Le Mesnager v. Hamilton

35 P. 1054, 101 Cal. 532, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 1070
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1894
DocketNo. 14903
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 35 P. 1054 (Le Mesnager v. Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Le Mesnager v. Hamilton, 35 P. 1054, 101 Cal. 532, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 1070 (Cal. 1894).

Opinions

De Haven, J.—

The defendants, Samuel Hamilton and Adelaide E. Hamilton, were and are husband and wife, and this is an action to foreclose a mortgage alleged to have been executed by them on January 2, [534]*5341889, to secure a promissory note, also executed by them on the same day, for the sum of seven thousand dollars. The complaint contains a copy of the mortgage, and of the certificate of acknowledgment attached thereto. The certificate is that of a notary public, and shows upon its face that the mortgage was duly acknowledged by the defendants upon the day of its date.

The defendant, Adelaide E. Hamilton, filed an answer, in which she avers that the land described in the mortgage was and is her separate property, and in which she also denies that she ever executed or acknowledged the mortgage, and further “ alleges that the statement in the certificate of said notary, appended to said pretended mortgage by said notary, reciting and stating that she .... appeared before, or was in the presence of, said notary, .... is untrue and false.”

The case was tried upon the issues thus presented, and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiffs in accordance with the demand of the complaint, and a decree of foreclosure directing the sale of the property mentioned in the mortgage to satisfy the amount adjudged to be due from defendants to plaintiffs on account of the note and mortgage.

The defendant, Adelaide E. Hamilton, appeals.

Upon the trial of the action the appellant offered to prove that she never in fact appeared before the notary certifying to the acknowledgment attached to the mortgage, and that she did not acknowledge the mortgage, or know any thing about its delivery to the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs objected to this evidence upon the general ground of irrelevancy, and particularly because “it made no difference whether the defendant, Adelaide E. Hamilton, was present and acknowledged the mortgage or not, as the certificate of said acknowledgment was conclusive.” The objection was sustained, and the appellant was not permitted to prove the facts embraced in her offer.

This ruling was clearly erroneous. At the date of the mortgage sought to be foreclosed an acknowledgment [535]*535was essential to the validity of a conveyance by a married woman. Section 1187 of the Civil Code, as it then read, expressly declared that such a conveyance shall have no validity “until so acknowledged," and section 1093 of the same code also provided that “ no estate in the real property of a married woman passes by any .grant purporting to be executed or acknowledged by her unless the grant or instrument is acknowledged in the manner prescribed by sections 1186 and 1191." Such being the law at the date of the mortgage in question, it is at once seen that the facts offered to be shown were material and relevant, and struck as directly at the existence of the mortgage as would an offer to show that the signatures thereto were forgeries—the acknowledgment of appellant being as necessary a part of the execution of the mortgage by her as her signature. The certificate of acknowledgment was not conclusive evidence of the fact of acknowledgment, and such a certificate may be impeached by parol evidence that the person named therein never in fact appeared before the officer certifying to the acknowledgment. In such a case the act of the officer is wholly void, and the certificate is nothing but a fabrication. (Johnston v. Wallace, 53 Miss. 331; Pickens v. Knisely, 29 W. Va. 1; 6 Am. St. Rep. 622; Donahue v. Mills, 41 Ark. 421; Meyer v. Gosset, 38 Ark. 377; Williamson v. Carskadden, 36 Ohio St. 664; Michener v. Cavender, 38 Pa. St. 334; Borland v. Walrath, 33 Iowa, 130.) Of course when it appears that a married woman has actually appeared before an officer for the purpose of acknowledging a conveyance, and has made some kind of an acknowledgment, the certificate of the officer in relation to the manner and terms, and as to the fact of .the acknowledgment, would be conclusive in favor of a purchaser in good faith, and who has relied upon the truth of the certificate. The difference between such a case and one where the certificate is wholly void is very clearly pointed out by Campbell, J., in Johnston v. Wallace, 53 Miss. 331, in the following language:

[536]*536“ When a married woman appears before an officer to acknowledge her deed it is made by law his duty to inquire of her separately and apart from her husband as to her freedom from fear, threats, or compulsion of her husband in the execution of the deed; and it is his duty to decide upon this, and to certify the acknowledgment. His decision thus made and duly certified imports verity as to all persons acting on the faith of his official certificate in due form of law, and without any knowledge of any wrong or irregularity or of any circumstance to. excite inquiry and point to such wrong or irregularity. The appearance of the person before him to acknowledge is the occasion for the performance of his duty by the officer; the proposal to acknowledge the deed before him is the circumstance which calls into exercise the legal power to examine as to the execution of the deed, and to decide the sufficiency of the statement made as to that; and then, in certifying, he is declaring his conclusion uptin the fact he is called to decide. His official act thus solemnly performed must have sanctity, at least to the extent of being a safe reliance for every one who in good faith acts in the belief that it is true as stated. But where the person never appeared before an officer'to acknowledge the deed, but he„ falsely certifies that she did, his act is wholly without authority of law, and void in toto. All must be subject to the risk of an occasional forgery by officers authorized to take acknowledgments. Although liable to be deceived and imposed on by such an act, no one can claim that a married woman’s estate should be divested by forgery; and when she did not in fact appear before the officer to acknowledge, although he may certify that she did, she may show she did not, for his act is wholly without authority, and she but rights herself and wrongs no one in proving the truth of the case, for no one can claim by virtue of a forgery.”

The cases of Banning v. Banning, 80 Cal. 274,13 Am. St. Rep. 156, and De Arnaz v. Escandon, 59 Cal. 486, cited by respondents, are not opposed to the principle [537]*537declared in the case from which the foregoing quotation is made. In Banning v. Banning the wife acknowledged the deed through a telephone, and afterwards delivered the deed, apparently properly acknowledged, to the grantees, who were not shown to have had any notice of the manner in which the acknowledgment was taken. Under these circumstances the court held that the certificate was conclusive, and that the married woman could not avoid her deed because of the fact that she did not personally appear in the actual presence of the officer certifying to the acknowledgment. That was all that was decided there, and that case is authority for nothing more. It is true that the court quotes with approval the following portion of section 538 of Jones on • Mortgages: “As to statements of fact contained in a certificate of acknowledgment which is regular in form, such, for instance, as the fact that the grantor appeared and acknowledged the execution of the instrument, they can only be impeached for fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
35 P. 1054, 101 Cal. 532, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 1070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/le-mesnager-v-hamilton-cal-1894.