Gray v. Patton

41 Ky. 12, 2 B. Mon. 12, 1841 Ky. LEXIS 60
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 13, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 41 Ky. 12 (Gray v. Patton) 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
Gray v. Patton, 41 Ky. 12, 2 B. Mon. 12, 1841 Ky. LEXIS 60 (Ky. Ct. App. 1841).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion-of the Court.

John T. Gray and wife seek the reversal of a judgment of eviction, for a lot in the city of Louisville, rendered against them- in an action of ejectment bn the de[13]*13raise of Thomas W. Patton, who claims as only heir of his mother.

Where several aresued in eject* ment as teire* tenants, and né¡ service of common order or anf appearance by any of them, and one be admitted to defend, and the record show no privity be'* tween such defendants & those in possession, though a judgment against such may be erroneous, yet one defendlllUoanno°t thereof. llimself A will made in proved*1 and*1 recordedbefoiethe separation, ^is aaeopy ñmn ule probate court of Virgima properly certified, is evithe act of 1797.

[13]*13On the trial the lessor exhibited a conveyance from the trastees of Louisville to Joseph Sanders and from Sanders to George Watts, the lessor’s maternal grandfather, and a certified copy of his said grandfather’s will, devising the lot to the devisor’s daughter, who was the lessor’s mother: and he also proved that his mother had died in December, 1822, and his father in July, 1837. Gray relied on a deed purporting to be a conveyance of the lot in 1797, from Samuel Patton and his wife, who were the lessor’s parents, and on sundry derivative conveyances under which he ( Gray) and his wife and those under whom they claim title, had occupied and enjoyed it for about forty years. But the only authentication of Mrs. Patton’s acknowledgment of the deed of 1797, was a certificate by the clerk of the Jefferson County Court, showing that in 1806 she had, upon' privy examination, made the statutory acknowledgment before two Justices of the Peace for Hardin county, where she then resided, and that their certificate, together with the deed, had been duly recorded as required by law; and there being no record proof of any special commission to the said justices to take the acknowledgment, the Circuit Judge decided that the conveyance of 1797, with the certificate of the justices, as certified by the clerk, was insufficient to prove that Mrs. Patton had conveyed her legal title. That decision presents the main question for revision. But we will first briefly dispose of some less important points involved in the record.

After notice to several persons sued as terre-tenants, and before any service of a common order or an appear, anee by any of them, Gray and ivife were made defend, ants. And, as the record does not show any privity between those defendants and the tenants in possession, their counsel insists that the judgment against “the defendants” is erroneous. But, however irregular or ineffectual, as to the tenants, the proceedings in this respect may be admitted to have been, still Gray and wife cannot have been prejudiced thereby, and cannot, on their writ of error, urge that as a ground for reversal. Whether [14]*14there is either no judgment, or an erroneous judgment, against the occupants, this writ of error by Gray and wife alone does not authorize us to decide.

a feme covert tuaiiy estate.of inherit-acknowledgment tíon^beforTtwo Peíce351 unless they acted under a commission from the county lies^and1 unless such commisdeed and eertificordedWein tíTé lanTs^ay.1616 the

A copy of the will of Watts, certified from a probate court of Virginia, where he resided, was objected to as evidence, on the ground that the Virginia court had no jurisdiction so far as the lot in Kentucky was concerned, Admitting, as we may, that this objection would be unangwera[jie jf the piobatehad been since the political sepaction of Kentucky from Virginia, still, as the will was provGd and admitted to record in Virginia when Kentucr . o fry was a portion thereof, the probate was as effectual here as it would have been had it been made in Louismtte itself: Morgan’s adm’r. vs Gaines ei al. 3 A. K. Marshall, 614.

The plaintiffs in error also insist'' that the deed by the trustees in 1783, was ineffectual for want of sufficient authority and title. But, as the facts bearing on this point are substantially the same as those considered in the case of Fitzhugh et al. vs Croghan, 2 J. J. Marshall, 432, the decision in that case, which we still approve, must overrule this assignment of error also.

Upon the main and’ only remaining question deemed worthy of consideration, we feel some perplexity.

Our predecessors having, more than once, decided that under the 4th section of the act of 1797, 1 Slat. 440, copied from a Virginia statute of 1785, an acknowledgment before Justices oi the Peace, without a special commission, is insufficient to pass any other estate of a married woman in land than that of dower; as to which the act of 1792 may operate, we do not feel au- , , . . , ,, . ,. ¶ . thonzed now to inquire whether a less literal interpretation would have been more consistent with justice and our entire system of legislation on the subject of such conveyances; and although it has not, so far as we know, been hitherto, explicitly decided that the registration of the commission, as well as that of the certificate, is required by the statute of 1797, as indispensable to the conclusiveness of a conveyance by a feme covert of her inheritable interest in real estate; yet, as the statute requires the recording of the deed “together with such com■ [15]*15mission and certificate,” and as this court has frequently decided that the title does not pass without the prescribed registration of the certificate, we cannot consistently avoid the judicial conclusion that the title cannot be legally divested unless the commission, when one is necessary, shall have been also, in like manner, recorded.

They will not presume that a commission for the privy examination of a feme covert had issued and been lost (as the law required itto be recorded with the deed) where every thing else appears to make the conveyance complete and there is no allegation or proof of such loss.

Had not the statute imperatively required the recording of the commission, we would presume that a sufficient one had been issued to the justices who certified theprivy examination in this case; for it would be proper then to apply the general presumption of law, after so long a lapse of time, that the official act had been, in all Respects, right, except only so far as it might expressly appear to have been illegal.

But we are not allowed to presume the recording of that which the unlost and unmutilated record does not show to have ever been recorded: nor can we, without even a suggestion to that effect, presume that the record, as certified in this case, does not exhibit all that was ever recorded in the clerk’s office of Jefferson..

We cannot, therefore, decide that upon this last and principal question, the Circuit Judge instructed the jury erroneously, unless the 11th section of an act of 1831, 1 Stat. Law, 453, applies availably in such a case as this. ■So much of that enactment as can be material on that .subject is as follows:

“Seo. 11. Be it further enacted,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Massey v. Stout
4 Del. Ch. 274 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1871)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Ky. 12, 2 B. Mon. 12, 1841 Ky. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-patton-kyctapp-1841.