Mary N. Woodbourne v. . Ralph Gorrel and Others

66 N.C. 82
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 66 N.C. 82 (Mary N. Woodbourne v. . Ralph Gorrel and Others) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mary N. Woodbourne v. . Ralph Gorrel and Others, 66 N.C. 82 (N.C. 1872).

Opinion

PeabsoN, C. J.

Many interesting questions were presented and argued by the learned counsel, on both sides in reference to the examination and probate, in 1823. We will not enter into them, for in our opinion, the title of the plaintiff passed beyond all question, by the proceedings had in 1833. So, what we might say in regard to the proceedings in 1823, would be obiter, which the profession will- do this Court the justice to say, has at all times been avoided ; however much it cut off an opportunity for a useless display of labor and learning.

The validity of the conveyance under which the defendants make title depends upon the Dev. Statutes, ch. 3¶, sec. 9-10. Act. 1751, sec. 9 enacts, “ all conveyances, &c., acknowledged, &c,” shall be as valid in law, to convey all the estate of the wife, in svch lands, whether in fee simple, right of dower, or other estate, as if done by fine and recovery, or any other ways and means whatsoever.” Sec. 10 enacts, that when it shall be represented to the Judge or County Court, that the wife is so aged or infirm, that she cannot ti-avel to the Judge or County Court, it shall be lawful for the Judge or County Court to have a commission issued to two or more, for receiving the acknowledgment of the wife, and “ such deed acl&nowleged before them, after they have examined her privily and apart *85 from, her husband, touching her consent, and certified by the County Court to which the commission shall be returnable, shall by order of the County Court be registered with the commission and returns, and shall be as effectual as if personalty] aelcnowledged, before the Judge or Ooxrnty Court, by such feme covert.”

In our case, the examination of the feme covert, was taken by commissioners; by the section last cited, the return of the commissioners accepted by the County Court and ordered to be registered with the commission and return, is made as effectual as if personally acknowledged before the Judge or County Court, and by the previous section the acknowledgement before the Judge, makes the conveyance “ as valid in law to convey all the estate, as if done by fine and recovery,” so we are to en-quire what was the effect of a fine and recovery according to the common law, — that will decide the question of the admissibility of the evidence, the rejection of which is the error, set out in the bill of exceptions.

2 Blackstonds Com348 ; a fine, is an assurance of record, “sometimes said to be a feoffment of record, though it might with moré accuracy, be called an acknowledgment of a feoffment on record/'’ JBut more particularly a fine may be described to be amicable composition or agreement of a suit by leave of the king or his justices, “whereby the lands in question become or are acknowledged to be, the right of one of the parties.” The party to whom the land is to be conveyed or assured, commences an action or suit at law, by suing out a writ or precipe, called a writ of covenant, and the suit is compromised, and the terms entered on the record; by 27, JEdw. 1 — the note of the fine shall be openly read in the Court of Common Pleas. “ This is almost the only Act that a feme covert is permitted by law to do, (and that because she is privily examined as to her voluntary consent, which removes the general suspicion of compulsion by her husband): it is therefore the usual and almost the only safe method, whereby she *86 can join in the salo of any estate in ib 55. A recovery is, like a fine, a suit in the Court of Common Ricas, and the dLJioivjr-co is that instead of a compromise entered of record, ilio'u R a judgment entered in favor of the demandant53 ib 357. This reference to the common learning in regard to fines am! recoveries is made, because the counsel for the plaintiff, in his learned and earnest argument, did not advert to the fact that the Revised Statutes, Act of 1751, gives to the acknowledgment of a deed by husband and wife, before a judge of the County Court, (the wife being privily examined,) the force and efieet of afine and recovery. Fines and recoveries are matters of record in the Court of Common Pleas — it follows, that the acknowledgment and privy examination of a married woman before a judge or County Court as required by the statute, lias the force of, and is in fact a record. Suppose the record of the Court,of Common Pleas in England, sets out a fine duly levid by husband and wife, was it ever heard of, that the wife could afterwards impeach the verity of the record, and be allowed to aver, (not in a direct proceeding, to vacate and set aside the fine, but in an action of ejectment, when the fine is offerred in evidence as a conveyance of her title,) that the record was untrue, in this, that she was not examined separate and apart from her husband, (as is held in one of the eases cited by the learned counsel) or in this, that she did not acknowledge that she had executed the deed voluntarily and without compulsion, for that “ she had no recollection thereof,” and could prove that she was then “in asíate of mind too feeble to do any intelligent act ?” which is our caer, finp-pose the record of the County Court had set out the fact that Allen Woodbourneandliis wife, Mary N. Woodbournc, at May Term 1833, appeared in open Court and achio'wledyecl the execution of the deed, and thereupon she was examined by the Court, through one of its members in the verge of the Court, separate and apart from ber husband, and acknowledged that she had executed the deed voluntarily and of her own accord. *87 without any compulsion or constraint on the part of her husband, whereupon it is ordered that the acknoweldgment and examination be entered of record, and the deed together with a copy oí the record, be registered, “ could Mary N. Wood-bourne be afterwards heard to impeach the rarity of the record, collaterally, in an action for the land, when this ‘ assurance of record’was offerred in evidence ?” Surely not. But in our case, “ the execution of the deed was proved in Court by John M. Dick, and upon proof of the inability of Mary N. Woodbourne (the wife) to attend Court, to acknowledge the same, a commission was duly issued, and her privy ex u<> ¡ ation taken, returned, and recorded according to law,” in pursuance of seo. 10, Rev. Statute, ch. 87.

The learned counsel could not deny that this proceeding was of the same force as if the acknowledgment had been in open Court, and yet the position taken by him show's that his vigorous mind was led astray by a see i ing difference.

Perhaps, the legislation by which the form and solemnity required to levy a fine at the common law, is dispensed with, for the purpose of making a transfer of land by married women, easy and cheap, is unwise, for according to the common law, a fine could only be levied by acknowledgment in the Court of Common Pleas. By Statute Rdw.2., “if any by age, impotence or casualty be witholden, that he cannot come to our Court, two, or one of the justices, by assent of the rest shall go to the party and receive his cognizance on the plea in which the fine ought to be levied, &c.” ,

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.C. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mary-n-woodbourne-v-ralph-gorrel-and-others-nc-1872.