
    Maxey and Others v. Wise.
    Curative Statute. — If a deed executed by liusband and wife, of tbe wife’s lands, under tlie Revised Statutes of 1843, was inoperative to pass tlie title;, by réason of tlie failure of the notary to affix his official seal to the certificate of acknowledgment, the act of March 1, 1855, (1 G. & II., 262j) cured the defect, and made the deed effective.
    APPEAL from the Knox Circuit Court.
   Ray, J.

The appellants bring this action to recover pos session of certain real estate which had been sold, by their maternal ancestor to the defendant. A deed, in which the husband joined, had been signed and delivered, but the notary who took the acknowledgment failed to attach to his certificate his official seal. The deed was executed January 13, 1847. Proof was made that the person-who took the acknowledgment of the deed was,, at the time, a notary public. It is argued that the deed was void by the law in force at the time of its execution. R. S. 1843, § 17, p. 417; id. §§ 40, 44, pp. 420, 421.

The appellants insist, under the decision in the case of Watson v. Clendenin et. al., 6 Blackf. 477, that the failure of the officer to affix his seal prevented the instrument executed from becoming effective as a deed of conveyance. The court instructed the jury, that the act of the legislature, approved March 1, 1855, “To cure defects in the execution of deeds, or in the certificates of acknowledgment to conveyances of real estate, in certain cases therein named,” (1 G. & H. 262,) legalized and rendered valid the deed in question. The constitutional power of the legislature to declare the deed valid, is denied by the appellants. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania decided that an omission in the certificate of acknowledgment of a married woman to a deed conveying her estate in lands, was remedied by an act passed for that purpose, after the death of the wife, and after the lands had descended, and after the court had decided that the acknowledgment was inoperative to pass the lands. In the face of all these facts, the court held, that the act in question, being remedial in its nature, cured the defective acknowledgment, so that the lands passed and the grantee took title under it; although, without the act no title would have passed by the deed to the grantee. Tate v. Stooltzfoos, 16 Sarg. & Rawle 35; Hepburn v. Curts, 7 Watts. 300.

This decision is in point, and is so clearly correct in principle that we have no hesitation in following it.

The decision in 6 Blackf. was not that the deed from the wife was void, and conveyed no equity, but the court «imply refused, as other courts had done, to exercise its power' and enforce the equity. There were no judicial pre.•eedents for the exercise of such power. Where the married woman had joined with her husband in the execution of the deed, and had complied with all the requirements of <the statute, and the grantee, having paid the consideration, had gone into possession of the land, it would be a monstrous doctrine to assert that there was no equitable obligation .restiqg .upon .the wife to make the title effective in law, because the notary before wliom the acknowledgment had been taken omitted to place his seal to the certificate.

The lack of a remedy at law, for the failure of a married woman to comply with her contracts, does not relieve her from the moral responsibility resting upon her conscience; and when courts have failed, for lack of precedent, to enforce this equity, and the legislature have seized upon it and declared perfect that which good conscience required should be perfected, their action must pass unchallenged in a court of equity.

In the case of Goshorn v. Purcell, 11 Ohio State Rep. 641, 652, the court says: “The act of the married woman may, under the law, have been void and inoperative; but, in justice and equity, it did not leave her right to the property untouched. She had capacity to do the act, in a form prescribed by law for her protection. She intended to do the act in the prescribed form. She attempted to do it, and her attempt was received and acted on in good faith. A mistake, subsequently discovered, invalidates the act; justice and equity require that she should not take advantage of that mistake. She has no right to complain if the law which prescribed forms for her protection, shall interfere to prevent her reliance upon them to resist the demands of j ustice. She has no vested right to do wrong. Foster v. Essex Bank, 16 Mass. 245, 273. As was said in a recent case, ‘ laws curing defects, which would otherwise operate to frustrate what must be presumed to be the desire of the party affected, cannot be considered as taking away vested rights. Courts do not regard rights as vested, contrary to the equity and justice of the case.’ The State v. Newark, 3 Dutcher 185, 197.” This act of the legislature, in the language of Judge McLean, “gave effect to the intention of the parties by relieving from a mere informality.” 3 McLean 231.

The case of Good v. Zercher, 12 Ohio R. 364, to which we have been cited by counsel, was expressly overruled in Chesnut v. Shane, 16 Ohio 599.

J. C. Denny, for appellants.

In. our opinion, if the deed was inoperative to pass the title to the land, by reason of the failure of the notary to affi-y his seal, which we do not decide, the subsequent action of the legislature rendered it effective, and the instruction of the court to the jury was therefore correct.

We have not been favored, in this case, with a brief by the appellee.

The judgment is affirmed at the costs of the appellant.  