 16, of the Texas Constitution of 1876, which declares that:

“No * * * retroactive law, or any law impairing the obligation of contracts, shall bo made.”

The court below excluded the deed because of the defective acknowledgment. The curative act provides in plain words that under certain circumstances the instrument, if it has been recorded for 10 years, “whether proved or acknowledged in such manner or not, shall be admitted as evidence in any suit in this state, without the necessity of proving its execution.” There can be no doubt about the power of the Legislature to prescribe or to change rules of evidence. The right to have a case tried by existing rules of evidence is not a vested right. Such rules, like others affecting remedies, are at all times subject to modification and control by the Legislature, and the changes are [20]*20applicable to existing causes of action, even in states where retrospective laws are forbidden. Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations (6th Ed.) 451. Referring to such changes in the rules of evidence, Cooley gives the familiar instance of a Legislature making a tax deed prima facie evidence that all proceedings have been regular, thereby changing the burden of proof from one party to the other; and then he makes the significant observation that:

“Statutes making defective records evidence of valid conveyances are of •a similar nature; and these usually, perhaps always, have reference to records before made, and provide for making them competent evidence where before they were merely void.” Id. 452.

A Legislature, while it has the undoubted power to make a tax deed prima facie evidence of the regularity of the steps preceding the .sale, could not make it conclusive evidence. Neither could the Texas Legislature make an imperfect and ineffective deed so conclusive as to cut off the right of a party to show its invaliditv a beinp- Wtrod or otherwise. And it is true that, under pretense of making or changing a rule of evidence, the Legislature cannot deprive a party ot a vested right in property. And this limitation of legislative power is urged with much earnestness on our attention. Whether or not Blount has a “vested right,” within the meaning of the limitation,, is a question that must be decided. In deciding it, we must consider what rights, if any, were conferred by the defective deed of the Joneses to Vaughan in 1854, as well as what rights, if any, were conferred by the deed of the Jones heirs to E. A. Blount in 1907.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 F. 15, 31 L.R.A.N.S. 1076, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 4657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downs-v-blount-ca5-1909.