Real estate in the District of Columbia, belonging to a married
woman before the Act of April 10, 1869, c. 23, may be conveyed, by
deed voluntarily executed and duly acknowledged by her husband and
herself, to secure the payment of a debt of his.
Under §§ 450-452 of the Revised Statutes of the
District of Columbia, a certificate of the separate examination and
acknowledgment of a married woman, made in the prescribed form and
recorded with the deed executed by her, cannot be controlled or
avoided, except for fraud, by extrinsic evidence of the manner in
which the magistrate performed his duty.
A receiver of a national bank, appointed by the Comptroller of
the Currency, is not accountable in equity to the owner of real
estate for rents
Page 123 U. S. 298
thereof received by him as such receiver and paid by him into
the Treasury of the United States, subject to the disposition of
the Comptroller of the Currency, under § 5234 of the Revised
Statutes.
Accruing rents, collected and paid into court by a receiver
appointed on a bill in equity against the mortgagor and a second
mortgagee to enforce a first mortgage, which appears to have been
satisfied and discharged, belong to the second mortgagee so far as
the land is insufficient to pay his debt.
In equity. The case is stated in the opinion of the court.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The original suit was a bill in equity, filed January 10, 1879,
by Keyser, as the receiver of the German American National Bank,
against Hitz and wife, Donaldson, Prentiss, Chipley, Halstead,
Crane, Tyler, and Jenks to enforce a deed in the nature of a
mortgage dated January 26, 1876, by which Hitz and wife conveyed
land in Washington to Donaldson and Prentiss in trust to secure the
payment of promissory notes for $20,000 made by Chipley, endorsed
by Halstead, and held by the bank, as well as to set aside, as made
in fraud of the bank, the following conveyances of the same land:
1st., release dated June 16, 1877, from Donaldson and Prentiss to
Mrs. Hitz; 2d., a deed of the same date from Hitz and wife to
Crane; 3d., a deed dated June 18, 1877, from Crane to Tyler, in
trust to secure the payment of Crane's promissory notes for
$20,000, payable to Hitz, and by him endorsed to Jenks.
Mrs. Hitz filed a crossbill against Keyser and her codefendants,
alleging that she was induced to execute the conveyance to Crane by
fraud, and in ignorance of its contents, and praying for a
cancellation both of that conveyance and of the deed of trust from
Crane to Tyler, and for an account of rents and
Page 123 U. S. 299
profits. By leave of court, she afterwards amended her bill so
as to allege that the deed to Crane was fraudulently altered after
she executed it.
After a hearing upon pleadings and proofs it was adjudged at the
special term, by a decree made November 28, 1881, and amended
December 15, 1881, that these two deeds were valid against Hitz,
but void as against his wife; that the former deed of trust had
been discharged by payment and release, and that Keyser account for
the rents and profits previously received by him, and collect and
pay into court all rents subsequently accruing. From that decree
Mrs. Hitz, Jenks, and Keyser each appealed to the general term,
which, on December 11, 1883, reversed the decree of the special
term, and dismissed both bills, save that the cause was retained to
take an account of the rents and profits received, or which should
have been received, by Keyser and to determine the right to those
rents and profits, which were claimed by Mrs. Hitz as her separate
property, by Jenks as part of the security afforded by the deed of
trust to Tyler, and by Keyser under judgments recovered against
Hitz. 2 Mackey 513. On July 13, 1885, a further decree was entered
in general term denying the right of Mrs. Hitz to any part of those
rents and profits. 4 Mackey 179. From each decree of the general
term, she alone appealed to this court.
The principal matter to be determined is the validity, as
against Mrs. Hitz, of the conveyance from her husband and herself
to Crane, and of the deed of trust from Crane to Tyler. The
evidence establishes the following facts:
Mr. and Mrs. Hitz were married in 1856; children were born to
them, and she inherited the land in question from her father before
the passage of the act of Congress providing that
"In the District of Columbia, the right of any married woman to
any property, personal or real, belonging to her at the time of
marriage or acquired during marriage in any other way than by gift
or conveyance from her husband shall be as absolute as if she were
feme sole, and shall not be subject to the disposal of her
husband nor be liable for his debts, but such married woman may
convey, devise, and bequeath
Page 123 U. S. 300
the same or any interest therein in the same manner and with
like effect as if she were unmarried."
Act of April 10, 1869, c. 23, § 1, 16 Stat. 45; Rev.Stat.
D.C. §§ 727, 728.
Chipley and Halstead were men of no means, and the real object
of the deed of trust from Hitz and wife to Donaldson and Prentiss
was to secure certain liabilities of Hitz to the bank, of which he
was then president. The object of making the deeds from Hitz and
wife to Crane and from Crane to Tyler was to secure the payment of
money actually advanced by Jenks to Hitz, and by Hitz applied to
the payment of the notes secured by the former deed of trust.
The evidence satisfactorily proves that no fraud was practiced
upon Mrs. Hitz, and that the deed from herself and her husband to
Crane was put in its present form before it was signed by either of
them. As these are pure matters of fact, and the evidence relating
to them is well summed up in the opinion of the court below, they
need not be enlarged upon. 2 Mackey 521526.
There can be no doubt that, by a deed voluntarily executed and
duly acknowledged by the husband and the wife, the entire title of
both might be conveyed to secure the payment of his debt,
notwithstanding that the act of 1869, as construed by this Court,
exempted the land, or any interest therein, from being taken on
execution against him.
Hitz v. National Metropolitan Bank,
111 U. S. 722;
Mattoon v. McGrew, 112 U. S. 713.
The more important question is whether the appellant has shown
by competent and sufficient proof that her acknowledgment of the
deed to Crane did not fulfill the requirements of the Revised
Statutes of the District of Columbia upon the subject, which are as
follows:
By § 441, acknowledgments of deeds may be made before any
judge of a court of record and of law, or any chancellor of a
state, or a judge of a court of the United States or a justice of
the peace, or a notary public, or a commissioner of the circuit
court of the district.
By § 450,
"When any married woman shall be a party executing a deed for
the conveyance of real estate or interest
Page 123 U. S. 301
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 to her the deed fully."
By § 451,
"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 following
effect,"
that is to say, beginning in the usual form of a certificate of
acknowledgment and adding that,
"being by me examined privily and apart from her husband, and
having the deed aforesaid fully explained to her, she 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."
By § 452,
"When the 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 chapter, the deed shall be as effectual in law as if she had
been an unmarried woman,"
except as to any covenants therein.
These provisions substantially reenact statutes which have been
in force ever since 1715 in the District of Columbia and in the
State of Maryland, out of which the District was formed. Maryland
Stats. 1715, c. 47, § 11; 1752, c. 8; 1766, c. 14, § 6;
1797, c. 103, § 3, all in Kilty's Laws; D.C.Laws 1868, pp. 21,
28, 38; Acts May 31, 1832, c. 112, 4 St. 520; April 20, 1838, c.
57, § 4, 5 Stat. 227.
The conveyance of the estates of married women by deed, with
separate examination and acknowledgment, has taken the place of the
alienation of such estates by fine in a court of record under the
law of England, though differing in some of its effects owing to
the diversity in the nature of the two modes of proceeding.
Page 123 U. S. 302
A fine was in the form of a judgment of a court of record, at
first in an actual, and afterwards in a fictitious suit by the
conusee against the conusors to recover possession of the land, and
derived its very name from its putting an end to that suit, and to
all other controversies concerning the same matter. 2 Bl.Com. 349;
Co.Lit. 262
a. A party could not, therefore, impeach it at
law, even for infancy, except by writ of error sued out while still
under age or for insanity. Bac.Ab. Fines and Recoveries, Fines, C;
5 Cruise, Dig. tit. 35, c. 5, §§ 4154;
Murley v.
Sherren, 1 Per. & Dav. 126, 8 Ad. & El. 754. Yet if
any fraud or undue practice was used in obtaining the fine, the
court of chancery would relieve against it, as against any other
conveyance. 5 Cruise Dig. tit. 35, c. 14, §§ 6777;
Bulkley v. Wilford, 2 Cl. & Fin. 102;
Conry v.
Caulfield, 2 Ball & Beatty 255.
On the other hand, the alienation of land by deed of husband and
wife, with her separate examination and acknowledgment, is, in form
as well as in fact, a conveyance by the parties, and therefore does
not, even if the acknowledgment is certified by a magistrate in the
form prescribed by statute and recorded, bind a wife who, by reason
of infancy or insanity, is incapable of conveying.
Sims v.
Everhardt, 102 U. S. 300;
Williams v. Baker, 71 Penn.St. 476;
Priest v.
Cummings, 16 Wend. 617, 631, and 20 Wend. 338, 349;
Jackson v. Schoonmaker, 4 Johns. 161. In any case of fraud
or duress, also, it may be impeached by bill in equity, or, in some
states, in an action at law.
Central Bank v. Copeland, 18
Md. 305;
Schrader v. Decker, 9 Penn.St. 14;
Louden v.
Blythe, 16 Penn.St. 532, and 27 Penn.St. 22;
Hall v.
Patterson, 51 Penn.St. 289;
Jackson v. Hayner, 12
Johns. 469;
Fisher v. Meister, 24 Mich. 447;
Wiley v.
Prince, 21 Tex. 637.
The statute of 18 Edw. I.
De Modo Levandi Fines enacted
that if a
feme covert should be one of the parties to a
fine, then she must first be examined by certain justices, and if
she did not assent to the fine, it should not be levied. Yet this
was always understood to mean that the fine ought not to be
received without her examination and free consent, but that if it
was received and recorded, neither she nor her heirs could
Page 123 U. S. 303
be permitted to aver that she was not examined and did not
consent; "for this," says Lord Coke, "should be against the record
of the court, and tending to the weakening of the general
assurances of the realm." 2 Inst. 510, 515; Bac.Ab.
ubi
supra.
The object of a statute like that now before us, requiring the
separate examination of the wife to be taken by a judicial officer
or notary public, to be certified by him in a particular form, and
to be recorded in the registry of deeds, is twofold: not only to
protect the wife by making it the duty of such an officer to
ascertain and to certify that she has not executed the deed by
compulsion of her husband, or in ignorance of its contents, but
also to facilitate the conveyance of the estates of married women
and to secure and perpetuate evidence upon which innocent grantees
as well as subsequent purchasers may rely that the requirements of
the statute necessary to give validity to the deed have been
complied with.
Lawrence v. Heister, 3 Har. & Johns.
371, 377.
The duty of examining the wife privily and apart from her
husband, of explaining the deed to her fully, and of ascertaining
that she executed it of her own free will, without coercion or
under his influence, is a duty imposed by law upon the officer,
involving the exercise of judgment and discretion, and thus a
judicial or
quasi-judicial act. The magistrate is required
to ascertain a particular state of facts, and, having ascertained
it, to certify it for record for the benefit of the parties to the
deed and of all others who may thereafter acquire rights under it.
And the statute expressly provides that upon the recording of the
certificate, "the deed shall be as effectual in law as if she had
been an unmarried woman."
The reasonable, if not the necessary, conclusion is that, except
in case of fraud, the certificate, made and recorded as the statute
requires, is the sole and conclusive evidence of the separate
examination and acknowledgment of the wife.
It has been decided by this court, in a case arising under a
similar statute of Virginia, that if the certificate as recorded is
silent as to these facts, the want cannot be supplied by parol
evidence that the wife was duly examined, and this for the
Page 123 U. S. 304
reason stated by Mr. Justice Trimble in delivering judgment, as
follows:
"What the law requires to be done and appear of record can only
be done and made to appear by the record itself, or an
exemplification of the record. It is perfectly immaterial whether
there be an acknowledgment or privy examination in fact or not if
there be no record made of the privy examination, for by the
express provisions of the law, it is not the fact of privy
examination merely, but the recording of the fact which makes the
deed effectual to pass the estate of a
feme covert."
Elliott v.
Peirsol, 1 Pet. 328,
26 U. S.
340.
That the magistrate's certificate, when made in the form
required by the statute and duly recorded, is conclusive evidence
that he has performed his duty has not been directly adjudged by
this Court, but the course of its decisions has tended to this
conclusion. In
Drury v. Foster, Mr. Justice Nelson, in
delivering judgment, observed:
"There is authority for saying that where a perfect deed has
been signed and acknowledged before the proper officer, an inquiry
into the examination of the
feme covert, embracing the
requisites of the statute as constituting the acknowledgment, with
a view to contradict the writing, is inadmissible; that the acts of
the officer for this purpose are judicial and conclusive."
69 U. S. 2 Wall. 24,
69 U. S. 34. And
in
Young v. Duvall, the Court said that if the officer's
certificate
"can be contradicted to the injury of those who in good faith
have acted upon it, the proof to that end must be such as will
clearly and fully show the certificate to be false or fraudulent.
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 of titles to real estate which would
inevitably flow from one less rigorous."
109 U. S. 109 U.S.
573,
109 U. S.
577.
It would be inconsistent with the reasons above stated as well
as with a great weight of authority to hold that in the case of a
deed actually executed by a married woman of full age and sound
mind, a certificate of her separate examination and acknowledgment,
in the form prescribed by the statute and duly recorded with the
deed, can afterwards, except for
Page 123 U. S. 305
fraud, be controlled or avoided by extrinsic evidence of the
manner in which the examination was conducted by the magistrate.
Comegys v. Clarke, 44 Md. 108;
Jamison v.
Jamison, 3 Whart. 457;
Williams v. Baker, 71 Penn.St.
476;
Harkins v. Forsyth, 11 Leigh 294;
Greene v.
Godfrey, 44 Me. 25;
Baldwin v. Snowden, 11 Ohio St.
203;
Graham v. Anderson, 42 Ill. 514;
Dolph v.
Barney, 5 Or. 191;
Johnston v. Wallace, 53 Miss. 331;
Hartley v. Frosh, 6 Tex. 208.
See also Bancks v.
Ollerton, 10 Exch. 168, 182.
As to such of the cases cited by the learned counsel for the
appellant as have not been already referred to, it may be remarked
that in
Rhea v.
Rhenner, 1 Pet. 105, in
Hepburn v.
Dubois, 12 Pet. 345, in
Dewey v. Campau, 4
Mich. 565, and in
O'Ferrall v. Simplot, 4 Ia. 381, the
requisite certificate was either wanting or defective upon its
face, and that
Dodge v. Hollinshead, 6 Minn 25, and
Landers v. Bolton, 26 Cal. 393, were decided under
statutes which expressly provided that the certificate should not
be conclusive, but might be rebutted by other evidence.
In the case at bar, the recorded certificate of the notary
public who took the acknowledgment is in the form given in the
statute. The other evidence on the subject is the testimony of the
appellant and of the notary. The appellant, being called as a
witness in her own behalf, admitted her signature but did not
recollect that she ever executed or acknowledged the deed in
question, and denied that it was ever explained to her. The notary,
being called as a witness by the appellees, testified that in
taking her acknowledgment, he asked her if she had read over the
deed and understood its contents, and if she willingly signed,
sealed, and delivered it, without any compulsion on the part of her
husband, and wished not to retract it, to all which she answered in
the affirmative; that he did not otherwise explain the deed to her,
and did not read it himself; and that he did not think it necessary
to explain a deed if the party was already acquainted with its
contents.
The appellant's signature being admitted, and there being no
proof of fraud or duress in taking or procuring her acknowledgment,
the extrinsic evidence was, for the reasons and upon
Page 123 U. S. 306
the authorities before stated, incompetent to impeach the
notary's certificate as to the manner in which he had performed his
duty.
The result is that the appellant shows no ground for reversing
the principal decree, and it only remains to consider her claim to
rents and profits. This claim consists of two parts:
First. For rents received with the consent of Hitz, by Keyser as
receiver, appointed by the Comptroller of the Currency, of the
national bank, from the time of his appointment as such receiver in
October, 1878, to the date of the decree of the court below in
special term, December 15, 1881. But it appears that the moneys so
received were paid by him into the Treasury of the United States,
subject to the order of his superior officer, the Comptroller of
the Currency, as required by § 5234 of the Revised Statutes,
and were distributed by the Comptroller among the creditors of the
bank. They were therefore rightly treated by the court below as not
to be accounted for in this cause.
Second. For rents received by Keyser under his appointment as
receiver by the decree of the court in special term on December 15,
1881, and paid by him into the registry of the court pursuant to
that decree from its date until its reversal in general term, on
December 11, 1883. It is argued for the appellant that, by the rule
affirmed in
Teal v. Walker, 111 U.
S. 242, a mortgagee is not entitled to rents and profits
until he has been lawfully put in possession of the land, and that
Keyser, having been admitted into possession by Hitz only, cannot
hold the rents and profits against Mrs. Hitz. The conclusive answer
to this argument is that the accruing rents were not received and
held by Keyser by virtue of an agreement with Hitz, but the court,
through Keyser as its receiver, took possession of these rents in
order to preserve them for the party who should ultimately prevail
in the suit. When it was afterwards adjudged that the first deed of
trust, and the debt thereby secured, which Keyser's original bill
sought to enforce, had been released and discharged, and that the
second deed of trust was valid as against Mrs. Hitz, and the sum
obtained for the land at a sale under the power contained in
Page 123 U. S. 307
this deed proved insufficient, by more than the whole of the
fund in court, to pay the debt of Hitz to Jenks secured by this
deed, it was rightly held that Mrs. Hitz had no right as against
Jenks to any part of this fund. This view disposes of the case
independently of the application of part of the fund to the payment
of taxes accrued during the pendency of this suit, and even if the
rents originally belonged to Mrs. Hitz, and not to her husband as
tenant by the curtesy, which is by no means clear.
Hitz v.
National Metropolitan Bank, 111 U. S. 722.
Decrees affirmed.