Under the laws of Maryland, which were in force in the District
of Columbia in 1859, it was competent for a married woman, outside
of the District, to execute, with her husband, a power of attorney
to convey her lands therein, which, when acknowledged by her
according to the statute relating to the acknowledgment by married
women of deeds conveying their real property in the District,
thereby became a valid and sufficient instrument to authorize the
conveyance by attorney, and the first section of the Act of March
3, 1865, c. 110, 13 Stat. 531, contains a clear legislative
recognition of the right to execute such power.
Such a power of attorney, executed in one of the Northern states
before the civil war by a married woman then residing there, was
not revoked by the fact that, when that war broke out, she and her
husband removed to the Southern states, where he entered the
Confederate service, and where she resided to the close of the
war.
When the purchase money for land sold under such a power is
received by the principal, to permit her heirs after her death to
repudiate the transaction on the ground that the power of attorney
had been revoked by the war, would be in conflict with every
principle of equity and fair dealing.
A majority of the Court think that the deed made under the power
of attorney which is in controversy in this suit, and which is
printed at length in the statement of the case, below, was in the
nature of a conveyance of the legal title, though defectively
executed, and that it came within the provisions of the Act of
March 3, 1865, and its defective execution was thereby cured.
By this disposition of the whole case upon the merits, the Court
is not to be considered as deciding that parties situated as the
plaintiff's were in this case, out of possession, can maintain an
action for partition.
The appellants herein brought this suit in the Supreme Court of
the District of Columbia for the purpose of obtaining
Page 169 U. S. 56
partition of certain lands in the City of Washington, known as
square 53 of the ground plan of that city.
Upon the trial, it appeared that the common source of title was
one George W. Peter, who in January, 1837, conveyed the premises to
Henry Huntt and Benjamin Ogle Tayloe as tenants in common. Mr.
Huntt died in 1838 intestate, leaving two daughters, Fannie and
Mary, and a son named George Gibson Huntt, to whom his undivided
interest in these lands descended. Fannie married an officer in the
United States army named Gibson, and Mary married an officer in
that army named Robert Ransom, Jr. In May, 1859, Lieutenant Ransom
was stationed at Carlisle Barracks, in Pennsylvania, and at that
time he and his wife executed and acknowledged a power of attorney
to the brother of Mrs. Ransom, to convey their interest in the
land, the material part of which power reads as follows:
"Know all men by these presents, whereas, Lieutenant Robert
Ransom, Jr., of the United States army, and Mary, his wife, in
right of the said Mary, are seised in fee simple, as tenants in
common with the sister and brother of the said Mary, to-wit, Fanny
Huntt and George Gibson Huntt and with B. O. Tayloe, of certain
lots of ground in the City of Washington, in the District of
Columbia, which are described as follows: [Describing, among
others, the lots in question.] To provide for the contingency of
our absence, we, the said Robert Ransom, Jr., and Mary, my wife, do
by these presents constitute and appoint, and in our place put and
depute, the said George Gibson Huntt, of Washington City aforesaid,
to be our true and lawful attorney-in-fact for us, and in our name,
place, and stead, to control, manage, grant, bargain, and sell, and
in that event convey, all our right, title, and interest in and to
the said lots and square of ground, or any part or parts thereof,
or to join in, and for us, and in our name, to sign, any
proceedings in partition of the said lots and square, or to appear
for us in court for that purpose, and in regard to the said real
estate to do, execute, and perform every act and thing necessary to
be done as fully and amply as we might or could do if personally
present,
Page 169 U. S. 57
and we do hereby ratify and confirm all and whatsoever our said
attorney-in-fact may legally do in the premises."
"In witness whereof we, the said parties to these presents, have
hereunto set our hands and seals this twenty-third day of May, A.D.
one thousand eight hundred and fifty-nine."
"R. Ransom, Jr. [Seal.]"
"M. H. Ransom [Seal]"
"Witnesses present:"
"S. H. Graham"
"A. L. Sponsler"
This paper was duly acknowledged by both Lieutenant Ransom and
his wife, the latter of whom made the acknowledgment necessary to
be made in the District of Columbia in order to convey real estate
by a married woman.
The acknowledgment and the certificate thereof are full and
complete, and taken and certified by a proper officer.
The premises in question at that time were vacant lots. Soon
after the execution of this power of attorney, Lieutenant Ransom
was ordered away, and, with his wife, he left the station at
Carlisle Barracks, and went to Fort Lyon, in the western country.
He was a native of one of the Southern states, and when the war
broke out, he resigned his commission in the army and entered the
Confederate service, and at the conclusion of the war he had risen
in that service to the rank of general. Mrs. Ransom's brother,
George Gibson Huntt, to whom the power of attorney above mentioned
was given, remained in the old army. At the conclusion of the war,
Gen. Ransom returned with his wife to his native state, North
Carolina, where she died in February, 1881, leaving a number of
children, who are complainants herein. He remained in that state
until his death, in January, 1892.
During the continuance of the war, the children of the deceased
Mr. Huntt became anxious to sell their interest in the premises in
question, as the land was still vacant and unimproved, and a source
of expense in the way of the payment of taxes. It was more
particularly on account of Mrs. Ransom that the sale was desired,
in order to aid her as far as possible by turning her interest in
the lands into money. Negotiations for the sale of the property
were therefore commenced
Page 169 U. S. 58
sometime in 1864 through a real estate agent employed by Mr.
Walter S. Cox, a distant relative of the parties and then a
practicing lawyer at the bar of the District, now one of the
justices of the Supreme Court thereof. These negotiations resulted
in the sale of all their interest in the property to Mr. Tayloe,
the owner of the other half interest therein, and deeds were duly
given therefor by Mrs. Gibson and Mr. Huntt to Mr. Tayloe, and on
the 29th of November, 1864, Mr. Huntt, assuming to act under the
power of attorney already mentioned, executed, acknowledged, and
delivered to Mr. Benjamin O. Tayloe a paper which reads as
follows:
"Know all men by these presents that I, George Gibson Huntt, by
virtue of the annexed power of attorney to me from Robert Ransom,
Jr., and Mary Ransom, his wife, and for and in consideration of the
sum of eight hundred and thirty-three 33/100 dollars to me in hand
paid by Benjamin Ogle Tayloe, of the City of Washington, in the
District of Columbia, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged,
have bargained and sold to said B. O. Tayloe, his heirs and
assigns, all the right, title, and estate of them, the said Robert
Ransom, Jr., and Mary Ransom, being one undivided third part of,
in, and to those pieces of ground, in the City of Washington
aforesaid, known and described as lots Nos. one and three in square
No. five, lot No. ten in square fourteen, lots Nos. five and nine
in square No. seventeen, lots Nos. three and four in square No.
twenty-eight, lot No. three in square No. thirty, and the whole of
square No. fifty-three, with the improvements and appurtenances,
and I hereby further agree, in behalf of said Robert and Mary
Ransom, that they shall and will, as soon as convenient, make and
execute a proper deed of conveyance of said premises to said Benj'n
O. Tayloe, in fee simple."
"In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this
29th day of November, A.D. 1864."
"George Gibson Huntt [Seal]"
"[Stamp, $1. G.G.H. Jan.4th, '65.]"
"Witness: W. Kline"
This paper was acknowledged by Huntt before officers
different
Page 169 U. S. 59
from those before whom proof of the power of attorney was made.
It was also, and on the 14th day of January, 1865, recorded in the
proper land records office in the District of Columbia, together
with the power of attorney already referred to.
The purchase price of the lands was paid to Mr. Cox, who
promptly paid over her share to Mrs. Gibson, and also included in
such payment the share belonging to Mrs. Ransom, and Mrs. Gibson
duly paid over Mrs. Ransom's share to her or expended the same for
her benefit and with her approval. This was done prior to the close
of the war, while Mrs. Ransom was within the line of the Southern
army with her husband, and Mrs. Gibson was in one of the Northern
states.
After the death of Mr. Tayloe, which occurred in 1868, one of
his daughters, Julia Tayloe, in November, 1870, succeeded, under
proceedings in partition, to all the interest of her father in the
premises. She married, in 1865, the defendant John W. Paine, and
the other three defendants are the children of such marriage. From
the time of the division of the estate of Mrs. Paine's father, Mr.
Tayloe, which took place in 1870, his daughter, Mrs. Paine, claimed
to be the owner of the property, and was in possession thereof,
renting it through her husband and his agents, for a coal yard and
for other purposes, and paying the taxes upon the same up to the
time of her death in 1872, since which time her husband has been in
possession, claiming the right as tenant by the curtesy, and his
three children claim title in fee, subject to the life estate of
their father.
Prior to the filing of this bill, Mr. Paine had expended large
sums of money in building 22 dwelling houses on the property at a
cost of about $125,000, and has received the rents from such
houses, and paid the taxes on the property, the whole property
being now estimated to be worth about $250,000. The sum at which
the property was sold, in 1864, was a fair price for the same, and
the best that could be secured after earnest efforts made to sell
it.
After the death of Robert Ransom and his wife, this bill was
filed by their children, and the relief sought is to have
Page 169 U. S. 60
the paper executed by Mrs. Ransom's brother, George Gibson
Huntt, under the power of attorney given by her husband and
herself, declared null and void as a cloud upon the title of the
complainants in this property, and the bill then asks that the
right of the complainants to a one-sixth (Mrs. Ransom's alleged)
interest in the land in fee as tenants in common with the
defendants may be established against all the defendants, as well
the life tenant as the reversioners, and the land partitioned
accordingly.
Upon these facts, the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia
dismissed the bill with costs, and, its judgment to that effect
having been affirmed by the Court of Appeals of the District,7
App.D.C. 116, the case is now here upon the complainants' appeal
from that judgment of affirmance.
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, after stating the facts, delivered the
opinion of the Court.
The questions in this case grow out of the execution of the
power of attorney by Lieutenant Ransom and his wife while at
Carlisle Barracks, Pa. in 1859.
It is claimed on the part of appellants (1) that the power of
attorney given by Mrs. Ransom, a married woman (jointly with her
husband), could not operate as a valid authority to the attorney
named therein to convey her real estate, because a married woman
could not convey real estate by a power of attorney; (2) that the
power of attorney was revoked by the war; (3) that the paper
executed by the attorney-in-fact pursuant to the power of attorney
was not a conveyance, and did not pass the title of Mrs. Ransom to
Mr. Tayloe; (4) that these difficulties were not cured by the act
of Congress entitled "An act to quiet
Page 169 U. S. 61
titles in favor of parties in actual possession of lands
situated in the District of Columbia," as that act only applied to
instruments conveying lands and to parties who were in actual
possession at the time when the act was passed, and the paper
executed by the attorney was not a conveyance, and when the act was
passed, the premises in question were vacant; (5) that the purchase
price for her interest in that land was never received by Mrs.
Ransom, and her heirs are not estopped from setting up the
invalidity of the alleged contract of sale or conveyance upon any
equitable grounds.
The first section of the above act is set out in the margin.
*
Page 169 U. S. 62
Very careful and well considered opinions have been delivered in
the case, both in the supreme court and in the Court of Appeals of
the District, in which these various questions are discussed. The
supreme court held that the two papers (the power of attorney and
the instrument executed in pursuance thereof) were so far valid as
to be subject only to such objections and defects of form of
execution and acknowledgment as could be cured by legislation, and
these defects were cured by the act of Congress; that this statute
was constitutional, and that the power of attorney was not revoked
by the war, but was in full force and valid when the deed by the
attorney was executed. The court also thought the defense which had
been set up, that the complainants were at the commencement of the
suit and thereafter out of possession and their title denied by the
defendants, who were
Page 169 U. S. 63
in actual and full possession, was an answer to the bill for
partition, even if there had been no other defense proved. The bill
was therefore dismissed.
The Court of Appeals, while discussing somewhat the defense that
complainants were out of possession, did not decide the case upon
that ground, but held that the power of attorney (properly
acknowledged by Mrs. Ransom, as above stated) duly conferred upon
the attorney-in-fact the legal power to convey Mrs. Ransom's
interest in the land; that the war did not revoke the power; that
the paper executed and delivered by the attorney-in-fact was not a
conveyance, but only a contract for the sale and conveyance of the
land; that the act of Congress did not apply to such a paper; and
lastly that the contract of sale was within the scope of the power
of attorney, and vested in the purchaser an equitable interest or
estate which, upon general equitable principles, a court of equity
would not divest out of the vendee in the absence of fraud, and no
fraud being alleged or shown, and the purchase money having been
received by Mrs. Ransom, equity would not set aside the sale. We
will now state the conclusions to which we have come regarding
these questions:
And first, as to the question whether the power of attorney
executed by Lieutenant Ransom and wife to George Gibson Huntt
authorized and enabled the attorney to bargain and sell and convey,
or contract to convey by deed of bargain and sale, the property
therein mentioned. We think it did.
Under the laws of Maryland, which were in force in the District
of Columbia in 1859, we think it was then competent for a married
woman, outside of the District, to execute, with her husband, a
power of attorney to convey her lands therein, which, when
acknowledged by her according to the statute relating to the
acknowledgment by married women of deeds conveying their real
property in the District, thereby became a valid and sufficient
instrument to authorize the conveyance by attorney. It is not
claimed that the acknowledgment to the power of attorney in this
case was insufficient in matter of form to comply with the statute
in that respect.
Page 169 U. S. 64
The real contention is, assuming the acknowledgment to have been
sufficient, that a married woman could not by any manner of
acknowledgment appoint an attorney with authority to convey her
lands. It is true that, by the common law, a married woman could
not convey an estate of freehold owned by her unless by levying a
fine or suffering a common recovery. This was altered by the
statute in England of 3 & 4 Will. IV, c. 74, abolishing fines
and recoveries and providing other means for the conveyance of
estates. In most if not all of the states of the Union, statutes
have been passed providing for the manner in which a married woman
can dispose of her real estate. These statutes were intended to and
did set aside the technicalities of the common law, and they
provided some simple and effectual method for the transfer of the
interests of married women in real estate. The Chief Justice of the
Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, in delivering the
opinion of that court in this case, has cited several Maryland
statutes which the court holds were in force in this District in
1859, and those statutes are also held to provide for the case of
the execution of a power of attorney by a married woman joined in
by her husband and privily acknowledged by her, authorizing the
attorney-in-fact to convey her real property in the District.
This separate acknowledgment is provided for in probably all the
statutes of the various states relating to the subject of the
conveyance by married women of any interest they may have in real
estate. It has been said to be the most important and essential
element in the method employed to transfer such estates.
The statutes referred to in the opinion are the statutes of
Maryland of 1715, c. 47; 1752, c. 8, and 1766, c. 14, and in those
statutes the ceremony of the private examination of the married
woman and her voluntary acknowledgment of the deed were made
substitutes for the private examination as to her voluntary consent
in the levying of the fine or the suffering of a common recovery.
After citing these various statutes of Maryland, and commenting
upon their provisions relating to conveyances of married women, the
Chief Justice, in his opinion in this case, says:
Page 169 U. S. 65
"These provisions of the acts of 1715 and 1766 were in force in
this District in 1859, and are still in force, and they were in no
respect repealed by or in conflict with the acts of Congress of the
31st of May, 1832 (4 Stat. 520), and of the 20th of April, 1838 (5
Stat. 226), relating to the execution and acknowledgment of deeds
for land in the District of Columbia. The acts of Congress do not
profess to repeal the acts of Maryland of 1715 and 1766 or to be
exclusive in their operation, but they have in some particulars,
not involved here, amplified and extended the provisions of the
former statutes then in force. And construing these statutes
altogether, and looking to the reason and policy upon which they
are founded, it would seem to be clear that in the year 1859 and
down to the year 1865, it was competent to a
feme covert,
by a joint power of attorney with her husband, duly executed and
acknowledged according to the forms prescribed by the statute, to
execute and acknowledge a valid deed of conveyance of her real
estate situate in the District of Columbia. It is well settled that
a power to convey land must possess the same requisites and observe
the same solemnities in execution and acknowledgment as are
necessary in a deed directly conveying the land, and that a title
to land can only be acquired and lost according to the laws of the
place where the land is situated.
Clarke v.
Graham, 6 Wheat. 577. In this case, the property to
be conveyed was specifically mentioned and described in the power
of attorney, and the power of attorney was executed and
acknowledged at Carlisle, in the State of Pennsylvania, by husband
and wife, under their hands and seals, and the acknowledgment and
authentication of the instrument was in all respects in accordance
with the provisions of the statutes in force in the District of
Columbia, providing the manner and form in which the real estate of
femes covert could be conveyed. Indeed, we do not
understand that the statutory requirement in respect to the form of
acknowledgment and authentication thereof is a matter of objection.
The terms of the statutes, any 'grantor or bargainor of any lands
or tenements,' being out of the province, or 'any person or persons
conveying,' etc., not residing in the province
Page 169 U. S. 66
at the time, etc., may acknowledge said deed by letters of
attorney, well and sufficiently proved, etc., are sufficient to
embrace
femes covert authorized to sell and convey their
real estate. If not, then the husband could not sell and convey by
power of attorney, free of the contingent right of dower of his
wife, for if the wife could not acknowledge by power of attorney a
deed for the conveyance of her own real estate, she would be
equally unable to acknowledge by power of attorney a deed for the
relinquishment of dower in the lands of her husband. Such
disability, we think, was never intended by the legislatures
passing the statutes to which we have referred to be fixed upon
femes covert having lands with right to convey the
same."
We give great weight to the views expressed by the Chief Justice
in regard to these statutes of Maryland because, as is well known,
he occupied for many years a seat upon the bench as Chief Justice
of the Court of Appeals of that state, and is specially familiar
with its laws and the construction given them by the courts of the
state. In addition to such circumstance, and from a perusal of the
various statutes cited, our own judgment concurs with the Court of
Appeals upon this question. We think a clear implication arises
from the provisions of these acts that a power of attorney such as
has been described, and acknowledged as already mentioned, was good
in 1859 in this District. We can think of no good reason for
excluding such implication. Where the person is by the statute
allowed to do the principal thing directly, we think she could do
it by power of attorney as described in this case. The power to
convey includes, in such case, the power to appoint another to do
the same thing. We therefore agree with the views expressed by some
of the text writers, when power is given by statute to married
women to convey their interest in real estate where their husbands
join in the conveyance, and where the private examination is made,
that in such cases the right of the wife to dispose of it by power
of attorney joined in by her husband, and where she was privately
examined, etc., would naturally be implied. The common law, which
incapacitates a married woman from making a contract
Page 169 U. S. 67
in general, is so far altered by the statute as to permit her to
execute a power of attorney, and to therein contract to ratify his
acts, instead of conveying directly, as the statute in terms
provides. (
See Washburn on Real Property, 4th ed., vol. 3,
p. 258.) The author there says:
"It is laid down unqualifiedly in some of the states that a
married woman cannot make a valid power of attorney, even jointly
with her husband, to make a deed of her interest. But it is
difficult to perceive any reason for the rule where she can do the
principal thing herself, and such a right is clearly recognized by
statute in Massachusetts. A similar right is also recognized by
statute in New York."
We do not think the aid of a statute is necessary. When the
power is given her by law to convey directly, she can by the same
ceremonies authorize another to do the act for her. The reasoning
which would prevent it is, as we think, entirely too technical,
fragile, and refined for constant use. It is said in Story on
Agency, sec. 6:
"So, in regard to married women, ordinarily they are incapable
of appointing an agent or attorney, and, even in case of a joint
suit at law, an appointment of an attorney by a married woman is
void, and her husband may make an attorney for both. But where a
married woman is capable of doing an act, or of transferring
property or rights with the assent of her husband, there, perhaps,
she may, with the assent of her husband, appoint an agent or
attorney to do the same."
In this case, we hold that as the wife was capable of conveying
her real estate in Washington, in 1859, by a deed, properly
executed and acknowledged by her privily, etc., and joined in by
her husband, she could accomplish the same thing by authorizing
another to convey for her, where the authority was joined in by her
husband, and the required private examination, etc., made.
The Court of Appeals of Maryland has never, so far as we can
discover, construed the statutes above cited in any manner opposed
to the views expressed by the Court of Appeals of this District in
this case. The cases of
Webster's Lessees v. Hall, 2 Harr.
& McH.19,
Flannigan v. Young, 2 Harr. & McH. 38,
Hollingsworth v. McDonald, 2 Harr. & Johns. 230,
Page 169 U. S. 68
and
Lawrence v. Heister, 3 Harr. & Johns. 371, in
which the above-named statutes are referred to, were all cases
where deeds had been executed and where the acknowledgment of
either the wife or the husband was held to be defective under the
provisions of those statutes. In some of the cases, it was said to
be necessary, in order to pass the interest of the wife in her
land, that she and her husband must join in the deed as grantors,
which must be properly acknowledged, etc. This statement was not
made as descriptive of the only method by which a married woman
could convey her land, but was made in relation to the defective
manner in which the deed of conveyance was executed in the
particular case, which was the case of a deed defectively
acknowledged under the statute. No decision has been cited by
counsel for the appellants from the courts of Maryland which is
inconsistent with or opposed to the construction given to these
statutes by the court below.
In
Holladay v.
Daily, 19 Wall. 606,
86 U. S. 610,
the plaintiff and his wife appointed an attorney with general power
to convey land which belonged to the husband. The attorney-in-fact
subsequently conveyed the lands, and the plaintiff Holladay, after
such conveyance, alleging that he had never received any of the
consideration money recited in the deed, sued to recover back the
possession of the land. The only question was as to the sufficiency
in law of the power of attorney from Holladay and wife to Hughes,
the attorney-in-fact and his deed thereunder, to pass the title of
the husband. It was held that the power was sufficient, the Court
saying:
"Here, the object, and the sole object, of the power was to
enable the attorney to pass the title freed from any possible claim
of the wife, and under the law of Colorado, that result could be
accomplished by the deed of the husband alone as fully without as
with her signature."
What was said by the learned Justice in delivering the opinion
of the Court in that case in regard to the manner in which the
interest of married women in real estate could be conveyed was not
necessary to the decision of the case, the point decided being
that, considering its form, the power of attorney signed by the
husband and wife was valid to convey his interest in the real
property.
Page 169 U. S. 69
Finally, upon this branch of the case, we also concur with the
lower court in holding that the first section of the act of
Congress, already mentioned, contains a clear legislative
recognition of the right to make this power of attorney. In this
case, we think this fact is entitled to exceptional consideration.
The act was evidently drawn with care, and it fully and plainly
describes the different defects of the various instruments upon
which it was intended to operate. Although the section is quite
long and the phraseology is somewhat involved, yet the meaning of
the section is perfectly clear. Certain provisions therein fully
recognize the then existing right of a married woman to appoint,
jointly with her husband, an attorney-in-fact to convey lands owned
by her in this District, and language is used for the purpose of
curing certain named defects which might exist in the execution or
acknowledgment of such a paper. Speaking of the acknowledgment, the
statute in the first section proceeds in this way:
"
And provided also that, when the power of attorney
shall have been executed by a
feme covert, the same shall
be effectual and sufficient if there shall have been such an
acknowledgment of the same as would be sufficient, under the
provisions of this act, to pass her estate and interest therein
were she a party executing the deed of conveyance, the record and
copy thereof of any deed recorded as aforesaid to be evidence
thereof, in the same manner and to have the same effect as if such
deed had been originally executed, acknowledged and recorded
according to law."
It had already been provided in the section
"that the certificate of acknowledgment by a
feme
covert shall show that the acknowledgment was made 'apart' or
'privily' from her husband, or use some other term importing that
her acknowledgment was made out of his presence, and also that she
acknowledged or declared that she willing executed or that she
willingly acknowledged the deed, or that the same was her voluntary
act, or to that effect."
The acknowledgment attached to the power of attorney in this
case was sufficient, under the provisions of this act, to pass the
estate and interest of Mrs. Ransom if she had been a
Page 169 U. S. 70
party executing a deed conveying her real estate in the
District.
Upon a consideration of all the circumstances, we have no doubt
that the power of attorney in question was properly executed and
acknowledged, and that it authorized the person named therein as
attorney-in-fact to convey Mrs. Ransom's real estate situated in
this District.
(2) The next question which arises is whether this power of
attorney was revoked by the war which broke out between the two
sections of the country in 1861.
Lieutenant Ransom, although one of the last officers to go out,
did resign his commission in the army of the United States, and
went South, and entered the army of the Confederacy, in which,
before the close of the war, he attained high rank. His wife
followed him, so that, during the war, they were both inside the
lines of the Confederacy.
We are of opinion that the war did not revoke the power of
attorney executed by Mrs. Ransom and her husband. It is not every
agency that is necessarily revoked by the breaking out of a war
between two countries in which the principal and agent respectively
live. Certain kinds of agencies are undoubtedly revoked by the
breaking out of hostilities. Agents of an insurance company, it is
said, would come within that rule.
Insurance Company v.
Davis, 95 U. S. 425. In
that case, Mr. Justice Bradley, in delivering the opinion of the
Court, said:
"That war suspends all commercial intercourse between the
citizens of two belligerent countries or states, except so far as
may be allowed by the sovereign authority, has been so often
asserted and explained in this Court within the last fifteen years
that any further discussion of that proposition would be out of
place. As a consequence of this fundamental proposition, it must
follow that no active business can be maintained, either personally
or by correspondence, or through an agent, by the citizens of one
belligerent with the citizens of the other. The only exception to
the rule recognized in the books, if we lay out of view contracts
for ransom and other matters of absolute necessity, is that of
allowing the payment
Page 169 U. S. 71
of debts to an agent of an alien enemy where such agent resides
in the same state with the debtor. But this indulgence is subject
to restrictions. In the first place, it must not be done with the
view of transmitting the funds to the principal during the
continuance of the war, though, if so transmitted without the
debtor's connivance, he will not be responsible for it."
The learned judge then adds that, in order to the subsistence of
the agency during the war, it must have the assent of the
parties.
These remarks were made in relation to the case then before the
Court, which was an action on a policy of life insurance issued by
a New York corporation before the war upon the life of Davis, a
citizen and resident of the State of Virginia. The premiums were
regularly paid until the beginning of the war, the last one having
been made December 28, 1860. Previous to the war, the company had
an agent residing in Petersburg, Virginia, where the assured also
resided, and premiums on the policy had been paid him in the usual
way. About a year after the war broke out, the agent entered the
Confederate service, and remained there until the close of the war.
An offer of payment of the premium due in December, 1861, was made
to the agent, which he declined to receive, alleging that he had
received no receipts from the company, and that the money, if he
did receive it, would be confiscated by the Confederate government.
He testified that he refused to receive any premiums, had no
connection with the company during the war, and after it terminated
did not resume his agency. Davis died in September, 1867. The
plaintiff below was assignee of the policy, and claimed to recover
the amount of ten thousand dollars on the ground that he was guilty
of no laches, and that at the close of the war, the policy revived.
The judge instructed the jury that if the assured was ready and
offered to pay his premium to the agent in Virginia after the
breaking out of the war, there was no forfeiture of the policy,
although the agent refused to receive the money, if within a
reasonable time after the war he endeavored to pay his premium and
the company refused to receive it. The defendant contended that the
war put an end
Page 169 U. S. 72
to the agency, and that the offer to pay the premium to the
former agent was of no validity, and the failure to pay rendered
the policy void. This Court held that the case was nearly on all
fours with that of
New York Life Insurance Company v.
Statham, 93 U. S. 24, but the
point as to the supposed power of an agent of a company in the
adhering states to receive premiums in a state in insurrection
after the war broke out not having been specially adverted to in
the opinion of the Court in that case, it was particularly
considered in the
Davis case, as above quoted from. It was
in relation to such an agency that the remarks were made. Agents of
a life insurance company are undoubtedly engaged in the active
business of their principal. Their duty is to receive the premiums
for all policies obtained by them and to transmit such premiums to
the home office. The prompt transmission of such premiums is a
necessity for the successful prosecution of the business of the
company. Upon their receipt, the company is able to invest them in
some interest-bearing security, and thus provide funds for the
ultimate payment of the policy when it matures. It is easy to see
that active and continuous business of such a nature could not be
carried on during a war where the principal and the agent reside in
the different countries engaged in such war.
In the case of
Kershaw v. Kelsey, 100 Mass. 561, the
general subject of contracts and business entered into and
transacted between the citizens of the different states at war with
each other is examined, and the question treated with great care by
Mr. Justice Gray in delivering the opinion of the Supreme Judicial
Court of Massachusetts, and numerous authorities are referred to
and commented upon in the opinion. In the course of that opinion,
it was said at page 572:
"The result is that the law of nations, as judicially declared,
prohibits all intercourse between citizens of the two belligerents
which is inconsistent with the State of war between their
countries, and that this includes any act of voluntary submission
to the enemy or receiving his protection, as well any act or
contract which tends to increase his resources, and every kind of
trading or commercial dealing or intercourse, whether by
Page 169 U. S. 73
transmission of money or goods, or orders for the delivery of
either, between the two countries, directly or indirectly, or
through the intervention of third persons or partnerships, or by
contracts in any form looking to or involving such transmission, or
by insurances upon trade with or by the enemy. Beyond the principle
of these cases, the prohibition has not been carried by judicial
decision. The more sweeping statements in the textbooks are taken
from the
dicta which we have already examined, and in none
of them is any other example given than those just mentioned. At
this age of the world, when all the tendencies of the law of
nations are to exempt individuals and private contracts from injury
or restraint in consequence of war between their governments, we
are not disposed to declare such contracts unlawful as have not
been heretofore adjudged to be inconsistent with a state of
war."
Under the circumstances of this case, we think the
attorney-in-fact had the right to make the conveyance he did. It
was not an agency of the class such as is mentioned in
Insurance Co. v. Davis, supra, and was not necessarily
revoked and avoided by the war. Where it is obviously and plainly
against the interest of the principal that the agency should
continue, or where its continuance would impose some new obligation
or burden, the assent of the principal to the continuance of the
agency after the war broke out will not be presumed, but must be
proved, either by his subsequent ratification or in some other
manner. And on the other hand, where it is the manifest interest of
the principal that the agency, constituted before the war, should
continue, the assent of the principal will be presumed, or if the
agent continues to act as such, and his so acting is subsequently
ratified by the principal, then those acts are just as valid and
binding upon the principal as if no war had intervened.
Insurance Company v. Davis, supra.
It is entirely plain, as we think, that the mere fact of the
breaking out of a war does not necessarily and as a matter of law
revoke every agency. Whether it is revoked or not depends upon the
circumstances surrounding the case and the
Page 169 U. S. 74
nature and character of the agency. This case shows that, in
1859, at the time when the power of attorney was executed,
Lieutenant Ransom and his wife were desirous of realizing their
share of the value of the land in controversy. It was vacant,
unimproved land in the City of Washington, and the charge for taxes
was quite burdensome. The parties desired to realize the money. No
sale of the property was effected from that time until the latter
part of 1864 or early part of 1865. There is no evidence of any
such change of circumstances as would naturally suggest a
revocation of the authority to sell, but, on the contrary, the
testimony is otherwise. It appears to have been to the interest of
all parties to sell, and thus to free themselves from a constant
source of expense. In addition to that, the evidence is clear and
sufficient that, after the sale, the action of the attorney-in-fact
of Mrs. Ransom was ratified and confirmed by her by the receipt of
her share of the purchase money or its expenditure for her benefit
and with her assent and approval. Her sister, Mrs. Gibson,
testified that Mrs. Ransom's share of the purchase money was either
paid over to her or expended for her at her direction. This full
and complete ratification of the act of the agent shows
conclusively the assent of the principal to the continuance of the
agency notwithstanding the war. Some criticism is made upon this
testimony of Mrs. Gibson because, after the passage of so many
years, she is unable to state definitely which course was pursued
-- whether the money was paid to Mrs. Ransom or whether it was
expended for her at her direction. We think the criticism is not
well founded. Mrs. Gibson might well have been able to state with
absolute certainty that she either paid the money to Mrs. Ransom or
expended it for her at her direction, and yet, after this lapse of
time, she might also be unable to state with like certainty which
of the two courses was pursued. It is perfectly possible for a
witness to be certain of the ultimate fact and yet to have
forgotten the intermediate facts upon which that ultimate fact was
based.
Here, we have a power of attorney properly executed for the
purpose of selling, among other lots, this real estate in question,
and a state of circumstances which fairly shows that
Page 169 U. S. 75
it was for the benefit and interest of the principal that such
real estate should be sold at the time the sale in fact occurred;
we have also the principal's receipt of her share of the purchase
money in 1865, with full knowledge of all the facts, and her
acquiescence in and approval of the action of her attorney up to
the time of her death in February, 1881. Upon these facts, we think
it clear that the instrument executed by the attorney-in-fact was
as valid and effectual as if no war had intervened. The
ratification of the act of the attorney was full and complete. It
recognized and assented to the continued existence of the agency.
The purchase money for the land was received by the principal, and
to permit her heirs after her death to repudiate the transaction on
the ground that the power of attorney had been revoked would be at
war with every principle of equity and fair dealing. This principle
applies as strongly in the case of a married woman as in any other,
and it will not permit her, or, upon her death, her heirs at law,
to repudiate a transaction the benefits of which she received with
full knowledge of the circumstances attending it, and yet claim to
recover an estate which had been sold with her authority, and the
purchase money for which had been paid to her.
Bein
v. Heath, 6 How. 247;
Bank v. Partee,
99 U. S. 325,
99 U. S. 329.
Bedford v. Burton, 106 U. S. 338,
considers generally the obligation of married women to do equity
under circumstances somewhat similar in principle to the present
case.
Nor does the Act of Congress of July 17, 1862, c. 189, 12 Stat.
589, to suppress insurrections, etc., have any effect upon the
sales, transfers, or conveyance of the estate and property of
persons in rebellion after September 23, 1862, except as to the
United States. As against that government, the transfers of
property liable to seizure were null and void. They were not void
as between private parties or against any other party than the
United States.
Conrad v. Waples, 96 U. S.
279.
(3) Even though the power of attorney were valid, and had not
been revoked by the war, it is objected that the instrument
executed by the attorney-in-fact conveyed no title, but at best,
was a mere contract of sale; and
Page 169 U. S. 76
(4) That this objection is not cured by the act of Congress,
above set forth.
These two questions may be considered together, and it makes no
difference in the result whether the instrument be construed as
conveying a legal title or an equitable title only.
Some of the Justices of this Court concur in opinion with the
Court of Appeals that, taking all the provisions of the instrument
together, it did not amount to a deed of conveyance, but only to an
agreement to convey made by an attorney who was authorized by his
power to make a conveyance. In that aspect of the case, the
instrument would convey an equitable title, which would afford a
good defense to this bill, and it would be unnecessary to invoke
the curative act of Congress.
But a majority of this Court is of opinion that the instrument
was in the nature of a conveyance of the legal title, though
defectively executed, and that it came within the provisions of the
act, and the defect was thereby cured.
We agree generally that although there are words of conveyance
in praesenti in a contract for the purchase and sale of
lands, still, if from the whole instrument it is manifest that
further conveyances were contemplated by the parties, it will be
considered an agreement to convey, and not a conveyance. The whole
question is one of intention, to be gathered from the instrument
itself.
Jackson v. Moncrief, 5 Wend. 26;
Ogden v.
Brown, 33 Pa.St. 247;
Phillips v. Swank, 120 Pa.St.
76.
Looking at the instrument executed by the attorney, it will be
seen that he refers to and annexes the power of attorney executed
to him by Robert Ransom, Jr., and Mrs. Ransom, his wife, states the
consideration received by him from Mr. Tayloe, acknowledges its
receipt, and then acknowledges that he has
"bargained and sold to Mr. B. O. Tayloe, his heirs and assigns,
all the right, title, and estate of them, the said Robert Ransom,
Jr., and Mary Ransom, being one undivided third part of, in, and
to"
the various pieces of ground, including the ground in question,
and then adds, "with the improvements and appurtenances." Stopping
here,
Page 169 U. S. 77
and construing the language of the instrument, there can be no
question that it was executed as a conveyance of the interest of
the principals in the land, and was intended as such by the
attorney-in-fact. Although the instrument shows an intention on the
part of the attorney to convey the title of his principals, yet,
instead of signing their names by himself as attorney, he signs his
own name, preceding the signature with the statement, "In testimony
whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this 29th day of
November, 1864." This is one of the defective executions of an
instrument under a power of attorney spoken of in the act of
Congress. It is alleged, however, that the following language,
which appears at the end of the instrument executed by Huntt,
changes the character of that instrument, and shows that it was not
intended as a conveyance, but as a simple contract of sale. The
language referred to comes immediately after the words, "with the
improvements and appurtenances," and is as follows:
"And I hereby further agree, in behalf of said Robert and Mary
Ransom, that they shall and will, as soon as convenient, make and
execute a proper deed of conveyance of said premises to said
Benjamin O. Tayloe in fee simple."
We do not think this language changes the effect of the prior
portion of the instrument, nor does it show that the intention of
the person executing it was simply to enter into a contract of
sale. He is the only one who signs it. The instrument shows that he
is executing it as an attorney-in-fact and by virtue of the power
of attorney annexed to the instrument. Although he assumes therein
to bargain and sell (in legal effect to convey) to Mr. Tayloe, his
heirs and assigns, all the right, title, and estate of his
principals, being a one undivided third part of the real estate in
question, yet he also agrees in the same instrument, in addition to
the conveyance by himself of the title of his principals, to also
obtain from them a deed of the same premises. This portion of the
instrument is a contract in the nature of a covenant for further
assurance. It may well be that the grantee, Mr. Tayloe, while
taking the conveyance from the attorney-in-fact and paying the full
consideration for the land, would also desire to obtain
Page 169 U. S. 78
a deed conveying the same title and executed by the parties in
person. This desire may easily be understood, even upon the
assumption that the instrument executed by virtue of the power of
attorney was intended to convey the title. Such a deed would remove
all possible question which could, in any event, arise based upon
the fact that the conveyance was executed by an attorney instead of
by a principal. The agreement to obtain a conveyance from his
principals is entirely consistent with the prior portion of the
instrument, in which the attorney assumes to convey the title by
virtue of the power of attorney, which he annexes. If the attorney
had, instead of agreeing in behalf of his principals that they
should make and execute a proper deed of conveyance of the
premises, agreed that he would himself at some future time make
such a deed, a different question would be presented, for in that
case, taking the whole instrument together, it might be argued that
there was no intention at that time to convey the title. But where,
in addition to conveying the title himself by apt words, clearly
expressed, he simply agrees to also procure a proper deed from his
principals at some future time, there is nothing inconsistent in
that agreement with the intention to himself convey the title by
virtue of the power. Nor do we regard the fact as material upon
this latter point that, in the acknowledgment of the instrument in
question, taken by two aldermen who were
ex officio
justices of the peace, they describe the instrument as a certain
contract of sale, and certify that "Mr. Huntt executed said
contract and acknowledged the same to be his act and deed." What
the aldermen may have regarded as the legal effect of the
instrument is not of much importance, and whether they describe it
as a contract of sale or as a conveyance cannot alter the character
of the paper itself or its legal effect.
Being of opinion that the paper was in the nature of a
conveyance, we also think that the defective execution of the
instrument was cured by the act of Congress. This instrument was
executed by the attorney-in-fact, who acknowledged the same to be
his act and deed instead of the act and deed of his principals, and
the act of Congress provides that, in such case,
Page 169 U. S. 79
the deed shall have the same effect as if such attorney-in-fact
had acknowledged the deed to be the deed of the grantors (his
principals). One or two other defects existed of a like nature --
that is, of a nature which might be cured by a legislative act --
and which were cured by the act in question.
The statute applies where the parties intended to convey,
thought they had conveyed, and yet had not complied with the
requisites necessary to make the conveyance in all things
effective. In such case, especially where the consideration for the
instrument has been received and retained, curative statutes may be
passed which give validity to the defective instruments to the same
extent as was intended by the parties at the time when they were
executed.
Watson v.
Mercer, 8 Pet. 88,
33 U. S. 110;
Randall v.
Kreiger, 23 Wall. 137.
The chief objection to the act, assuming that the instrument was
a conveyance, is that it does not apply in this case as plaintiffs
urge, because at the time when the act was passed, the parties
claiming through this deed were not, as plaintiffs contend, in the
actual possession of the land covered by it. The statute declares
the instrument is to have effect and validity to pass the fee
simple to the estate intended to be conveyed and to bar dower in
the real estate therein mentioned "in favor of parties in actual
possession, claiming under and through such deeds." It is said that
this limitation to the parties in actual possession refers to the
time when the act was passed, and, if the parties claiming under
the deed were not at that time in actual possession of the
premises, the statute has no application to them. We think the act
applies if, at the time when it was passed, the parties claiming
under the defective instrument were in actual possession of the
land, and that the act also applies if the parties claiming under
such instrument were not in actual possession at the time of its
passage, but subsequently came into such possession. The act cured
the defects in the instrument mentioned therein if, when it passed,
the parties were in actual possession, claiming under such
instruments, and if, thereafter ousted, they could still claim the
benefit of the act, even in an attempt to regain possession. If not
in actual possession
Page 169 U. S. 80
when the act was passed, they could not have the benefit thereof
in an attempt to obtain possession thereafter. But if thereafter
they were in actual possession, they could defend that possession
under the act, so far as their title depended upon defective
instruments existing at the time when the act was passed and which
were of a character covered by its terms.
We think this is a fair construction of the act, and that it
ought to be liberally construed for the purpose of obtaining the
benefits it was clearly intended to give in the case of a defective
execution of otherwise valid instruments. This view renders it
unnecessary to decide as to the validity of the objection that
these defendants were not in actual possession when the act was
passed. We do not decide whether they were or not. They were in
actual and undisturbed possession at the commencement of this suit,
and they can avail themselves of the act to protect such possession
and their title under the deed in question.
(5) The fifth objection taken we have already answered in
holding that Mrs. Ransom did in fact receive the purchase price of
her share in the land with full knowledge that it was such purchase
price, and thereby ratified and confirmed the act of her
attorney.
By this disposition of the whole case upon the merits, we are
not to be considered as deciding that parties situated as the
plaintiffs were in this case, out of possession, can maintain an
action for partition. We have not discussed that question, and do
not decide it, because it was unnecessary on account of the views
we have stated in relation to the other aspects of the case.
We are of opinion that the complainants have failed to make out
a cause of action, and the judgment dismissing the bill must
therefore be
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE did not sit in this case, and took no part in
its decision.
*
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled that all
deeds heretofore recorded in the land records of the District of
Columbia, which have been executed and acknowledged by femes covert
(their husbands having signed and sealed the same) for conveying
any real estate, or interest therein, situated in said District,
and all acknowledgments of deeds heretofore recorded, as aforesaid,
which have been made by femes covert (whether they have executed
the deed or not) for the purpose of releasing their claims to dower
in the lands described therein, situated as aforesaid, in which
acknowledgments the form prescribed by law has not been followed,
and all deeds heretofore recorded, as aforesaid, which have been
executed and acknowledged by an attorney-in-fact, duly appointed
for conveying real estate situated in said District, and all deeds
heretofore recorded, as aforesaid, executed and acknowledged, or
only acknowledged by such attorney-in-fact, for conveying real
estate situated in said District, as to which the acknowledgment
was made before officers different from those before whom proof of
the power of attorney was made, and as to which the power of
attorney was proved before only one justice of the peace, and all
deeds heretofore executed and recorded as aforesaid for the purpose
of conveying land situated in said District, acknowledged out of
the District of Columbia, before a judge of a United States court,
or before two aldermen of a city, or the chief magistrate of a
city, or before a notary public, and all deeds heretofore executed
and recorded as aforesaid for the purpose of conveying land
situated in said District, acknowledged by an attorney-in-fact,
duly appointed, or by an officer of a corporation, duly authorized,
who has acknowledged the same to be his act and deed, instead of
the act and deed of the grantor or of the corporation, and all
deeds heretofore executed and recorded as aforesaid for the purpose
of conveying land situated in said District to which there is not
annexed a legal certificate as to the official character of the
officer or officers taking the acknowledgment, shall be, and the
same are hereby, declared to be of the same effect and validity to
pass the fee-simple or other estate intended to be conveyed, and
bar dower in the real estate therein mentioned in favor of parties
in actual possession, claiming under and through such deeds, as if
such deeds had been by such femes covert executed and acknowledged,
or acknowledged in case of a dower right, in the form heretofore
prescribed by law; as if such deeds had been executed and
acknowledged by the grantor in the deed; as if such power of
attorney had been proved before the officer or officers taking the
acknowledgment; as if such power of attorney had been proved before
two justices of the peace; as if such acknowledgment had been made
before any judge of a state court, or before two justices of the
peace; as if such attorney-in-fact or officer of a corporation had
acknowledged the deed to be the deed of the grantor or the
corporation; as if such deeds had thereto annexed a certificate, in
legal form, that the officer or officers taking the acknowledgment
were really what they purport to be,
provided that the
certificate of acknowledgment by a
feme covert shall show
that the acknowledgment was made 'apart' or 'privily' from her
husband, or use some other term importing that her acknowledgment
was made out of his presence, and also that she acknowledged or
declared that she willingly executed or that she willingly
acknowledged the deed, or that the same was her voluntary act, or
to that effect,
and provided also that when the power of
attorney shall have [been] executed by a feme covert
, the
same shall be effectual and sufficient if there shall have been
such an acknowledgment of the same as would be sufficient, under
the provisions of this act, to pass her estate and interest therein
were she a party executing the deed of conveyance, the record and
copy thereof of any deed recorded as aforesaid to be evidence
thereof, in the same manner and to have the same effect as if such
deed had been originally executed, acknowledged, and recorded
according to law."