Shelton v. Deering

49 Ky. 405, 10 B. Mon. 405, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 12, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 Ky. 405 (Shelton v. Deering) 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
Shelton v. Deering, 49 Ky. 405, 10 B. Mon. 405, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 118 (Ky. Ct. App. 1850).

Opinion

Chief Justice Maes hall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This bill was filed by Patsy Shelton to obtain dower in a tract of land which had been conveyed to Deering in 1837 by a deed executed by her husband and herself, and recorded in proper time on the certificate of her acknowledgment and privy examination, made by two Justices of the Peace of the county in which the land was situated, which was also the county in which the parties resided. The husband acknowledged the deed before the Clerk of the same court.

To avoid the effect of this deed as a bar to the claim of dower, two grounds are assumed in the bill: First, that the two Justices were not authorized to take the acknowledgment and privy examination of the complainant ; and, second, that if they were, the deed became void by a subsequent alteration made by her husband, with the consent of the grantee, after the acknowledgment of the complainant and before that of her husband.

1. With regard to the authority of the Justices. The fourth clause of the act of 1785, (for regulating conveyances,) [406]*406(Stat. Laws, 433,) authorizes the acknowledgment and privy examination of a feme covert, to be taken and certified by two Justices of.the Peace of that county in whicji she dwelleth, if in the United States, who may be empowered by commission to be issued by the Clerk of the court in which the deed ought to be recorded. And the act of 1792, (Stat. Law, 436,) after providing, in the third section, ihui in cases where deeds had been recorded without a relinquishment of dower by the wife of the grantor, she may relinquish her right before two Justices of the Peace in the county, whose certificate of privy examination, &c., shall be recorded, &c., enacts that “in all cases where a deed is made by the parties residing in the county where the land may lie, it shall be lawful for the feme covert to relinquish her right of dower in like manner”, that is, before two Justices of the Peace in the coun- ? ty. Then the second section of the act of 1831, (Stat. Law, 451,) expressly repeals all laws which require a commission to issue to take the relinquishment of dower 01- the acknowledgment of femes to deeds residing 0 J o in or out of this State, conveying lands in this State, and declares that all deeds thereafter made and acknowledged in the manner prescribed by law, without such a commission, to be as effectual as if such commission had been issued, &c.

The act, of Virginia of 1785, authorized two Justices of the Peace of the county where the feme resided, having n commission for that purpose, to t.ike the acknowledge menL and pi ivy examination ofa feme covert to conveyances — & the statute of Kentucky of 1792, authorized two Justices of the Peace under faken™úch°nac° píi°yVl^x'amhiation to a relinquishment or dower, in eases where deeds from the husband had corded from&the" husband; also, “m all eases where a deed is ttesp’ — the6secthe act°of°i83if having dispensed with the commission, two JusPeace tho’ in the thefelne resides6 and the land lies, may take such relinq.uishment& tiol7 6 without The fourthsection of the act of aH.8kindshof in°dower' or'rHit'of ofhi79^to dower only.

We are of opinion that this case comes directly within provision of the third section of the act of 1792, as this deed was made by parties residing in the county , / 1 ° where the land lay, and the relinquishment was taken and certified by two Justices of the Peace of the same county. We are also of opinion that the case is em- , , , r braced by the fourth clause of the act of 1785, as modified by the second section of the act of 1831, dispensinS with the commission. The provision in the third sect'on tbe act of 1792 is applicable to the relinquishment of dower only. The fourth section of the act of 1785 applies to the conveyance or release of any interest which the/e»ie may have, and which might be conveyed or released by deed. And the necessity of a [407]*407commission, as therein required, having beeen dispensed with, the acknowledgment and privy examination of a feme covert, residing any where in the United States, may be effectually taken and certified without a commission by two Justices of the Peace in the county of her residence. There is no defect in the form of the certificate now before us, and the first objection to the deed must be deemed unavailing.

The alteration' of a deed'by the' husband with the-assent of the-grantee, after it was properly acknowledged by husband & wife,in a part which did not change-its legal effectin’ respect to the-wife, held not to-vitiate the deed-a;: *.o the wife.

2. It seems that the deed as oiiginally drawn and executed and acknowledged by the complainant, described the land conveyed by its metes and bounds without naming any quantity; but before it was acknowledged by the husband, he upon objection beiiig made to the omission, inserted or caused to be inserted, the words “containing by survey two hundred acres,” as part of the description ; and also in the covenant of warranty, which purports to be joint, the words “and that the same shall contain two hundred acres.” The question is whether these alterations of the deed have rendered it void as to the wife. Having been made before the instrument was acknowledged by the husband, and with his consent or by his own act, they certainly do not vitiate the deed as to him, but make a part of it as his act, although they make it, as to him, a very different instrument, in legal effect as well as in words, from what it was in its original form.

Did the alterations, or either of them, change the legal effect of the deed, as the act of complainant? If they did, then, as they were made without her consent, and with the consent of the grantee, we think the whole deed should be regarded as void, so far as the complainant is concerned. But if the legal effect of the deed, so far as she is concerned, would be the same whether the interlineations had, been made before or after her execution and acknowledgment of it, that is, if neither her interest in the land nor her liability with respect to it would have been effected by the insertion or omission of the words in question, when done with her knowledge and previous to her acknowledgment of the deed, then as the alteration was not made with [408]*408any view of defrauding or injuring or affecting her, but merely in furtherance of the arrangement and in view of the rights of other parties, and as the alteration would be wholly immaterial in its operation as to her, and was made by the parties between whom it was to operate, we are of opinion that it would not and should not impair the efficacy of the deed as her act and as it existed when executed and acknowledged by her.

The wife uniting in a deed with the husband & relinquishing dower, is not the surety of the husband in the warranty of quantity or of title.

Suppose, then,'that the deed had contained the same words when the complainant acknowledged it, which were afterwards inserted, would these words have imposed any liability on her, or would they in any manner have affected her interest in the land? We think they would not.

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Related

Williams v. Thomas
149 S.W.2d 525 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 Ky. 405, 10 B. Mon. 405, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelton-v-deering-kyctapp-1850.