Truman v. Lessee of Lore

14 Ohio St. (N.S.) 144
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1862
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Ohio St. (N.S.) 144 (Truman v. Lessee of Lore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Truman v. Lessee of Lore, 14 Ohio St. (N.S.) 144 (Ohio 1862).

Opinion

Peck, C. J.

On the trial in the district court, the plaintiff in error objected to the reading of certain portions of the deposition of Joseph Struble, taken in a chancery suit between the same parties, affirming the legal incapacity of Henry Lore, [150]*150deceased, at the time the deeds to his son Zacharias were ex ecuted, and also tending to show, that the deeds were pro< cured by the influence and persuasion of the mother of Zacharias. Struble was one of. the subscribing witnesses, and the magistrate who took and certified the acknowledgment of the said Henry, that each of said conveyances was his voluntary act and deed.

The plaintiff in error objected to the testimony for the following reasons :

l! That Struble being the magistrate certifying the acknowledgment, was incompetent to testify to the grantor’s-want of legal capacity at the time.

2. That proof of the acts and declarations of Mrs. Lore-in urging the conveyances, as stated in the deposition, was not competent testimony, at lato, to avoid the deed of one-competent to convey.

The portions objected to read as follows :

“ The mind of Henry Lore, at the time he executed the-deed, was very feeble and weak.”

“ I think there were some influences made, at the time the deed was executed, to make him execute the deed.”

“ I think that Henry Lore, at the time he made this deed; was not capable of making a contract. This was my opinion at the time; and I think he was not capable of disposing of his property at that time, for he was very feeble indeed.”

And being cross-examined as to the “ influences ” alluded to, and their manifestations, he also stated :

“ From the fact that the old lady went to the bed, and talked to him, and he seemed to take no part in the matter, I thought he was influenced to make the deed.

“ She refused to execute the deed to Thomas, and went out of doors, and I went out and conversed with her, and reasoned' the matter with her, and Thomas afterward agreed to give the-six dollars per acre for his. She refused to execute this deed unless Thomas would give six dollars per acre, and the old man should make the deed to Zacharias; that is, she refused to give or relinquish her right of dower.”

I can not say there was much said at the time; for the con[151]*151versation was between him [Henry Lore] and his wife, and was very low, so that I could not hear. I know the old lady went out of doors, and refused to sign a deed going to Thomas Lore, son of Henry Lore, unless the old man would give this deed to Zacharias, and Thomas should pay six dollars per acre, instead of three dollars, for the land he was about to have deeded to him.”

The magistrate does not exercise judicial functions in taking such acknowledgment. He is not required to determine and to certify as to the grantor’s capacity, and we presume he never supposed he had done so, by using the word “ voluntary ” in his certificate. If the grantor acknowledges the “ signing and sealing ” of the instrument, it is his duty to certify that fact, and there his duty ends.

His act, though official, is purely ministerial, and the adverse party is not thereby precluded from showing the grantor’s legal incapacity at the time. 2 Selden, 434; 8 Barb, 463; 4 Johns. 161.

The plaintiff’s counsel seems to admit this, but insists, that public policy prohibits a magistrate from disproving a fact to which he has certified. But the argument loses much, if not all of its force, when we consider he is not required to certify any such thing, nor empowered to make any such investigation.

The reasons which would close the lips of the magistrate,, also apply to the subscribing witnesses. The grantor, under the statute, must ,dso acknowledge the signing and sealing to them, and they in the form used in the deeds, attest that acknowledgment. If all were excluded, public policy would be violated, rather than promoted, by the exclusion.

We do not doubt that Struble was a competent witness to prove the legal incapacity of Henry jLore, at the time the deeds were executed; the weight and effect of his testimony being left to the jury, and contrasted, if need be, with the certificate he had signed.

The objections to portions of his deposition, relating to the mere weakness of body and mind of Henry Lore not amounting to legal incapacity; and to influences and persuasions of [152]*152bis wife, not amounting to duress, will be considered in connection with the charge of the court upon the same points.

The bill of exceptions does not profess to set out all the testimony, of which there is said to have been an immense mass, occupying several days in its accumulation; but only so much thereof, as was necessary to show the pertinency of the instructions moved by the plaintiff in error. But it sufficiently appears that the formal execution of the two deeds from Henry to Zacharias Lore was not disputed, and that the testimony was limited mainly to the capacity of the grantor; the extreme weakness of his body and mind; and the exer eise of undue influence over him by Mrs. Lore, and the further point, that there had been no such delivery of either deed, as vested the title in the grantee and those claiming under him. This paucity of statement as to the testimony, makes it extremely difficult for us to determine whether some of the qualifications annexed by the court to the instructions asked, were, or were not, authorized by the testimony in the cause. We therefore propose to confine ourselves, mainly, to the consideration of certain points arising out of the instructions given, and the instructions refused, and as to which no such difficulty exists.

The plaintiff in error having given in evidence the two deeds from Henry Lore to his son Zacharias, then about sixteen years of age, signed by the said Henry with his mark, and purporting to be duly sealed, attested and acknowledged, and having also proved that Zacharias and those claiming under him had been in possession of the lands in controversy, in accordance with said deeds, ever since the death of said Henry, in October, 1842, a period of more than eighteen years, asked the court to charge the jury as follows :

“ That a deed executed by the grantor’s making his mark, at the place of signature, is quite as well executed, in estimation of the law, as by writing his name in full; and the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff, in this case, to satisfy the jury that Henry Lore, senior, did not assent to the execution of the two deeds to his son, Zacharias Lore, exhibited in evi[153]*153-dence, in the form and manner in which those deeds appear, on their face, to have been executed.”

This charge the court refused to give as asked, but in reply •thereto did charge:

1. “ That a deed would be as well executed in that manner as by the grantor signing the same. But the jury are to inquire, from all the evidence, as to the fact of the deed having been executed by the grantor.

It is necessary that the grantor should have been of sound and disposing mind at the time of executing the deed, and that Ihe should have been left to the free exercise of such mind in its execution.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio St. (N.S.) 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/truman-v-lessee-of-lore-ohio-1862.