Wilkerson v. Dennison

113 Tenn. 237
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 113 Tenn. 237 (Wilkerson v. Dennison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkerson v. Dennison, 113 Tenn. 237 (Tenn. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shields

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Complainant attacks a deed made by her husband, when in life, and herself, conveying certain lands of the former, upon the ground that it has no valid certificate of her privy examination annexed and registered.

The relief sought is a recovery of homestead.

It is admitted that the privy examination was taken by S. E. Murray, the legally appointed deputy of D. A. Griggs, clerk of the county court of Henderson county, and that he made and appended to the deed a certificate in proper form, save that it recites that the examination [239]*239was taken by D. A. Griggs, county clerk, and purports to have been signed by Mm officially in Ms own proper person, and tMs is the gronnd of the attack. It is said that, the examination haying been taken by S. E. Murray in the absence of his principal, the certificate should have been made in his name as deputy clerk, and so signed by him, and, having been made in the name of the clerk, and attested by his signature, it is void.

Clerks of the county courts of this State are authorized to appoint deputies with full power to transact all the business of such clerks. Code 1858, section 4050, subsec. 4 (Shannon’s Ed., section 5865).

Deputies appointed under this statute are vested with all the powers and authority of principal clerks.

This court construing this section in Martin v. Porter, 4 Heisk., 413, said:

“The power to appoint a deputy necessarily involves the idea that he shall act in the place of and for the regular clerk, and exercise the same powers; the acts of the deputy being the acts of the principal clerk by his lawfully appointed agent.”

The statute providing for the authentication of instruments for registration authorizes the acknowledgment, which includes privy examination, to be made by the persons executing them who reside or are within the State, before the clerk, or his legally appointed deputy, of any county court of the State. Code 1858, section 2039 (Shannon’s Ed., section 3713).

There can be no doubt but that under both of the [240]*240sections of tbe Code referred to a legally appointed deputy of a clerk of the county court is authorized to take the privy examination of a married woman to a conveyance of her real estate, and the only open question is whether or not the certificate which is required to be made of the examination shall show that it was made and signed by him as such deputy, or made in the name of the principal and authenticated by his signature.

There is nothing in either of these sections directing the course to be pursued, and the question' must be determined upon principle.

Mr. Mechem, in his work upon Public Officers, section 585, has very clearly stated the law upon the subject in these words:

“The question in whose name a deputy officer should act is one of much importance and of considerable apparent uncertainty. The conflict in the cases is, however, believed to be more apparent than real, and to be readily settled by reference to principles already considered.

“In several of the States the authority to act in an official capacity is given to the principal alone, or, if the appointment of deputies is recognized or authorized by law, they are regarded as the mere private agents or servants of the principal, and not as independent public officers deriving independent authority from the law. Where such is the case, the authority exercised by the deputy is manifestly a derivative and subsidiary one — it is the authority conferred upon the principal, and not [241]*241an authority inherent in the deputy. It follows then, logically and legally, that the authority should be exercised in the name of him in whom it exists, and not in his name, who of himself has no recognized authority at all. The execution should, therefore, be in the name of the principal alone or in the name of the principal by the deputy.

“In other States, as has been seen, the deputy is recognized as an independent public officer, and is endowed by law with authority to do any act which his principal might do. In these cases, where the authority exists in the deputy himself by operation of law, and is not derived solely through the principal, it is well executed in the name of him in whom it exists, the deputy himself.

“Under either state of facts the authority of a special deputy, who, as has been seen, is regarded as the mere private agent or servant of the principal, would, unless otherwise provided by statute, be properly exercised in the name of the principal.”

We are of the opinion that deputy clerks of the county courts of this State are authorized to take and certify the acknowledgment of deeds in both the names of their principals and themselves as deputies. The authority to do so in the name of their principals is conferred by section 4050, supra, vesting in them all the powers of principal clerks; and section 2039, supra, confers upon them in their official capacity as deputies the authority independent of that derived from the principal clerks. [242]*242This last was held by this court in tbe case of Beaumont v. Yeatman, 8 Humph., 542, where an acknowledgment or probate made and signed by a deputy clerk in his own name, that of the principal nowhere appearing, was heid valid, and the deed properly authenticated for reg-itration; and this was also reaffirmed in the later, case of Tipton v. Jones, 10 Heisk., 565.

We have no reported case in this State in which the validity of an acknowledgment taken and certified by a deputy in the name of his principal, like the one here involved, has been called in question. It is true that Judge Turley, in the case of Beaumont v. Yeatman, above referred to, does state that certificates of acknowledgments should be made by and in the name of the officer, taking the acknowledgments, but the question we now have for decision, was not involved there, and this statement was mere dictum.

This precise question arose in the case of Talbott v. Hooser, 12 Bush, 414. The acknowledgment to the deed challenged in that case was taken by R .E. Harrison, the deputy, and the certificate was written so as to show that the maker of the conveyance acknowledged the execution of it before B. M. Harrison, the clerk of the court whose signature also appeared to it, as if it had been signed by himself. These were admitted facts. The contention of complainant was that the certificate was not the act of B. M. Harrison, because he did not take the acknowledgment or make the certificate; and that it was not that of R. E. Harrison, the deputy, since it did not appear to be made by him, and he did not sign it.

[243]*243The court, in bolding tbe certificate valid, said:

“Tbe deputy ‘is but tbe officer’s shadow, and doth all things in tbe name of tbe officer himself, and nothing in bis own name, and bis grantor (principal) shall answer for him’ (3 Kent, 458); and in Triplett, etc., v. Gill, etc., 7 J. J. Marsh., 438, and Commonwealth v. Arnold, 3. Litt., 316, this court held that a deputy bad a right to sign bis principal’s name, and in tbe latter case that a deputy appointed merely by parol bad such authority.

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