The statutes of Michigan require the attestation of two
witnesses to the grantor's signature. A deed of husband and wife
was offered in evidence, the attestation to which was: "Signed,
sealed, and delivered in presence of S.W. for" the husband,
"W.H.R., G.H. for" the wife, and there was a certificate that "the
word
half' in the twelfth line was
Page 127 U. S.
327
interlined before signing S.W., E.W." E.W. signing this
certificate with S.W. was the justice of the peace who took the
acknowledgment, and his certificate of acknowledgment stated that
he knew the person who made the acknowledgment to be the person who
executed the instrument. Held that the execution of the
deed was proved, and it was properly admitted in evidence.
A certificate by a master in chancery and notary public in New
Jersey, taking an acknowledgment there of a deed of land in
Michigan, that he is "satisfied that the parties making the
acknowledgment are the grantors in the within deed of conveyance"
is a sufficient certificate that they were the same persons as
those named as grantors in the deed; but if defective in this
respect, the defect is cured under the laws of Michigan by a
certificate from the proper official that the person taking the
acknowledgment was "a master in chancery and notary public" and
that "the annexed instrument is executed and the proof of
acknowledgment thereto taken in accordance with the laws of the New
Jersey."
The will of a citizen of New York, dying in the City of New
York, was admitted to probate there. A duly authenticated copy
being presented for probate in Michigan, notice to all parties
interested by publication was ordered, and on proof of such
publication, and after hearing and proof, the instrument was
admitted to probate in Michigan and ancillary letters were issued.
Held that the parties were properly brought before the
court by publication, and that the will was properly admitted to
probate.
An objection as to the sufficiency of a certificate of a
register of deeds to an instrument offered in evidence which was
not made at the trial cannot be taken here.
In Michigan, a declaration of trust which declares that the
parties executing it hold the property in trust for themselves and
two other persons is an express trust, and under the laws of that
state, the whole estate in law and in equity is vested in the
trustees.
When a party to an action of ejectment in Michigan sets up a tax
title, several years old, it is competent for the other party,
after showing by the official records that an illegal expenditure
of public money was ordered sufficient under the laws of the state
to vitiate the whole tax if paid from it, to prove by parol
evidence that the sum so ordered to be paid was paid out of the
moneys raised by the tax in question.
Ejectment. Verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. Defendant
sued out this writ of error. The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 127 U. S. 328
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action of ejectment, originally brought in the
Circuit Court for the County of Marquette, in the State of
Michigan, by the H. Witbeck Company, plaintiff, against William C.
Culbertson, defendant. The object of the suit was to recover
certain lands situated in the County of Marquette to which the
plaintiff claimed title in fee. The case was removed to the circuit
court of the United States, where a trial was had which resulted in
a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. This, as a matter of right,
was set aside upon motion under the law of Michigan and a new trial
granted, which also resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of
the plaintiff. It is this which the present writ of error brings up
for review.
During the progress of the trial, the plaintiff established
title by various conveyances, beginning with patents from the
United States, in William A. Pratt. As a link in the chain of title
from Pratt, the plaintiff offered in evidence the record of a deed
from Pratt and wife to Still Manning and William Wright, which was
executed and acknowledged in the State of Michigan. This was
objected to by the defendant upon the ground that it was attested
by only one witness as to the signature of William A. Pratt. The
instrument was, however, admitted in evidence notwithstanding the
objection, to which the defendant excepted. This ruling is made the
ground of the first assignment of error.
The deed offered in evidence was signed, acknowledged, and
recorded according to the laws of the State of Michigan. It is
admitted that there was one witness to the signature of Mr. Pratt,
and two witnesses to the signature of Mrs. Pratt, but it is denied
that there was a second witness to the signature of the former. The
part of the record containing the testimonium is as follows:
Page 127 U. S. 329
"It witness whereof, the said party of the first part have
hereunto set their hands and seals the day and year first above
written."
"WM. A. PRATT [L.S.]"
"HARRIET W. PRATT [L.S.]"
"Signed, sealed, and delivered in presence of"
"STEPHEN WALSH"
"For William A. Pratt"
"GEO. HOWE"
"W. H. ROCKWELL"
"For Harriet W. Pratt"
"The word 'half' in the twelfth line was interlined before
signing [on the second page]."
"STEPHEN WALSH"
"EBENEZER WARNER"
Ebenezer Warner was the justice of the peace who took the
acknowledgment of Pratt on the 29th day of October, 1855, which is
also the date of the deed, and in his certificate of such
acknowledgment he says: "I certify that I know the person who made
the said acknowledgment to be the individual described in and who
executed the within instrument." It will also be noted that he
signs with Walsh as a witness, and that their signatures
immediately follow the statement as to the word "half" having been
interlined before signing. These circumstances are sufficient to
show that Walsh and Warner were witnesses to the signature of Mr.
Pratt, and the matter may be easily explained by supposing that
Rock well and Howe, the two witnesses for Harriet W. Pratt,
inserted their names above those of Walsh and Warner as witnesses
for William A. Pratt. Under all the circumstances, we think the
court was correct in admitting the deed in evidence.
Carpenter v.
Dexter, 8 Wall. 513.
The second assignment of error also rests upon an alleged
insufficiency in the acknowledgment of another deed, which was
offered in evidence by the plaintiff, from Still Manning and wife,
and William Wright and wife to Edward C. Wilder,
Page 127 U. S. 330
conveying all the lands in controversy. To the admission of this
deed defendant's counsel objected "for the reason that it does not
appear on said certificate that the persons acknowledging were the
same persons as those named as grantors in said deed." The
acknowledgment in this case was taken in the State of New Jersey
before William A. Richter, a master in chancery and notary public,
who says in his certificate that the parties, naming them,
personally appeared before him, "who, I am satisfied, are the
grantors in the within deed of conveyance." This language is the
defect complained of by defendant.
We are inclined to the opinion that this is sufficient evidence
that the parties who appeared before him were the grantors in the
deed. If he was satisfied of that fact, the court cannot now
inquire into the evidence by which he reached that conclusion. But
any difficulty on this subject is removed by the certificate of the
Clerk of the County of Essex, in that state, that said Richter was
a master in chancery and a notary public in and for said county,
and
"that the annexed instrument [meaning the deed] is executed, and
the proof of acknowledgment thereto taken, in accordance with the
laws of said State of New Jersey."
This official statement that the acknowledgment was made
according to the laws of the state is, we think, sufficient to make
it valid, because the law of Michigan provides (Howell's Statutes
§ 5660) that where such acknowledgments are taken out of the
state, the clerk certifying to the official character of the
officer shall also state "that the deed is executed and
acknowledged according to the laws of such state."
The third assignment of error is based upon the fact that the
court allowed the plaintiff to put in evidence a record from the
office of the Register of Deeds of Marquette County of the will of
Edward C. Wilder. The objection of defendant's counsel to the
admission of this certified copy of the will, as stated in the bill
of exceptions, is
"that said record contained no proof that the Probate Court of
the County of Marquette obtained jurisdiction to make the order
admitting said will to probate in this state, and that it contains
no
Page 127 U. S. 331
record of any authentication or probate by any foreign court or
officer."
This objection being overruled, an exception was taken by
counsel for the defendant to the admission of the record. The copy
contained, after the seal of Wilder, the testator, the usual
attestation of two witnesses, who declare that the will was signed
in the presence of each of them and that it was at the same time
declared by him to be his last will and testament, and that at his
request and in his presence they signed their names as witnesses
thereto. The testator died in New York, and the paper offered for
probate in the County of Marquette, in Michigan, purported to be a
copy of the will as it had been probated in the former state. The
following papers constitute the proceedings in the probate court
for the County of Marquette:
"STATE OF MICHIGAN,
County of Marquette, ss:"
"At a session of the Probate Court for the County of Marquette,
holden at the Probate Office in the City of Marquette, on Monday,
the thirty-first day of October, in the year one thousand eight
hundred and eighty-one."
"Present: Edward S. Hardy, Judge of Probate."
"In the Matter of the Estate of Edward C. Wilder, Deceased."
"This day having been appointed by the court for hearing the
petition of James E. Dalliba praying, amongst other things, for
reasons therein set forth, that a certain instrument purporting to
be a copy of the last will and testament of said deceased, and the
probate thereof, duly authenticated and heretofore presented to
this Court with said petition, be allowed, filed, and recorded. Now
come into court the said petitioner and answers, and it
satisfactorily appearing by due proof on file that a copy of the
order of this court touching the hearing of said petition, made on
the seventh day of October 1st last, had been duly published as
therein directed, whereby all parties interested in the premises
were duly notified of said hearing."
"And it further satisfactorily appearing to the court, after
Page 127 U. S. 332
a full hearing upon said petition and on examination of the
proofs and allegations of the petitioner, that said deceased was at
the time of his death a resident of the City of New York in the
State of New York, and died leaving his last will and testament,
which was duly approved and allowed in the Surrogate Court for, in,
and of the County of New York, in the State of New York, according
to the laws thereof, and that he was possessed of estate situate in
said County of Marquette, on which said will operates."
"And the evidence touching the premises being materially
considered, it satisfactorily appears that said copy of said will
ought to be allowed in this state as the last will and testament of
said deceased."
"It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and declared by this Court
that said copy of said last will and testament of said deceased be
allowed, filed, and recorded in this court, and that the same shall
have full force and effect in this state, as such will, agreeably
to the statute in such case made and provided."
"And it is further ordered that the execution of said last will
and testament be committed and the administration of the estate of
the said deceased be granted to said Sophia Wilder, the executrix
in said will named, who is ordered to give bond in the penal sum of
one thousand dollars, with sufficient sureties, as required by the
statute in such case made and provided, and that, the same being
duly approved and filed, the letters testamentary do issue in the
premises."
"EDWARD S. HARDY"
"
Judge of Probate"
"State of Michigan,
County of Marquette, ss:"
"Probate Court for said County"
"Be it remembered that the annexed and foregoing instrument,
being a duly authenticated copy of the last will and testament of
Edward C. Wilder, late of the County of New York, in the State of
New York, deceased, which was duly allowed, filed, and recorded in
said court in pursuance of the decree thereof, of which the
foregoing is a true, full, and correct copy. "
Page 127 U. S. 333
"In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and affixed
the seal of said court at the City of Marquette, in said county,
this thirty-first day of October, in the year one thousand eight
hundred and eighty-one."
"[Seal] EDWARD S. HARDY"
"
Judge of Probate"
We can see no defect of jurisdiction in the Probate Court of
Marquette County sufficient to justify the rejection of this copy
of the will or to impeach the action of the probate judge in
ordering it to be recorded. There is in the proceedings the full
recital of the production of the copy of the will, and that the
order for the hearing of the petition, made on the 7th day of
October, "had been duly published as therein directed, whereby all
parties interested in the premises were duly notified of said
hearing." The court further certifies that the probate thereof was
duly authenticated "and presented to this court," meaning evidently
the probate of the will in the State of New York. The certificate
further recites that
"It satisfactorily appears to the court, after a full hearing
upon said petition and on examination of the proofs and allegations
of the petitioner, that said deceased was at the time of his death
a resident of the City of New York, in the State of New York, and
died leaving his last will and testament, which was duly approved
and allowed in the Surrogate Court for, in, and of the County of
New York, in the State of New York, according to the laws
thereof."
This being a recital in the record of the judgment of the court
admitting the instrument to probate, certifying that it had been
fully proved by the "examination of the proofs and allegations of
the petitioner," and that it was duly admitted to record, is
sufficient. Unless the necessary parties in such cases could be
brought before the court by publication, there would be in many
cases an impossibility of doing it at all.
Grignon v.
Astor, 2 How. 319. There appears to be some
controversy in the brief submitted by counsel as to the fact that
the copy of the instrument offered in evidence is certified from
the office of the register
Page 127 U. S. 334
of deeds, but as no such objection was made upon the trial of
the case, it is unnecessary to discuss it here.
The fourth assignment of error is founded upon the rejection of
a deed called a "declaration of trust," made by Still Manning and
William Wright, which was offered by the defendant. This instrument
was signed and acknowledged in the month of November, 1855, and
covered the land now in controversy. The deed from Manning and
Wright to Wilder, referred to in the second assignment of error,
was executed in July, 1860, nearly five years after this
declaration of trust. The object of the defendant in offering the
latter was to show that the legal title had passed out of Manning
and Wright, and that Wilder did not get the title by the deed which
was made to him. Upon the objection of the plaintiff to the
introduction of this deed, it was rejected by the court, to which
ruling the defendant excepted.
The proposition upon which the defendant sought to introduce
this instrument is founded upon certain statutes of the State of
Michigan, of a character similar to those common in other states,
found in Howell's Statutes §§ 5563-5573, inclusive. They
comprise the usual provisions for abolishing uses and trusts, and
enact in substance that the use shall vest in the
cestui que
trust as a legal title, except when otherwise provided. Most
of these statutes, however, have relation to implied trusts, and it
is not necessary here to go through all of them nor to enter upon
their critical discussion at this time. It is sufficient to say
that the paper presented in this case is not a conveyance to
anybody, but it purports to declare in express terms that the
parties executing it hold the property in trust for themselves and
two other persons. It is therefore an express trust, and comes
within the language of § 5578, which reads as follows:
"5578. Every express trust, valid as such in its creation,
except as herein otherwise provided, shall vest the whole estate in
the trustees in law and in equity, subject only to the execution of
the trust, and the person for whose benefit the trust was created
shall take no estate or interest in the lands, but may enforce the
performance of the trust in equity. "
Page 127 U. S. 335
This declaration of trust evidently contemplated that the legal
title remained with the trustees, and that they had the power and
authority to sell and convey the property, the profits or proceeds
to be divided according to the interest which was declared in the
instrument creating the trust. We think the legal title remained in
Manning and Wright until by the deed to Wilder they transferred to
him the strict legal title. The deed was therefore properly
rejected.
The next and last assignment of error which we propose to
consider relates to the production of various deeds conveying the
lands in question to persons under whom the defendant claims on
account of sales for taxes. These deeds were offered in evidence
and rejected by the court, to which ruling the defendant
excepted.
The principal ground upon which they were held to be invalid was
that the tax levy under which they were sold included an illegal
allowance for extra compensation to Goodwin and Eddie, who were
judges of the state court which included within its jurisdiction
the County of Marquette. It appeared that the supervisors of that
county allowed and paid to them, out of the tax levies, an
additional compensation of $400 per annum in excess of their
salary. It does not seem to be controverted that, by the law of
Michigan, if this sum was included in the assessment and levy of
taxes, on account of which the sales were made that these deeds
represent, the title based upon them is void. Both parties admit
this proposition in argument, and certain authorities referred to
in the briefs establish it as the settled doctrine of that state.
Lacey v. Davis, 4 Mich. 140;
Case v. Dean, 16
Mich. 12;
Edwards v. Taliafero, 34 Mich. 13.
In
Hammontree v. Lott, 40 Mich. 195, the court said: "A
tax deed is void if a portion of the tax for which it was given was
excessive and invalid." In the recent case of
Silsbee v.
Stockle, 44 Mich. 561, the whole subject was very elaborately
reviewed by Judge Cooley of that court, and the principle here
stated fully established. The strength of the opinion in that
direction may be seen by the following extract from the syllabus of
the case:
Page 127 U. S. 336
"The statutory provisions that no sale for delinquent taxes
shall be held invalid unless it be made to appear that all legal
taxes were paid or tendered, and that all taxes shall be presumed
to be legally assessed until the contrary is affirmatively shown
(Comp.L. § 1129), are unconstitutional so far as they sustain
sales for taxes which are in part illegal."
Counsel for plaintiff in error deny the sufficiency of the
evidence produced in regard to the increase of salary by the
county, above what the state allowed to the judge, or that the fact
is established by competent testimony, and it is urged with much
force that this attempt to show now, some fifteen or twenty years
after the transaction, that the tax levy for the particular years
in question did include this increased compensation, cannot be
accomplished by parol testimony. We think, however, that there is
enough in the bill of exceptions which is not parol, but matter
found in the records of the boards of supervisors who made the tax
levy, to establish the fact without any parol testimony. The
records of the proceedings of this body for Marquette County were
read in evidence for each of the years 1861, 1865, 1866 and 1867,
the same being all that appeared therein relative to the
equalization of the assessment rolls of the several townships, and
the action by which the rate of apportionment of the state and
county taxes for each of those years was fixed. This is spread in
full upon the record in the bill of exceptions. It appears that the
aggregate valuation of the taxable real and personal property of
the county in 1861 was determined to be $1,285,965.50, and we then
find this entry.
"The subject of additional compensation to Judge Goodwin being
under consideration, on motion of _____, it was resolved that all
former action of the board on this subject be rescinded and that
the sum of four hundred dollars be paid to Judge Goodwin in orders
on the treasurer of this county, upon his signing a receipt in full
of all demands against the county on such account, up to the first
day of January, A.D. 1862, such receipt to be filed with the clerk
before such orders are issued."
Then immediately follows the rate of taxation:
Page 127 U. S. 337
"On motion, it was resolved that a tax of six and one-half mills
on the dollar be raised on the taxable property of Marquette and
Schoolcraft Counties for the contingent fund, to defray the general
expenses of the county."
The only parol evidence introduced which seems to have had any
influence upon the decision of this question was the testimony of a
witness that Judge Goodwin received this $400 from the county
treasury at a time when it must have been paid out of the levy made
at this time. We think that was competent, and that, the date of
the receipt of the money being shown, the inference that it was
paid out of the tax levy, which we have already recited, is
sufficient.
It is also shown by the records of the board of supervisors, in
regard to the levies of other years, that for the years 1865, 1866,
1867, and 1868, an illegal sum of the same character, being $350
per annum, was included in the assessment and paid over to Judge
Eddie. The court left it to the jury to determine, under all the
evidence which was introduced, whether in pursuance of such
resolutions these sums were levied as a tax, and for the purpose,
as claimed by the plaintiff, of paying salaries to these judges.
Although he refers in this connection to the additional evidence of
two witnesses, Healy and Maynard, as having some influence upon the
determination of this question, it is quite obvious that the
proposition was established of the payment of additional
compensation to these judges out of an unlawful levy of taxes, so
far as the lands in question are concerned. And while the parol
testimony was not necessary to show that the amount paid for that
purpose was included in the tax levy for the years under which
these sales were made, it was competent to show by oral testimony
that these judges actually received the money out of the taxes
collected under those assessments.
These are the only assignments of error which we are called to
consider, and as we do not find that there was error in the matters
alleged, the judgment of the circuit court is
Affirmed.