Hockman v. McClanahan

12 S.E. 230, 87 Va. 33, 1890 Va. LEXIS 86
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 6, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 12 S.E. 230 (Hockman v. McClanahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hockman v. McClanahan, 12 S.E. 230, 87 Va. 33, 1890 Va. LEXIS 86 (Va. 1890).

Opinion

Lacy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

These cases are as follows: One Rebecca McOIanahan, now deceased, and under whom the appellants in both suits claim the lands in controversy, as her next of kin and heirs-at-law, and who'was the wife of the appellee, Thomas McClanahan, who is the appellee in both suits, was, on the 8th day of June, 1872, entitled to certain interests in the lands in controversy, and on that day conveyed certain interests in the said lands to one Samuel McOIanahan, the brother of the said Thomas, which interests are described by the said Rebecca and Thomas as “all their right, title, and interest in and to the lands to which the said Rebecca McOIanahan is entitled as one of the children of Christian Hockman, deceased, and as one of the heirs of Samuel M. Hockman, deceased, lying and being in the said county of Shenandoah”; and the same was instanter reconveyed by Samuel to the said Thomas.

And on the 27th day of February, 1874, the said Rebecca having acquired other interests in these same lands by the death of her brother, Joseph Hockman, on that day she conveyed the same, along with her husband, the said Thomas, to one Harrison Crabill, describing the same as “all the right, title, and interest of the said Rebecca McClanahan in and to the lands whereof her brother, Joseph Hockman, died seized and possessed, lying and being in said county, on and near the North Fork,” &c., which, in like manner as before, was reconveyed instanter by the grantee, Harrison Crabill, to the said Thomas, the husband, the object of each deed being to vest the title to the wife’s lands in the husband, Thomas McClanahan, the appellee.

The said Rebecca McOIanahan having in the meantime died, in December, 188?, the bills' were filed in these suits, the plaintiffs (the appellants here) suing as the next of kin and heirs-at-law of Rebecca McOIanahan, above named, to have the deeds above mentioned set aside and annulled for [35]*35various reasons therein assigned. Upon the hearing the circuit court of Shenandoah dismissed the bills of the plaintiffs, and they appealed to this court.'

The first error assigned is the refusal of the court to annul the deed of 1872, because of the irregularity and insufficiency •of the acknowledgment of the married woman aforesaid, as certified by the clerk taking the same.

The certificate to the deed of 1872 is as follows:

“State of Virginia,
“Shenandoah County—to-wit :
“I, George W. Miley, clerk of the county court of said county, in the State of Virginia, do certify that Thomas McClanahan and Rebecca, his wife, whose names are signed to the writing above, bearing date on the 8th 'day of June, 1872, personally appeared before me in my office, and acknowledged said writing to be their will and deed; and Rebecca McClanahan being examined by me privily and apart from her husband, and having the writing aforesaid fully explained to her, declared that she had willingly executed the same, and does not wish to retract it.”

Our statute (Code of Virginia 1860, section 4, chapter 121), provides that “ when a husband and his wife have signed a writing .purporting to convey or transfer any estate, real or personal, she may appear before a court authorized to admit such writing to record, or before the clerk thereof in his office, and if, on being examined privily and apart from her husband by the clerk, and having such writing fully explained to her, she acknowledges the same to be her act, and declares that she had executed it willingly, and does not wish to retract it, such privy examination, acknowledgment, and declaration shall be thereupon recorded,” &c.; and the form of the certificate is prescribed in accordance with the law.

In the certificate in this case the wife and husband appeared [36]*36and acknowledged the writing to be their deed; whereas, the-statute required that the acknowledgment of the wife should be after she was removed from the presence and actual - supervision of her husband; and if, after the writing had been fully-explained to her, she should acknowledge the same to be her act, and declare that she had executed it willingly, and did not wish to retract it, that then it should be recorded.

But in this case the acknowledgment was before the privy examination, and before the writing had been fully explained to her; whereas, the deed, upon its face, shows that she was-illiterate, and could not sign her name, and doubtless she was-unable to read the deed for herself.

But the argument is that, upon her privy examination, she declared that she had willingly executed it, and does not wish to retract it, and that this was, in substance, an acknowledgment ; that if she did willingly execute it, then it was her act,, and the declaration that she had willingly executed it was a, declaration that it was her act, and that a declaration that it. was her act wa)s an acknowledgment that it was her act.

The law, however, requires, in express terms, that she shall both acknowledge it to be her act, and declare that the act was-willingly done. Can one be made to suffice for both? The-law does not authorize the recordation of the deed, except, upon such “ privy examination, acknowledgment, and declaration.” They are distinctly repeated in the section which provides for the recordation and the divesting thus of the-wife’s right. Can we say that, acknowledgment and declaration being the same, one will suffice, when the statute requires-both; or can we say that, both being required after privy examination, one may come before and be in the presence of the husband, and the other, coming after, will suffice for both?' The acknowledgment being in the presence of the husband,, and before the writing had been explained to her," is it not altogether void ? And the declaration that she had willingly executed the deed, standing without the allegation that she-[37]*37now acknowledges it as her act, standing alone, is the statute complied with, and is the wife’s right passed ? It is well-settled by our decisions that a literal compliance with this statute ■is not necessary. When there has been a substantial compliance therewith, it is sufficient. See Langhorne v. Halleson, 4 Leigh, 225; Todd v. Baylor, Id. 498; McClanachan v. Siter, 2 Gratt., 280, in this court, and Dennis v. Tarpenny, 2 Barb., 371; Dundas v. Hitchcock, 12 Howard, 256; Drury v. Craig, 5 Wall., 795; Watson v. Michael, 21 W. Va., 568.

But the result of the authorities is that while a substantial compliance with the statute will suffice, yet it must be a substantial compliance with every requisite of the statute. None of the requirements can be dispensed with, and a compliance with some of them be held to contain the substance of them all. The examination must be privy; the writing must be explained to her; these are prerequisites. And, after this, the wife must then (1) acknowledge the deed to be her act, (2) declare that she did willingly execute it, and (3) that she does not now wish to retract it.

If she does not, under these circumstances, acknowledge it to be her act, and declare that she willingly executed it, then the law ❖ill regard the execution as involuntary and as under compulsion, and she is not bound.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 S.E. 230, 87 Va. 33, 1890 Va. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hockman-v-mcclanahan-va-1890.