Summer v. Mitchell

29 Fla. 179
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 29 Fla. 179 (Summer v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Summer v. Mitchell, 29 Fla. 179 (Fla. 1892).

Opinion

Raney, C. J.:

Appellant sued appellee in enjectment, and the result was a judgment in favor of defendant.

The first error assigned is the refusal of the judge to admit in evidence a certified copy of the record of a «deed of the land in controversy, a lot in Ocala, from Hubbard L. Hart and Mary Elizabeth Hart, his wife, to A. Gf. Summer and Henry Smith. The deed purports to have been executed for and in consideration «of six hundred dollars, in Thomas county, State of Georgia, July 9th, 1863. Its conclusion is as follows:

In testimony whereof, we, the said party of the first part, have hereunto set our hands and seals this the •day and year first above written.

Hubbard L. Hart, [seal.]

M. E. Hart. [seal.]

Signed, sealed and delivered in presence:

Jacob Kubitskik,

T. C. Brace well, J. P.

[195]*195The certificate of the acknowledgment made by the grantors of the execution of this deed is as follows : State or G-eorgia,

Thomas County.

Be it remembered that on this 22nd day' of July, A. D., 1863, personally came before me, the undersigned deputy Clerk of the Circuit Court in and for the county and State aforesaid, Hubbard L. Hart and Mary Elizabeth Hart, who respectively acknowledged each for himself and herself, and the said Mary Elizabeth Hart being absent from her husband, the said Hubbard L. Hart, acknowledged voluntarily, without fear or compulsion of or from her said husband, that they signed, sealed and delivered the foregoing instrument for the purposes therein mentioned. In witness whereof I herewith set my hand and seal of office the day and year above mentioned.

T. C. Bracewell, Deputy Clerk S. & J. C.

The deed thus executed and acknowledged was admitted to record in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Marion county on the 30th day of July, 1863, by the clerk of that court. His certificate •of the record need not be set out. A copy of this record duly certified March 19th, 1888, by the then clerk, being offered in evidence was objected to by defendant on the general ground that the deed had not been duly proven, acknowledged and recorded as [196]*196required by law, and the objection having been sus tained, the ruling was excepted to.

The particulars wherein the acknowledgment, or the copy of the record, was objected to as being deficient, are not stated m the bill of exceptions; still whatever objection might have been taken here to the generality of the objection below had been waived by the specifications of the particular grounds of objection in the brief of counsel for appellant, upon whose behalf alone the cause has been argued before us. Carpenter vs. Dexter, 8 Wall., 524.

These grounds'of objection are: 1st. That it does not appear that the parties .making the acknowledgment were known to the officer taking the acknowledgment. 2d. A deputy cannot take an acknowledgment. 3d. It does not appear that the officer acted within his jurisdiction. 4th. The acknowledgment was taken before an officer who had no authority .to take acknowledgment of deeds in this State.

At the time of the execution and acknowledgment of the deed in question, viz: July, 1863, the statute regulating the acknowledgment or proof, made out of the State, of deeds conveying any interest in real estate within the State, for the purpose of being used or of entitling such deeds to be recorded here, was that of February 3rd, 1834, entitled ‘an act concerning the authentication of conveyances,” as amended by act of February 27th, 1340. The first section of the act of 1834, provided that the deed should be acknowledged by the party or parties executing the same, or that [197]*197the execution thereof by such party or parties should be proved by a subscribing witness thereto, “before the officers hereinafter named, and in the manner and form hereinafter mentioned;” and its second section enacted that- no acknowledgment or proof of any such deed “executed or acknowledged out of the State should be taken by an officer or officers aforesaid, unless the officer taking the same shall know or have satisfactory proof that the person making such acknowledgment is the individual described in and who executed the deed or instrument under seal.” Its third section provides, “in addition to the requisites contained in the preceding sections,” for the privy examination of married women (residing out of the territory) executing such an instrument; and the' fourth section made provisions as to the acknowledg- ■ ments made out of the territory, but within the United States, and was supplanted and expressly repealed by the above mentioned act of 1840. This statute, entitled, “An act in amendment of” the former act, enacted that all such instruments acknowledged out of the territory, but within the United States or its territories, with the intent to be used or recorded here, should be acknowledged or proved before one of the commissioners appointed under the act of January 24th, 1831, and in those cities •or counties wherein no commissioner “is or shall be .appointed under said law, or in case of his sickness, death, or inability to perform the duties of his office where he may have been appointed, ’ ’ that such acknowledgment and proof might be taken before the [198]*198chief-justice, judge, presiding justice, or president of any court of record of the United States, or of any state or territory thereof having a seal and a clerk or prothonotary; but that no proof of acknowledgment, taken by any such chief-justice, judge, presiding justice or president, should entitle such' instrument to be recorded, unless taken within some place or district to which the jurisdiction of the court to which he belongs should extend; and that the place of taking such acknowledgment should be set forth in the certificate, and also that the court of which he was such officer was a court of record, and that such certificate-of acknowledgment shouldj be accompanied by a certificate of the clerk or prothonotary of the court, under its seal, to the effect that the former officer was duly appointed or authorized as such judge, justice or president. The fifth section of the act of 1834 relates to acknowledgments or proofs taken out of the United. States, but in North or South America, or in Europe;, and the sixth, or remaining section is: That the certificate of such acknowledgment as aforesaid by the officer before whom the same shall be taken shall contain and set forth substantially the matter required to be done or proved to make such acknowldgment effectual by this act.

The above legislation [is to be found in Thompson’s. Digest, pp. 181-2,¡jand McClellan’s Digest, pp. 216-17, the word State being properly substituted for that of territory, when applicable to Florida.

Thus the law as to such acknowledgment or proof [199]*199stood in 1873, and, we may further observe, that up to this time acknowledgments or proof made in the State-had to be made before the officer authorized by law to-record the instrument, or before some judicial officer,, (act of November 15th, 1828, McClellan’s Digest, sec. 6, p. 215) or before a Notary Public (act of February 8th, 1861, McClellan’s Digest, sec. 3, p. 792).

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Bluebook (online)
29 Fla. 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summer-v-mitchell-fla-1892.