Lane v. Dolick

14 F. Cas. 1077, 6 McLean 200
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Illinois
DecidedOctober 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 14 F. Cas. 1077 (Lane v. Dolick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane v. Dolick, 14 F. Cas. 1077, 6 McLean 200 (circtdil 1854).

Opinion

DRUMMOND, District Judge.

This is an action of ejectment brought by Mrs. Lane against the defendants, for the west half of lot 43 and the west half of lot 15, in Belle-ville, Madison county. It is admitted by both parties, that on the 6th of July, 1834, the title to the property was in the plaintiff as her estate of inheritance, she, at that time, being a femme covert. On that day, Mrs. Lane and her husband, both being res[1078]*1078idents of Illinois, executed a deed, through which the defendants claim. The deed was acknowledged on the 8th of July, 1834. Mrs. Lane’s husband died in 1847, and since his death she has brought this action. A jury has been waived, and both law and fact submitted to the court. The case depends upon the effect to be given to the deed already mentioned. In the deed both Mrs. Lane and her husband are named as grantors, and the body of the deed is in the usual form. The certificate to this deed is as follows: The officer certified that there appeared before him, “James S. Lane and Margaret B., his wife, known to me to be the persons whose names are subscribed to the written instrument of writing, and acknowledged the same to be their free and voluntary act and deed, for the purposes therein mentioned; and the wife of the said James S. Lane being by me examined separate and apart from her said husband, and the contents of the within instrument of writing fully made known to her, she declared that she signed, sealed, and delivered the same, of her own free will and accord, and that she relinquished her dower in the premises therein mentioned, voluntarily and freely, without coercion or compulsion of her said husband.”

The statute under which this deed was acknowledged, declares that the officer “shall make her acquainted with, and explain to her the contents of such deed or conveyance, and examine her separate and apart from her husband, whether she executed the same voluntarily and freely, and without compulsion of her said husband; and if such woman shall, upon such examination, acknowledge such deed or conveyance to be her act and deed, that she executed the same volum tarily and freely, and without compulsion of her husband, and does not wish to retract,” the officer shall make a certificate, “setting forth that the contents were made known and explained to her, and the examination and acknowledgment aforesaid,” and “such deed” shall be as effectual to pass the title as if she were sole and unmarried.

Our law is different from the law of many of the states, in requiring the certificate to set forth the particular facts which must concur to render the deed valid. The certificate in this case states that the wife was examined separate and apart from her husband, and the contents of the deed were fully made known to her. The law required that it should appear that the officer made her acquainted with, and explained to her, the contents of the deed. In Hughes v. Lane, 11 Ill. 123, the supreme court of this state held, that the words “was made acquainted with the contents of the written deed,” were equivalent to the words, “that the contents were made known and explained to her;” and if this is correct, then it follows that the words in this ease, "and the contents of the within instrument of writing (being) fully made known to her,” are also equivalent to the words of the statute. That was the case of a conveyance by a femme covert, of two lots of land, to one of •which she had the right of dower, and to the other the fee; and, it is to be observed, the certificate contained some of the words necessary when a married woman relinquishes her dower alone, and the court seemed to have overlooked the difference between the law for the relinquishment of dower and that for the conveyance of the wife’s fee, or they laid no stress on that difference. Now it was all one law, January 31, 1827, with different provisions; and when the wife was to relinquish her dower, she did it by joining her husband in the deed, and the officer acquainted her with the contents, and then, on an examination separate and apart from her husband, he has to ascertain whether she relinquished her dower. The object of this part of the law is to declare how the wife’s dowrer may be released. Then, in the next section of the same law, it is declared how a married woman shall convey her own real estate, which is, by executing with her husband a deed for the conveyance of her land; and after its execution, the officer shall make her acquainted with, and explain to her, the contents of such deed. Now*, it would seem as though this alteration of the phraseologj’, this aduiuon to the sentence, was not without a purpose. In the case of dower, the wife grants nothing. She joins in the deed, and makes the proper acknowledgment to relinquish her dower. The officer acquaints her with the contents of the deed, and asks her whether she executed it and relinquished her dower freely, etc. In the case of a conveyance by a femme covert of her estate, she executes the deed to grant the inheritance, and as has often been decided, the deed must contain words of grant by her. Agricultural Bank v. Rice, 4 How. [45 U. S.] 241. And to give effect to the deed as a grant from her, she must not only be made acquainted with the contents of the deed, but they must be explained to her, the legislature appearing to think that it was quite possible, as all experience proves, that a woman might be made acquainted with the contents of the deed and yet not understand it; that is, she might read it, or hear it read, and yet not comprehend its effect. In Kentucky, the law' required the deed to be shown and explained to the femme covert, and the court, in Nantz v. Bailey, 3 Dana, 114, say it is necessary that the nature and effect of the deed should have been first explained to her. “It was the duty of the clerk, when he made the privy examination, to show and explain the deed, so as to have enabled the wife, in the absence of her husband, to understand truly the legal effect of the act she was about to acknowledge, and if he omitted to make the required explanation, the acknowledgment was void. The only explanation the clerk could [1079]*1079or should make was, that by the deed, if she should acknowledge it voluntarily and understandingly, she would forever relinquish her fee simple right.” It shows clearly that the court did not understand that a mere reading of the deed would in all cases be sufficient. Miller v. Shackleford, Id. 291. Our statute is even stronger than that of Kentucky, but, as already stated, the supreme court have decided that if she were made acquainted with the contents of the deed, they were explained to her, that is, it is one and the same thing. The object of these remarks will become apparent hereafter.

The certificate in this case does not contain the words “and does not wish to retract,” and, in this respect, is like the certificate in Hughes v. Lane, in which case the court held it was not necessary the certificate should contain those words, saying, they were inserted in the statute to afford a married woman an opportunity to avoid a deed, by informing the officer that she wished to retract, notwithstanding she had voluntarily executed it The court admit there may be a question whether this is the proper construction of the law, and say, they think it capable of that construction, and that it was the duty of the court, if possible, to adopt such a construction as would uphold rather than destroy titles.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 F. Cas. 1077, 6 McLean 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-dolick-circtdil-1854.