70 Ala. 156 | Ala. | 1881
From the earliest history of our legislation, until the enactment of the statute approved April 15th, 1873 (Pamph. Acts, 1872-3, p. 93), which was amended by an act approved February 10th, 1875 (Pamph. Acts, 1874-5, p. 194), the enactment of special, private statutes, relieving particular married women, partially or entirely, from the disabilities of coverture, was a common practice. All such enactments were attributed to the prerogative, rather than to the legislative power of the General Assembly — the power, as parens patries, over the person or property of the citizen resting under legal disabilities; the power exercised in the emancipation of infants, or in the superintendence and control of their persons and estates. These enactments varied in form and in terms, dependent upon the wishes and purposes expressed in the application for their passage. Sometimes, the married woman was, as to property and the rights to property, the capacity to contract, and to sue and be sued, converted into a femme sole, or, as it was most often termed, a free-cLeeiler. In some instances, she was simply invested with capacity to
These enactments, like the general statute creating and defining the separate estates of married women, have been construed as relieving from, or modifying the disabilities of coverture, only to the extent expressed in them. Beyond their express provisions, the woman has not been regarded as sui juris, or as having larger capacity to contract than she had at the time of their enactment. The uniform construction of the general statute has been, that while it enlarged the capacity of the wife to take and hold property owned-by her at the time of the marriage, or accruing to her subsequently, it did not enlarge her capacity to contract, even in reference to her separate estate, except in the mode and for the purposes pointed out and prescribed.—Alexander v. Saulsbury, Ala. 375; Warfield v. Ravisies, 38 Ala. 518; Bibb v. Pope, 43 Ala. 190. In Hatton v. Weir, 19 Ala. 127, the General Assembly, by joint resolution, authorized a particular married woman “ to take, receive, and hold, by gift, purchase, or inheritance, any property, real or personal, free from the molestation, hindrance, or authority of her husband, and free from any liability to pay his debts or contracts, and the same to dispose of by will, gift or sale, in the same manner as if she were a femme sole.” The resolution was silent as to the capacity of suit; and in the purchase of projierty, for the price, she gave a promissory note; and it was held an action at law thereon could not be maintained. A construction of the resolution which would subject her to a personal suit, it was said by the court, “ would be far beyond the intention of the legislature.”
The act of 1875, of force when the proceedings were had before the chancellor, upon the efficacy of which depends the validity of the mortgage executed by the appellant, contained a clause prohibiting, the subsequent presentation to the General Assembly of any bill “to make any married woman a free-dealer, or invest her with the rights of a free-dealer,” unless such bill was accompanied with a transcript of the record from the Chancery Court,- showing an application to the chancellor in conformity to the act, the refusal of the application, and the reasons for the refusal. This clause may not have been binding on subsequent legislatures; yet, when it is read in connection with the preceding parts of the act, there is manifested a clear legislative intention to delegate to the chancellor, sitting in term time or in vacation, exclusive power to relieve married women from the disabilities of coverture, “so far as to invest
The statute is a delegation to the chancellor, not to the Cham eery Court, of a power that, prior to its enactment, the General. Assembly had reserved to itself, not delegating it to any judicial tribunal or officer. In the absence of the statute, the chancellor could not exercise the power. The statics of a married woman, with its rights and disabilities, the general municipal laws define and establish. The alteration of this status, as to particular persons, does not lie within the original, inherent jurisdiction of any department of the judiciary, as created by the constitution. Deriving the power wholly from the statute, the chancellor, in its exercise, is bounded and limited by the terms of the statute. The power he can exercise, is the power conferred by the statute — no greater or less power, whatever may be the wishes or purposes of suitors, or the real or seeming exigencies and necessities of particular cases. The power is to relieve particular individuals from the general disability the law, upon its own policy, imposes on the class of citizens to which they belong. It is not necessary to say the statute must be subjected to a strict construction; perhaps, in reference to the proceedings it authorizes, a liberal, rather than a strict construction, would be properly extended to it; but it can not be construed as conferring any other power than that which is in terms defined and declared. The power conferred is not the general prerogative power the General Assembly had been accustomed to exercise, of removing entirely the disabilities of coverture, or of removing them only partially, or of investing them with capacity to make particular contracts, or to make particular dispositions of property. The power is precisely defined, and is, “ to relieve married women of the disabilities of coverture, as to their statutory and other sejaarate estates, so far as to im/oest them with the right to buy, sell, hold, con/oey,
The power exercised by the chancellor in the decree rendered, the validity of which is assailed, was not the power expressed in the statute. In some respects, it was larger, and in some narrower, than that power. The appellant, to employ the words of the decree, was “ declared a femm.e sole only so far as to mortgage her said house and lots in order to obtain an addition to the stock of goods and merchandise.” Her capacity as a femm.e sole is limited to a particular disposition, for a particular purpose, of particular property, and would terminate when that, disposition was made. The purpose of the disposition is to enable her to obtain cm addition to her stoefo of goods cmd merchandise. From the application it is apparent she was engaged as a trader in the buying and selling of goods and merchandise, and the continuation of the trade is the very reason and purpose of investing her with power to mortgage this specific real estate — a power the law withholds from married women in respect to'the estates it declares they hold separate from the husband. If the decree is valid, it legalizes the continuation of the trade, and invests her with the capacity of a sole trader in merchandise, — a capacity she has not at common law, or under the statute creating separate estates. Wilder & Co. v. Abernathy, 54 Ala. 644; Dreyfus v. Wolffe, 65 Ala. 496.
-The power the chancellor can exercise, is to relieve the married woman from the disabilities of coverture, to the extent precisely expressed. To that extent, by the decree, her status is changed, and permanently changed — she becomes a fennme sole, and she can not be restored to the condition of a femme covert.—Halliday v. Jones, 57 Ala. 525. If she did not mortgage the house and lots under the power conferred by the decree, her status as a fennme covert would remain unchanged; or if, having mortgaged, she redeemed, her status would be restored. If she mortgaged for any other than the purpose specified, the power conferred would not be exercised, and from the decree 'the mortgage could not derive operation and effect. As to all other of her property, now owned, or which
The decree, like all judicial sentences, depends for validity on the jurisdiction of the chancellor. The want of jurisdiction to change, temporarily and partially, the status of the appellant as a married woman — to convert her into a femme sole for a specific purpose, and as to specific property — renders the decree void. The mortgage rests for its validity, of consequence, wholly on the power of husband and wife to mortgage the statutory separate estate. While husband and wife may, by an instrument in writing executed in the mode prescribed by the statute, sell, they can not pledge or mortgage the sepárate estate of the wife. A mortgage of it is simply void — void at law and in equity.—Peeples v. Stalla, 57 Ala. 53; Chapman v. Abrahams, 61 Ala. 108; Shulman v. Fitzpatrick, 62 Ala. 571.
The decree of the chancellor must be reversed, and a decree will be here rendered, granting relief to the appellant.