Fergerson v. Fergerson

1 Georgia Decisions 135
CourtTalbot County Superior Court, Ga.
DecidedSeptember 15, 1842
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Georgia Decisions 135 (Fergerson v. Fergerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Talbot County Superior Court, Ga. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fergerson v. Fergerson, 1 Georgia Decisions 135 (Ga. Super. Ct. 1842).

Opinion

The bill further states, that the said Richard intended by said deed of conveyance to settle the property mentioned therein, upon the said Martha, and to her separate and exclusive use, and to debar the said James, and his creditors, from the same — that through ignorance of the parties as to the proper mode of framing the instrument so as to create, and settle a separate estate on the said Martha, the wife of said James Fergerson, and the want of knowledge that the said deed, as executed, would convey to the said Fergerson the interest designed for his wife exclusively, the deed appears in the form in which it is seen at bar, that the defendant, Carter, and the other defendants, are creditors of the said Fergerson, and have levied on the property included in said conveyance, and are seeking to have the same sold by the Sherifi'of the county, to satisfy their demands. The prayer of the bill, is, that the parties to the said deed may he permitted to correct tile mistake alleged by them to have been committed, as to the legal effect of the instrument as it is written, and to have the same decreed to settle a separate estate on the said complainants to the exclusion of the husband, and his creditors, for tile appointment of trustees, to take charge of the sole interest of the said Martha, and that in the meantime the creditors be enjoined from selling said property or any part thereof, and for general relief. To this bill, n general demurrer, for want of equity, is filed. From this statement of the case it is apparent, that the bill imports an application to the Court in behalf of the grantees in the deed for the correction of an error in Law, alleged to have taken place in framing the instrument, and for the reforming the language and legal effect of the instrument, so as to make it speak the supposed intention of the parties [137]*137thereunto, contrary to what is written, as those intentions shall be shewn, by parole evidence, to have been at the time the deed was executed. The broad and general question of the right of a Court of Chancery to correct, by its decree, errors or mistakes in Láv) Committed by individuals, has been much discussed, and variously decided. We are left to select from the different, and conflicting authorities on the subject, those we think most conformable to correct principles, and most conducive to the general good. It should he first observed, that the deed in question, is a full, unambiguous and perfect instrument. No omissions, mistakes or incongruities, appear on the face of it. It is, too, an instrument of great solemnity, being sealed and witnessed. Let it be further borne in mind, that it is not pretended that any misapprehension of the facts on which the deed was founded, existed between the parties at the time the instrument was executed, or that any fraud, deceit, or imposition, was practised to procure it. But the prayer of relief is placed on the naked ground of an error in Law, to be shewn by verbal testimony in direct contradiction to the plain and explicit language of the deed. The conveyance of the property in contest, although nominally made to the complainants, Martha It. and her children, is, in law, a conveyance to the respondent, Fergerson, to the precise extent to which the said Martha claims to be entitled. This, by virtue of that legal unify which exists between husband and wife. In order to prevent the marital rights of the husband from attaching to property conveyed to the wife, it is necessary that the conveyance contain words of express exclusion of him, or that the intent to exclude him do otherwise explicitly appear. The words in the gift or grant “to her,” or “to her own use,” will not have the effect in Law of vesting a separate estate in the wife. To this point the authorities are explicit, 1 Chit. Gen, Prac. 60. Clancy on Rights, 267. 1 Brown’s Ch. R. (by Belt,) 383. 4 Mad. Ch. Rep. 216. Story’s Com. on Equi. Indeed the bill is framed to meet this construction of the conveyance. So far then, as the intention of the parties to the deed is to be derived from the face of the instrument itself, it is conclusive in behalf of the title of the husband to the property in dispute. Now, on the score of credibility, this solemn and deliberate depositary of the contract of the parties, other things being equal, stands on higher ground, as a means of establishing the intention of the parties, than the mode of proof by which, it is sought to [138]*138be set aside. “ Parole evidence is not admissible to contradict, of vary, or add to, the terms of a deed.” — 1 Phil. onEvi. 548. 2 Stark. 548. That relief will be granted against a deed where it has been executed under a mistake of material facts, or where fraud, or imposition, unconnected with guilt or criminal negligence on the part of the applicants, has been practised, is certainly true, but in the absence of some special ground of relief, the deed is conclusive upon the parties to it. We proceed to ascertain whether a mistake of the Law governing the instrument, can, in the circumstances stated in the bill, be made the reason for reversing or varying the terms of the conveyance. That “ ignorance of the Law, which every man is bound to know, excuses no man,” was an early maxim in the Law. — 4 Black. 28. It is true, that the principle is here spoken of in more direct reference to the subject of criminal Laws, and the liability incurred by those who violate them, but the same doctrine has been very generally extended to civil cases also, alike at Law, and in Equity. “ It is a well known maxim, that ignorance of Law will not furnish an excuse for any person either for a breach or an omission of duty : ignorantia legis neminem excused : and this maxim is equally as much respected in Equity as in Law.” — 1 Story, Com. on Eq. 121. 1 Forth. Eq. B, 1, Ch. 2, sec. 7, note (v.) see page 109. 1 Lyon v. Richman, 2 Johns. Ch. Rep. p. 60. “The probable ground for the maxim is that suggested by Lord Ellenbokotoii, that otherwise there is no saying to what extent the excuse of ignorance might not be carried.” — 1 Story's Com. on Equity, 123. It is too easily understood to require proof, that the administration of criminal Law cannot be insisted on if the subjects of it are permitted to defend on the ground of ignorance of it — nor can the rights of property or reputation be protected, if individuals are allowed to repudiate the construction and operation of legal principles on their dealings and conduct. The rule that all must be held to know the law, as a general rule, is founded in the necessity of it, to government and social order. I lay down the principle with some qualification, for there are cases of very high authority, in which mistakes of the Law of a peculiar character have, in some circumstances, been relieved against in a Court of Chancery. A familiar instance is that of a defective execution of a power by one entrusted with it i As if an authority to sell land be conveyed in writing, and the deed made under it be informally executed through the ignorance of &é [139]*139draftsman. In that case, the intentions of the parties being apparent on the face of the papers themselves, and the error resting in the intrinsic proof contained in the transaction itself, a Court of Equity will step in, and give effect to the real intentions of the parties to the conveyance. — 1 Mad. 52, 1 Story’s Equi. 185.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Georgia Decisions 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fergerson-v-fergerson-gasupercttalb-1842.