Gill & Simpson v. Fauntleroy's Heirs

47 Ky. 177, 8 B. Mon. 177, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 147
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 47 Ky. 177 (Gill & Simpson v. Fauntleroy's Heirs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gill & Simpson v. Fauntleroy's Heirs, 47 Ky. 177, 8 B. Mon. 177, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 147 (Ky. Ct. App. 1847).

Opinion

Judoe Bkeck

delivered the opinion of the Court. — Judge Simpson, did not sit in this case.

These cases were all ejectments, brought upon the joint and several demise of the heirs of Margaret Fauntleroy and the devisees of Anne Harrod. The law and the facts, the latter having been agreed by the parties, were submitted to the Judge in the Court below, who rendered judgments for the plaintiffs in the two cases first named, for part of the land in contest, and for the defendants in the residue.

In the two first cases the defendants have appealed to this Court, and cross errors are assigned by the plaintiffs, now appellees. The other six have been brought up by the plaintiffs by writs of error.

As the same title is relied upon and the same questions in fact arise, in each case, they will all be considered together.

The lessors of the plaintiffs claim title under three patents, embracing in the aggregate, about three thousand acres of land, which emanated from the State of Virginia in 1782 and 1783, to James McDonald, heir at law of Patrick and James McDonald. In 1785 Anne McDónald, the mother of the patentee, married James Harrod. In the fall of 1787, the patentee died intestate and an infant, leáving his mother and his half sister, [178]*178Margaret Harrod, daughter of the said Anne, his only* relatives and heirs at law.

The clerk’s certificate upon the deed to James George adjudged insufficient. ío constitute .a valid acknowledgment of a feme covert, so as to pass her right in land, it is indispensable that she he privily examined, and upon such examination should fred™ and^wil^"^eed *andthe certificate of the these mate-[^exp^ess terms be clearly impli-

[178]*178In 1792, James Harrod departed this life.

About 1802, said Margaret, being in her seventeenth year, married John Fauntleroy. She lived till 1841 and died. Her husband survived her till 1845, when he died.

Anne Harrod died in 1843, having first made and published her last will and testament.

These suits were commenced in 1843, by the heirs of Mrs. Fauntleroy and the devisees of Mrs. Harrod.

Among other facts it is agreed, that John Fauntleroy, the husband of said Margaret, never was in possession of any part of the land in controversy, in such a way as to constitute him a tenant by the courtesy.

The defendants claim the land under deeds from Fauntleroy and wife, and by possession, adverse to Mrs. Harrod and her devisees, for more than twenty years.

The validity of these deeds will first be examined.

The deeds, under which Gill and Simpson, appellants in the two first cases, claim, bear date in 1814 and 1813. The first purports to be from Fauntleroy and wife to James George, for one hundred acres. Its validity as to Mrs. Fauntleroy, turns exclusively upon the following 'certificate:.

“Mercer County, Sct.

“This day John Fauntleroy and Margaret, his wife, a party to the within indenture, personally appeared before me, and acknowledged the same to be their act and deed: and the said Margaret, separate and apart from her said husband, acknowledged the said indenture to be her act and deed, and relinquished her right of inheritance to the land in said indenture mentioned, and also relinquished her right of dower, as the law directs.

“Attest, Tho. Allen, c. c.”

To constitute a valid acknowledgment under our statutes, by a feme covert, of a deed for the conveyance of land, it is indispensable, as has been repeatedly decided by this Court, that she should be privily examined? and upon such examination, should declare she freely and willingly executed the deed. It is equally indispensable that the certificate of the clerk or examining [179]*179officer, should state these material facts, either in express terms, or in language from which they may be clearly ... , 6 s J J J implied.

As clerks in taknowledgmentof teriallyCtitisnot ®¿'®cientjf jjja* the acknowledgbut and^ declarations The certificate stapp6 deofarel J¡Jg(£e defeoUve

The certificate before us, in reference at least to one of these essential requisites, is considered defective, and fatally so. It does not expressly state, nor in terms of equivalent import, that the feme declared she freely and willingly acknowledged the deed or relinquished right of inheritance. The law is equally imperative in requiring this fact to be certified, as the fact of privy examination. And a mere inference from the fact of acknowledgment upon such examination, that the declaration was made, is insufficient, and does not satisfy the requisition of the statute in that particular.

It is true some stress is laid upon the concluding words in the certificate, “as the law directs.” Whether that expression refers merely to the relinquishment of . dower or includes the acknowledgment of the deed and the relinquishment of her right of inheritance, is not material, as in either case it would be wholly unavailing to give validity to the certificate.

The clerk is a ministerial not a judicial officer in such cases, and whether the feme relinquished her title in the way- the law required, it was not his duty or province to decide. It was his duty to state the facts in regard to her acts and declarations, and whether they amounted to a compliance with the legal requisitions and were sufficient to pass her title, it would devolve upon the Judge or the Court to decide. If she .declared, upon privy examination, that she freely and willingly executed the deed, it was his duty so to state in his certificate. And as it does not expressly, or in language clearly implying it, contain that fact, the deed as to Mrs. Fauntleroy, was clearly invalid, and as her husband, according to the agreed facts, had no estate by the courtesy, opposed no obstacle to the plaintiff’s recovery upon the demise of her heirs.

In the second case the defendants relied upon a deed from Fauntleroy and wife to Stapp, made in 1813, but the certificate of acknowledgment as to Mrs. Fauntleroy, being equally defective as the one first disposed of, the [180]*180deed formed ño’obstacle to'the plaintiff’s recovery also, upon the demise of her heirs in that case.

The certifícate upon the deed t® Ramsey held to be valid': (3 Dana, 111: 5 B. Monroe. 481. )

In the case against Ramsey, the defendant relies upon a deed bearing date in 1817, which it is contended Is not' so authenticated and recorded as to pass the title of Mrs. Fauntleroy. The certificates upon it are as follows :

■ “ Mercer County, Sct :

“ I, Thomas Allen, clerk of the County Court aforesaid, do certify that John Fauntleroy and Margaret his wife, this day came before me in my office, and acknowledged the within instrument of writing to be their act and deed; and the said Margaret being by me examined separate and apart from her husband, freely and voluntarily relinquished her right of dower and inheritance, as the law directs. Given under my hand this 21st day of October, 1817. Thomas Allen.”

“Garrard County, Sct:

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47 Ky. 177, 8 B. Mon. 177, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gill-simpson-v-fauntleroys-heirs-kyctapp-1847.