Veeder v. Gilmer

105 S.W. 831, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 464, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 532
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 105 S.W. 831 (Veeder v. Gilmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Veeder v. Gilmer, 105 S.W. 831, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 464, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 532 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

JAMES, Chief Justice.

—The amended petition, in addition to the ordinary case of trespass to try title, alleged that plaintiffs and defendant claim lots 5 and 6 in block 3 of the upper survey of the town of Orange under a common source, to wit: the plaintiff, Annie M. Yeeder; and that plaintiff, Annie M. Yeeder, also claims same by regular chain of title from the State, setting forth a regular chain; and that defendant, Eli Gilmer, claims through a void deed from plaintiff to him.

Defendant’s pleading was not guilty, the several statutes of limitations, improvements, etc., and a cross proceeding to correct the acknowledgment of Mrs. Yeeder to a deed from herself and husband to David Gilmer, under which defendant holds.

Plaintiffs thereupon pleaded certain exceptions, also Mrs. Yeeder’s coverture, to defeat the. pleas of limitations, and also pleaded the four years’ statute in bar of defendant’s right to have the certificate of acknowledgment corrected.

The deed from Mr. and Mrs. Yeeder was made on May 16, 1871, and their acknowledgment taken on that date did not embody any separate acknowledgment of the wife. On October 28, 1871, an acknowledgment of Mrs. Yeeder was taken to the deed by a notary public, which complied in all respects with the statute, except that it omitted to state that the instrument was explained to her. The deed, after describing the lots, refers, in connection therewith, to^ a recorded deed, "To our father, Leander Mindaman, and I, the said Anna Yeeder, formerly Anna Mindaman, the sole heir of my father’s estate, together with my husband, Alcide Yeeder, do by these presents sell and convey to the said David Gilmer all of our rights, title, claim and interest that we have in said lots,’’ etc. The deed was placed of record in Orange County on July 1, 1871. The plaintiffs are the same as^ the grantors in said deed, and have remained husband and wife ever since, residing then and since in the State of Louisiana.

The lots have been in continuous adverse possession of David and Eli Gilmer, and they have placed upon it valuable improvements and kept the taxes paid upon it.

We copy the fudge’s material conclusions: •

4th.—"I conclude that the plaintiffs’ exception to defendant’s plea, to correct the certificate of acknowledgment should have been sustained *467 —that his right to correct the same was barred after four years from the date of same.
5th.—“I conclude that the acknowledgment of a married woman to a deed conveying the land can not be established in a collateral proceeding by oral testimony, when the certificate of the officer who took her acknowledgment is defective, nor in any other way, except in a suit to correct the same, brought within four years, as required by the statutes. The proper acknowledgment of a married woman before the proper authority gives validity to the deed and passes title, the evidence of which is shown by the certificate of the officer under seal. The officer speaks through his seal, and to permit him to deny the certificate and prove the acknowledgment otherwise would be to permit the acknowledgment of a married woman to be established by witness, the same as a feme sole, and therefore conclude that there is no evidence before the court of the acknowledgment by Mrs. Veeder of the deed from herself and husband to David Gilmer, and that the deed is now void, and passes neither legal or equitable title to said lots.”
8th.—“I conclude that said deed is not duly registered as to Mrs. Veeder, but that the same is properly acknowledged and duly registered as to Alcide Veeder, but that said deed shows upon its face that the land is the separate property of Annie M. Veeder, and I therefore conclude that the same does not support the five years’ statute.
9th.—“I conclude that the deed is an instrument in writing, not wanting in intrinsic fairness and honesty, and is therefore color of title, and will support the three years’ statute, and that defendant should recover the lots sued for.”

The second and third assignments of error complain of the ruling that defendant was entitled to the property by virtue of the statute of three years’ limitations. In respect to this we are of opinion, on account of the defective acknowledgment of the wife and the fact that the deed upon its face conveys notice that the lots were the separate estate of the wife, that the deed was neither title nor color of title. Silcock v. Baker, 61 S. W. Rep., 939; Watson v. Watson, 55 S. W. Rep., 183; Berry v. Donley, 26 Texas, 748, and was therefore no basis for the statute of three years.

The ten years’ statute could not avail defendant owing to Mrs. Veeder’s coverture, as the suit was instituted in August, 1902.

Appellee insists that the five years’ statute applies. This is not so for the reason .that it appears upon the face of the deed that the property was separate property of Mrs. Veeder and that she was the real grantor.

It is also insisted by appellee .that the statute of four years, applicable to the proceedings for the correction of an acknowledgment, did not begin to run until the filing of this action, for the reason that plaintiffs were nonresidents of the State when the deed and acknowledgments were made, and have remained such. Appellee’s reasoning on this proposition is that a suit to correct' an acknowledgment is strictly one in personam, and there never was a time when personal service could have been had on plaintiffs to bind them by judgment in such a case. We are of opinion that such a judgment affects, especially in the circumstances of this case, directly *468 the title to land, determines the status of the title, and would be binding on service other than personal.

We are further of opinion that the court did not err in holding that defendant was barred by the statute of four years of the right to have the certificate of acknowledgment corrected, or to recover upon pleadings and proof that the instrument was in fact explained to Mrs. Veeder by the notary. The application of the rule to the facts of this case is without doubt a hardship on defendant; but it is held that a purchaser of separate property of the wife is charged with notice at the time, of a defect in the wife’s acknowledgment, and the Legislature has been liberal in allowing him four years’ time thereafter to procure a correction thereof. The presumption- is that the certificate of the officer speaks the truth and states all that was done in the taking of the acknowledgment, and when four years are allowed to go by without any proceeding to correct it, the certificate must be taken as it stands, if the statute be invoked. It is contended by appellee that the statute was not intended to apply to suit between the parties themselves, that its object was to provide means for the correction of an acknowledgment when desired for the purpose of registration, in order that the record of the deed may constitute notice to third persons dealing with the land. This we are unable to hold in view of decisions on the subject. In Horton v. Davis, 83 Texas, on p. 37, it is stated: “Appellee’s plea of limitation under the four years’ statute we think presents a complete bar to Horton’s remedy to correct the certificate of acknowledgment under his plea seeking such relief.

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Bluebook (online)
105 S.W. 831, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 464, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veeder-v-gilmer-texapp-1907.