Wehrle v. Price

94 S.E. 477, 80 W. Va. 666, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 79
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 94 S.E. 477 (Wehrle v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wehrle v. Price, 94 S.E. 477, 80 W. Va. 666, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 79 (W. Va. 1917).

Opinions

Williams, Judge:

To a bill of review filed in the circuit court of Kanawha county by Elsie Price, an infant, by Jessie James her next friend, to review and set aside a compromise decree made on the 29th of May, 1912, in a chancery suit brought by H. L. Wehrle against A. E. Price, trustee, and others, the defendants demurred. The court overruled the demurrers, and, pursuant to the provisions of See. 1, Ch. 135, of the Code, as [667]*667amended by chapter 69, Acts 1915, at the request -of the parties, certified to this court for its determination two questions of law arising on said demurrers: (1) Whether the compromise decree was binding on the infant, Elsie Price; and (2) Whether a certain deed of date April 18, 1902, from James A. Price, trustee, and Mary J. Price to Ethel Price is a valid conveyance.

This court was formerly of the opinion that the demurrers had been properly overruled and, at a former term, to-wit,. on the 13th of February, 1917, entered an order sustaining the action of the circuit court. Petition for a rehearing was filed and a rehearing granted.

If the contention of demurrants, that the deed mentioned in the second question operated to pass to Ethel Price a fee simple title to the land involved in the litigation, the answer to the question first propounded becomes immaterial, because, in that event, Elsie Price is clearly not prejudiced by the compromise decree of which she complains.

In 1865 Archibald Price, and others, conveyed to James A. Price, trustee for Mary J. Price 98 acres of land in Kana-wha county. No powers were expressly conferred upon the trustee by the deed; he was merely a dry trustee holding the legal title for Mary J. Price, and her heirs.

On the 18th of April, 1902, Mary J. Price and James A. Price, trustee, executed a deed to “Ethel Price and the heirs of A. 0. and Ethel Price,” for 31 acres, part of the 98 acre tract. The bill avers that James A. Price was husband of as well as trustee for Mary J. Price, but the marital relation does not appear either on the face of the deed or in the certificate of acknowledgment thereto. The deed purports to be made by Mary J. Price and James A. Price, trustee, and is so signed and acknowledged. It is contended by counsel for the infant, Elsie Price, that the deed is inoperative to pass the title of Mary J. Price, because she was a married woman, and it is not made to appear either on the face of the deed or in the certificate of acknowledgment thereto that her husband joined her in the execution thereof. It is averred in the bill and, for the purposes of passing on the demurrers, must be taken as true, that James A. Price, the trustee, was [668]*668also her husband. On the other hand, counsel for demurrees contend that it should appear from the deed itself, or the acknowledgment thereto, that he joined in the execution of it in his capacity as husband. It is well settled that a married woman’s deed has no effect to pass her estate in land unless her husband joins her in the execution thereof. This court has decided that it is not necessary the relationship should appear on the face of the deed itself; that it is sufficient evidence of his consent if he signs the deed with his wife and acknowledges it. Morgan v. Snodgrass, 49 W. Va. 387. Was it necessary for James A. Price to sign the deed in his dual capacity as trustee and also as husband in order to evidence his consent as husband? We do not think so.

Being both trustee and husband, it is inconceivable that he should have joined his wife in the former capacity for the purpose of conveying the legal title to land in which his wife had the complete equity, and not thereby have intended to express his consent in the latter capacity, which was indispensable to the validity of the wife’s conveyance. It was not necessary for him to designate the capacity in which he signed in order to give effect to his signature in whatever capacity it ivas necessary for him to act.

Does the acknowledgment show a substantial compliance with the statute respecting acknowledgments by husband and wife? The statute nowhere expressly declares that the relationship must be certified. But Sec. 4, Ch. 73, Code, says it must be to the “following effect”, and then in the form given uses words showing the marital relation. But if the relation does in fact exist, is the failure to certify it fatal to a married woman’s deed? If a married woman should fraudulently induce someone to impersonate her husband in order to give effect to a deed in the execution of which her husband was not willing to join, and the officer taking the acknowledgment should certify that they were husband and wife, his certificate would certainly not be conclusive of the fact, although, under our law, the officer’s certification is a quasi judicial act. Even when the privy examination of the wife was necessary, the certificate was conclusive, when not fraudulent, of every material fact required by the statute to [669]*669be certified. If Ms certificate is not conclusive, as to tbe fact of relationsMp, how then can the omission of it from his certificate be material? If the relationsMp, even though certified, can be successfully denied, when it does not exist, and the deed thereby avoided, why then, for like reason and with equal propriety may it not be shown to exist, when the certificate is silent as to the fact? We are cited to no authority, nor have we, after diligent search, found any to support the proposition contended for, which, upon careful reconsideration, we think is hypertechnical. We are of the opinion that so much of the form of acknowledgment by a husband and wife, as provides for certifying the marital relation, is merely directory; and the omission thereof from the certificate does not vitiate the deed of a married woman, in which her husband has actually joined. Although not directly in point the case of Shumate v. Shumate, 78 W. Va. 576, 90 S. E. 824, is apropos. We there held that a writing purporting to be the deed-of a married woman, though not acknowledged in'the form required by the statute for the acknowledgment of a married woman, living separate and apart from her husband, was nevertheless a binding contract on her to convey, it being proven that she was in fact at the time living separate and apart from her husband. If it was proper to show the fact that Mrs. Shumate was living separate and apart from her husband by evidence dehors the writing in order to give it some effect, why is it not equally proper in this instance to prove the relationship between Mary J. Price and James A. Price in order to give her deed the effect which they both evidently intended it should have?

The conveyance to ‘ ‘ Ethel Price and the heirs of A. O. and Ethel Price, ” A. O. Price and Ethel Price being husband and wife, vested in Ethel Price an equitable estate in tail, which by the statute, Sec. 9, Ch. 71, was converted into a fee simple. The word heirs in this instance is used in its technical sense. Irvin v. Stover, 67 W. Va. 356; and Tomlinson v. Nickell, 24 W. Va. 148.

A. O. Price died leaving Ethel Price a widow. She after-wards married one P. H. Odell. During her widowhood, to-wit, in November, 1906, she leased 26 acres, a part of the [670]*67031 acres aforesaid, to tbe United Fuel Gas Company for oil and gas purposes. On November 28, 1911, Mary J. Price and James A.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.E. 477, 80 W. Va. 666, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wehrle-v-price-wva-1917.