In a suit to set aside a deed of trust executed to secure the
payment of a note signed by husband and wife, and the
acknowledgment of which was certified as required by law, it was in
proof that the wife signed the note and the deed, having an
opportunity to read both before signing them; she was before an
officer competent to take her acknowledgment, and he came into her
presence at the request of the husband, to take it, and she knew,
or could have ascertained, while in the presence of the officer, as
well to what property the deed referred as the object of its
execution.
Held that the certificate must stand against a
mere conflict of evidence as to whether she willingly signed,
sealed, and delivered the deed, or had its contents explained to
her by the officer, or was examined privily and apart from her
husband, and that even if it be only
prima facie evidence
of the facts therein stated, it cannot be impeached, in respect to
those facts, except upon proof which clearly and fully shows it to
be false or fraudulent.
Bill in equity to set aside a deed of trust given by husband and
wife of wife's real estate to secure payment of a debt of the
husband. The following averment in the bill shows the ground of the
action:
"7. Complainant charges and avers that said deed of trust (and
the other paper, whatever it may be) is a fraud upon her rights;
that the same is void in law, in that she did not know its
contents, and that she did not acknowledge the same in any manner,
either in the presence or hearing of her husband, or separately and
privately and apart from him; that she never borrowed or ever
received one cent or any other sum therefor or on account of said
deed of trust; that the whole transaction was fraudulent and void;
that said John Little is dead, and said Holtzman now claims to be
the holder of said debt, and she is advised that her only remedy is
in this Court."
The case was mainly argued on the facts.
Page 109 U. S. 574
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
It is provided by the Revised Statutes of the United States,
relating to the District of Columbia, that
"When any married woman shall be a party executing a deed for
the conveyance of real estate or interest therein, and shall only
be relinquishing her right of dower, or when she shall be a party
with her husband to any deed, it shall be the duty of the officer
authorized to take acknowledgments, before whom she may appear, to
examine her privily and apart from her husband, and to explain
Page 109 U. S. 575
to her the deed fully;"
further,
"If upon such privy examination and explanation, she shall
acknowledge the deed to be her act and deed, and shall declare that
she had willingly signed, sealed, and delivered the same, and that
she wished not to retract it, the officer shall certify such
examination, acknowledgment, and declaration, by a certificate
annexed to the deed, and under his hand and seal,"
to the effect indicated in the form prescribed by the statute.
R.S.Dist.Col. § 450. It is also provided that
"When a privy examination, acknowledgment, and declaration of a
married woman is taken and certified and delivered to the recorder
of deeds for record, in accordance with the provisions of this [the
fourteenth] chapter, the deed shall be as effectual in law as if
she had been an unmarried woman; but no covenant contained in this
deed shall in any manner operate upon her or her heirs, further
than to convey effectually her right of dower or other interest in
the real estate which she may have at the date of the deed."
Ib., § 452.
These statutory provisions being in force, there was placed upon
record in the proper office in the District of Columbia, on the
17th day of November, 1875, a deed of trust purporting to have been
executed by Mark Young and Virginia Young, his wife, and to have
been, on the same day, acknowledged before B. W. Ferguson, a
justice of the peace in and for the District of Columbia. The
certificate of that officer, under his hand and seal, shows that
the grantors were personally known to him to be the persons who
executed the deed; that they personally appeared before him in this
District
"and acknowledged the same to be their act and deed, and the
said Virginia Young, wife of said Mark Young, being by me [him]
examined privily and apart from her husband, and having the deed
aforesaid fully explained to her, acknowledged the same to be her
act and deed, and declared that she had willingly signed, sealed,
and delivered the same, and that she wished not to retract it."
This deed of trust conveyed certain real estate in the City of
Washington, the property of Mrs. Young, to the appellees, Duvall
and Holtzman, in trust to secure the payment of a note executed by
the grantors, whereby they promised to pay to the order of John
Little, two years after date at the National
Page 109 U. S. 576
Metropolitan Bank the sum of $8,000, with interest at the rate
of ten percent until paid. Neither Little nor the present holder of
the note had any knowledge of the circumstances attending the
execution of the deed. Default having occurred in the payment of
the debt so secured, the trustees advertised the property for sale
at public auction. Thereupon Mrs. Young instituted this suit for
the purpose of preventing such sale and to obtain a decree
declaring the deed of trust fraudulent and void, and requiring it
to be surrendered for cancellation.
The bill sets forth several grounds upon which relief to that
extent is asked, but those only deserve serious consideration which
are embraced by averments, to the following effect: that the
contents of the deed were never explained to her; that she signed
it because she was required, ordered, and commanded to do so by her
husband and a person who was with him; that its contents were never
known or explained to her by the officer; that so far from her
having been examined, in reference to the deed, privily and apart
from her husband, the latter remained in the presence of herself
and the officer on the occasion when it is claimed she signed,
acknowledged, and delivered it. It was in proof that Mrs. Young
signed the note and the deed, having an opportunity to read the
papers before signing them; she was before an officer competent
under the law to take her acknowledgment, and he came into her
presence for the purpose of receiving it; he so came at the request
of the husband, who expected, by means of the executed deed of
trust, to secure a loan from John Little of the amount specified in
the note, and she knew, or could readily have ascertained while in
the presence of the officer, as well to what property the deed
referred as the object of its execution. There is, however, a
conflict in the evidence as to whether she willingly signed,
sealed, and delivered the deed, or had its contents fully or at all
explained to her by the officer, or was examined privily and apart
from her husband.
It is not necessary to enter upon a review of the adjudged cases
bearing upon the general question of the effect to be given to the
certificate of an officer taking an acknowledgment of a married
woman to a conveyance of real estate, for if it
Page 109 U. S. 577
be assumed for the purposes of this case that it is only
prima facie evidence of the facts stated in it, we are of
opinion that the integrity of the certificate before us has not
been successfully impeached. The certificate of the officer states
every fact essential under the statute to make the deed, upon its
being delivered for record, as effectual in law as if Mrs. Young
was an unmarried woman. The duties of that officer were plainly
defined by statute. It was incumbent upon him to explain the deed
fully to the wife, and to ascertain from her whether she willingly
signed, sealed, and delivered the same, and wished not to retract
it. The responsibility was upon him to guard her against coercion
or undue influence upon the part of the husband, in respect of the
execution and delivery of the deed. To that end, he was required to
examine her privily and apart from the husband. These facts were to
be manifested by a certificate under his hand and seal. Of
necessity, arising out of considerations of public policy, his
certificate must, under the circumstances disclosed in this case,
be regarded as an ascertainment, in the mode prescribed by law, of
the facts essential to his authority to make it, and if, under such
circumstances, it can be contradicted, to the injury of those who
in good faith have acted upon it -- upon which question we express
no opinion -- the proof to that end must be of such a character as
will clearly and fully show the certificate to be false or
fraudulent.
Insurance Company v. Nelson, 103 U.
S. 544,
103 U. S. 547.
The mischiefs that would ensue from a different rule could not well
be overstated. The cases of hardship upon married women that might
occur under the operation of such a rule are of less consequence
than the general insecurity in the titles to real estate which
would inevitably follow from one less rigorous. It is sufficient
for the disposition of this case to say that even upon the
assumption that the certificate is only
prima facie
evidence of the facts stated in it, the proof is not of that clear,
complete, and satisfactory character which must be required to
impeach the official statements of the officer who certified Mrs.
Young's acknowledgment of the deed in question.
The decree must therefore be affirmed.
It is so ordered.