Veeder v. Gilmer

129 S.W. 595, 103 Tex. 458, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 229
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1910
DocketNo. 2081.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 129 S.W. 595 (Veeder v. Gilmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Veeder v. Gilmer, 129 S.W. 595, 103 Tex. 458, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 229 (Tex. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action by Mrs. Yeeder, joined by her husband, to recover two lots in the town of Orange. Judgment was given for defendant on his defense of three years limitation, and affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. The judgments of both courts below were in accord with an opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals given *461 in a former appeal (Veeder v. Gilmer, 105 S. W., 331), on the question whether or not the deed of a married woman, the certificate of acknowledgment to which is fatally defective and has never been corrected or reformed by judgment in accordance with the statute (Rev. Stats., arts. 4663-5), can be made to constitute color of title under the three years statute of limitation by parol proof that the privy examination and acknowledgment in fact were made as the law required and that the failure of the certificate to show the necessary facts was due to the officer’s omission to certify fully to what actually took place before him. The Court of Civil Appeals held that the deed, with such proof, was not good to pass the title, but was good as color of title to support the plea of limitation. The plaintiff in error attacks the last proposition, while the defendant in error, not only affirms it, but contends that the first is incorrect and that he should have judgment on both. . Our opinion is that the first proposition is correct and that it necessarily follows that the second is incorrect. It has long been settled by the decisions of this court, rendered by founders of much of our jurisprudence, not only that the privy examination of and acknowledgment by a married woman are absolutely essential to the passing of her title to land by deed, but also that the only evidence which the law will admit that the things essential to the completeness thereof actually took place is the certificate of the officer stating them, or the judgment of a court correcting such certificate in accordance with the statute so as to show them. Until the passage of the statute the certificate was the only evidence, and where it did not contain all the law required the deed failed. Looney v. Adamson, 48 Texas, 619; Berry v. Donley, 26 Texas, 737. The only change the statute makes is to permit the facts which actually existed and ought to have been stated in, but were omitted from, the certificate to be established and evidenced by judgment in an action brought for that purpose within the time prescribed by law, and it must follow that such facts can be shown only in two ways for the purpose of passing the title of the married- woman—(1) by the certificate, or (2) by judgment as stated. When it is contended, therefore, that such a deed actually acknowledged, but not' properly certified, is good to pass title,, it is implied that we are legally in possession of the facts of the acknowledgment not evidenced as the law prescribes, when the law will not receive any evidence of such facts other than that so prescribed. Of course, we are not speaking of the evidence admissible in an action to avoid such a deed on equitable grounds in which it is as permissible to go behind the certificate as it is to go behind judgments of courts. We are dealing with the question only as it arises, as it does here, as to the legal effect of a married woman’s deed when it is produced with the certificate fatally defective. The opinion of Judge Moore in Berry v. Donley, and of Judge Roberts, in Looney v. Adamson, have always been regarded as being the law, recognized in many ways that need not be cited, and whatever expressions may be found in some of the later opinions, they have never been overruled nor modified. There are later dicta of which some have been misunderstood, and others seem to favor *462 the proposition for which counsel for defendant in error contends. Of the first kind is the opinion of Judge Stayton in the case of Johnson v. Taylor, 60 Texas, 364. The character of that case must not be overlooked. It was an action to correct a certificate of a married woman’s acknowledgment under the statute before referred to on the validity of which statute an attack was made on the ground, stated generally, that it undertook to take away the title of married women to their property by imparting to their preexisting but void deeds, an effect they never before had; and it was in answering this objection that Judge Stayton wrote the opinion referred to. It shows throughout that he recognized the law to be as we have stated it. Thus, on page 362 he uses this language: “The statute does not attempt to create a right where none before existed, but simply to permit parties to show, if they can, by the judgment of a court, that which, before the statute was enacted, could only be shown by the certificate of the designated officer. A statute which accomplishes this, and no more, can not be said to operate retrospectively.” On page 364 he says: “It simply provides a new rule of evidence and a remedy, by which it may be shown that a contract was really made in accordance with law.” And again, on the same page he says: “In place of the evidence which the law required to be furnished ■ by the certificate of the officer, the statute now, in the absence of such evidence, substitutes the judgment of a court, before which full and free inquiry can be made as to whether or not the acknowledgment was under such circumstances and in such form as the statute requires.

“That the privy examination, acknowledgment and declaration before the officer as required by the statute is the essence and foundation of the obligation of a married woman’s deed is certainly true. Cross v. Evarts, 28 Texas, 532; Berry v. Donley, 26 Texas, 746; Looney v. Adamson, 48 Texas, 621.”

And on page 363 occurs a passage too lengthy to copy, which really states the substance of the entire decision. These passages show that Judge Stayton throughout the opinion treated the statute as supplying a new way of obtaining evidence of the fact which before could be shown only by the certificate of the officer and he nowhere asserted a proposition that would have been in the face of some of the decisions cited by him, viz.: that the facts constituting the privy examination and acknowledgment could be shown by parol, so as to make a deed, the proper acknowledgment of which was not shown either by the certificate as written by the officer or by a judgment correcting that certificate, operative to transfer the title of a married woman. To the contrary, on page 365, he says expressly that the statute must be complied with to pass such title. In sustaining the power of the Legislature thus to provide a means of evidencing the validity of deeds which otherwise would have been invalid, with Ms usual care and at great length, he states the things which the law had made it incumbent on the parties to a deed themselves to do as the things essential to a conveyance of the property of the feme covert, and points out that the statute under discussion dispenses with none of them, that it does not make a con *463 tract of any kind where there was none before, but simply 'gives effect to what the parties themselves had done by providing an additional Idnd of evidence of their action to that formerly required. Some of his expressions in developing this thought seem to have given rise to the erroneous impression that we are discussing.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.W. 595, 103 Tex. 458, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veeder-v-gilmer-tex-1910.