Fogg v. Holcomb

21 N.W. 111, 64 Iowa 621
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 23, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 21 N.W. 111 (Fogg v. Holcomb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fogg v. Holcomb, 21 N.W. 111, 64 Iowa 621 (iowa 1884).

Opinion

Reed, J.

The land in question was entered by one Porteus E. Roberts, and the parties each claim title from him. Plaintiff’s claim, as shown by the abstract attached to the petition, is that Roberts conveyed the land to Townsend Webster on the twentieth of March, 1856, and that Webster conveyed it to John Comstock on the ninth of January, 1882, and that he conveyed it on the thirty-first of May, 1882, to Charles S. Eogg, who conveyed it to plaintiff on the thirty-first of May, 1882.

Defendant’s claim, as shown by the abstract of title attached to her answer, is that Roberts conveyed the land on the tenth of October, 1856, to Benjamin Caren, and that he conveyed it to her on the fourth of January, 1867.

She also .alleges that Roberts entered the land as agent for said Caren, and that he held the title in trust for him, and [623]*623that Webster, after tbe conveyance to him from Roberts, conveyed the land to Caren, and that tbe deed was never recorded, but was accidentally burned and destroyed. ' But no evidence was introduced in support of these allegations.

1. acknowldetective1e'ertificate: instance. I. To establish her title to said land, plaintiff offered in evidence the deeds referred to in her abstract of title, also the record of said deeds. Defendant objected to the deed from Roberts to Webster, on the ground . ° that the execution oí the instrument was not acknowledged as required by law. The acknowledgment was made (as shown by the certificate indorsed on the instrument) before the clerk of the county court of Peoria county, Illinois. By the statute in force at the time the instrument purports to have been executed, (Code of 1851, section 1218, as amended by section 2, chapter 49, Acts of the Fifth General Assembly,) instruments affecting real estate in this state, when executed in another state, might be acknowledged before a court of record, or an officer holding the seal of such court. The certificate in question bears the imprint of the seal of said court; but it is not recited in the certificate, nor is it otherwise shown, that said court is a court of record, or that the clerk is the holder of its seal. The certificate of acknowledgment, then, is defective, and, unless it is affected by some of the subsequent legalizing legislation, it is not competent evidence of the execution of said deed.

_ curative act: deed. It was provided by section 2, chapter 80, Acts of 1858, “ that the acknowledgments of all deeds * '* * taken and certified previous to the taking effect of this aot and which have been duly recorded in the proper counties in this state, be and the same are hereby declared to be legal and valid in all courts of law and equity in this state;” * * * and an act of the same tenor and effect was passed-by the legislature in 1868.

It will be observed that, to bring the instrument in question within the provisions of the legalizing statutes, it must have been “duly recorded ” before the taking effect of the statutes. [624]*624An attempt was made to record it on the twentieth of March, 1856, but the record made at that time is not an exact copy of the instrument, and defendant claims that it was not duly recorded. A comparison of the record with the instrument shows that the recorder in making the record omitted to copy therein one or two lines of that portion of the deed which contains the description of the land conveyed by it. The description in the deed reads as follows: “2 certain tracts or parcels of land situated in Guthrie county, and state of Iowa, and known and described as the east half of section thirteen (13), in towinship seventy-eight (78) north, and range thirty-two (32) west, containing three hundred and twenty acres,” while that in the record reads: “2 certain tracts or parcels of land situated in Guthrie county, and east half of-section thirteen (13), in township seventy-eight (78) north, and range thirty-two (32) west, containing three hundred and twenty acres.” In other respects the record is a literal copy of the deed. But defendant’s claim is that it cannot be determined with certainty, from the language of the two instruments, that the property described by the record is the identical property conveyed by the deed. To constitute the record in question a valid recordAof the instrument, it is probably not essential that it should be a literal copy in every respect of the instrument. But it certainly is essential that it should embody every material part of the instrument, and that the language of the instrument be so nearly copied into the record as that the subject-matter of the instrument can be identified with certainty by the record; and, tested by this rule, we think the record in question is a valid record of said deed. The language by which the property is described in the record is not only applicable to that described in the deed, but is descriptive, as we think, of no other property. The property is described in both the record and the deed as the east half of section thirteen, in township seventy-eight north, and range thirty-two west. In addition to this, it is described in the record as being situated in Guthrie county, Iowa.

[625]*6253. CONVEYsra’ption^'judiciainotice, The courts of the state will take judicial notice of the fact that township seventy-eight north, of range thirty-two west of the fifth principal meridian, is situated in r I Gtotfm® county.. The description contained in then, would be expressed with certainty by the language, — the east half of section thirteen, in township seventy-eight north, of range thirty-two west of the fifth principal meridian, or by any other language which is the exact equivalent of that. The words north and west, as applied in the land surveys of the United States to townships and ranges, have certain and well known meanings. The number seventy-eight, and the word north, applied to a township of land, describes a township which is the seventy-eighth in number north of a certain base line or parallel, and the number thirty-two, and the word west, applied to a range, describes a range which is the thirty-second in number west of some one of the meridian lines which have been located by the general government in the surveys of the public lands. By an examination of a map published in 1883 by the commissioner of the general land office, and which shows the surveys of the public lands by the general government, we.have ascertained that the combination-township seventy-eight north, in range thirty-two west, occurs nowhere else except west of the fifth principal meridian. The description contained in the record is, therefore, the exact equivalent of that contained in the deed.

It is next claimed that the deed was not duly recorded, because it was not properly indexed. The evidence shows that the entry which was made in the index at the time the record was made is now in such condition that it is difficult to determine whether it originally described the land as being situated in township seventy-eight or seventy-nine. Expert evidence was taken by plaintiff to prove that the original entry was seventy-eight, and by defendant to show that it was seventy-nine. We do not find it necessary to determine this question, for it is shown that subsequently, in [626]*6261864 or 1865, a uew index was made, in which the instrument was correctly indexed, and this had the effect to bring the instrument within the operation of the curative act of 1868.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.W. 111, 64 Iowa 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fogg-v-holcomb-iowa-1884.