Simmons v. Dantzler

118 So. 829, 152 Miss. 428, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 230
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1928
DocketNo. 27330.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 118 So. 829 (Simmons v. Dantzler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons v. Dantzler, 118 So. 829, 152 Miss. 428, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 230 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

Ethridge, P. J.

L. N., A. F., and GL B. Dantzler, complainants in the court below, appellees here, filed suit to establish their title to a certain one hundred and sixty acres of land described in the bill of complaint against W. E. Simmons et al., appellants here, defendants in the court below. Both appellants and appellees claimed title to this land through deeds derived from James A. Dos-sett, who homesteaded the land in question. The complainants (appellees here) filed a record title deraigned from the United States government through mesne conveyances to themselves. The bill alleges that complainants and their vendees have been in open, continuous, notorious, and adverse possession of the land for longer than the statutory period.

The deed from the United States to James A. Dossett bears date August .19,1892, and was filed for record April 2, 1894. The deed from James A. Dossett to Joseph C. *432 Griffin was dated March 31,1894. Joseph C. Griffin deeded the land to the Griffin Land Company, a corporation, on February 28, 1908, which deed was filed for record in Book 1, p. 356, in Forrest county. The deed from the Griffin Land Company to L. N., A. F., and G. B. Dantzler was dated June 3D, 1925, and' filed for record January 24, 1927. The deed from James A. Dossett to Simmons Bros, was dated March 9, 1892. Simmons Bros, consisted of W. E. Simmons and Abner Simmons. James A. Dossett died some ten years prior to the trial.

It appears that the deed to Simmons Bros, purports to be signed by mark, and was acknowledged before one Perkins, a member of the board of supervisors of Perry county, but was not placed of record. The deed from Dossett to J. C. Griffin was also acknowledged before Perkins, the member of the board of supervisors; but, when he was placed on the stand as a witness, he failed to recollect the transactions. He stated that the writing resembled his, and he thought it was his, but was not absolutely certain. The deed from James A. Dossett to J. C. Griffin was not signed by mark, but appeared to be Dossett’s written signature and in the same handwriting as Perkins’ signature, who acknowledged the deed, and possibly signed Dossett’s name thereto. The brother of Dossett testified! that James A. Dossett, the grantor in each of the deeds, was unable to write his name, and it was shown that he was an illiterate man.

One contention is that the deed referred to above from James A. Dossett to Griffin was void because not signed, in the proper handwriting of D'ossett, or by his proper mark, and that the proof showed that his name was signed to the deed by the same person who took the acknowledgment thereto, and that under section 1433, Hemingway’s 1927 Code (section 1601, Code of 1906), the signature must be in the proper handwriting of such person, and, in case he be unable to write his name, then by *433 his proper mark; that it was the purpose of the statute to require actual writing of each name by the person signing an instrument of this kind where he could write, and if he could not write, that it be made by a mark made by the grantor, and not by another. In Mallory v. Walton, 119 Miss. 396, 81 So. 113, it was held that where a party acknowledged and delivered a deed, he adopts as his signature the mark appended thereto, although it may have been written by another; and also that the presumption is that a certified acknowledgment states the truth, which presumption can be overthrown only by evidence so clear, strong, and convincing as to exclude all reasonable doubt as to the validity of the instrument. The deed there involved seems to havé been made on the 15th day of March, 1.887, and thereafter, on the 4th day of May, 1908, the grantees in this deed conveyed their interest inutile land to a third person through whom the appellants claimed title. It was claimed in the suit that the deed made by Mallory and his wife was void because she had not made her proper mark, and that the law required her to sign a deed executed by her husband conveying the homestead, and that the deed being not signed by her in person was void. At page 404 of the official report of this case, section 1601, Code of 1906, cited supra, was quoted, and then the court said:

“The signature here in question does not purport to be in Mrs. Walton’s proper handwriting, but to have been made by her mark, and what we will have to say must be limited to a signature of such character. The reason for this caution being that while a mark made by another may be adopted as a signature, there may be a difference under the last statute hereinbefore set. forth between the power of a person to adopt a signature made for him by another and which purports to be in his own proper handwriting, and his power to adopt such a signature made by a mark, as to which an opinion is not now necessary. Ferguson v. Monroe County, 71 Miss. 524, 14 *434 So. 81; Sheehan v. Kearney, 82 Miss. 688, 21 So. 41, 35 L. R. A. 102. 'While Mrs. Whlton denied signing- the deed' in controversy, she did not deny that the facts stated in the certificate of acknowledgment are true; that is, that she personally appeared before R. Ftrank, Mayor of the town of Slate Springs, and ex officio justice of the peace, and-acknowledged that she ‘signed and delivered’ the deed. So that if her testimony be construed most strongly against her, as it should be, we must hold that the recital in the certificate is true, and, if true, then by acknowledging- and delivering- the deed she adopted as her. signature the mark appended' as such thereto, though it may have been made by another. ’ ’

Ferguson v. Monroe County, supra, was a case based, on the local option statutes, and the court held that, unless the signatures to the petition therein required were signed by the persons themselves, the petitions would not satisfy the requirements of section 1610', Code of 1906, which required a petition in writing- signed by one-third of the qualified electors “signed by.themselves,” citing section 1520, which requires, as does the present section 1601, Code of 1906:, the signature of every person to be in the proper handwriting, and the court there said:

“There is no escape from this positive and plain requirement, and it must be duly observed. Its effect is to make necessary the proper handwriting- of the petitioner, or his ‘proper mark,’ whatever that is, if he cannot write. N'o more is a signature required by law to be affixed by proxy. It must be signed by the hand of the petitioner himself. Ita■ lex scripta est, and for wise purposes as we must suppose. Anyhow, it cannot be disregarded, whatever may be thought of its wisdom, and it renders worthless every name on the petition not put there by the hand of the petitioner.”

This case does not present a case where a signature was solemnly acknowledged before an officer authorized *435 to take acknowledgments to such instruments, and is not necessarily-controlling where such acknowledgments may be legally taken by officers charged with the performance of that duty.

In the case of Sheehan v. Kearney, 82 Miss. 688, 21 So.

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Bluebook (online)
118 So. 829, 152 Miss. 428, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-dantzler-miss-1928.