185 P. 741 | Or. | 1919
The plaintiff and Charles Harder were married in Oregon in 1893. The testimony of the latter’s brothers, who were familiar at that time with his holdings, is to the effect that he had property at time of his marriage of the value of $7,000. The testimony of the plaintiff is the only evidence tending to dispute this. She and her husband, Charles Harder, lived at various places in the State of Oregon - and finally, in 1907, they removed to Idaho and resided there until his death in 1910. He had taken with him to Idaho $18,000 and deposited it in his own name in the First National Bank of Caldwell in that state. He invested about $8,000 of this money in realty in Idaho, which he owned at the time of his death. It appears that the married pair had domestic trouble and the plaintiff sued her husband for divorce in the courts -of Idaho. About that time Charles Harder, with the funds on deposit in the First National Bank of Caldwell, bought a draft on the First National Bank of Portland, Oregon, in the sum of $10,713, which he took with him en route to Portland' by train. On the way,
The next evening Charles and the defendant visited the fourth brother, where Charles repeated in substance the same statement about his wife and the gift of the money to the quartette of brothers. The four brothers/give a very circumstantial account of this transaction. They state that Charles Harder never afterwards claimed or asserted any act of ownership or control over the money, and that the certificate of deposit remained in the possession of the defendant until maturity, when it was cashed and later on the proceeds were divided' equally among the four brothers, long prior to the commencement of this suit.
“When property is owned by either husband or wife, the other has no interest therein which can be the subject of contract between them, or such interest as will make the same liable for the contracts or liabilities of either the husband or wife who is not the owner of the property, except as provided in this act”: Section 7034, L. O. L.
“The property and pecuniary rights of every married woman at the time of her marriage or after-wards acquired, shall not be subject to the debts or contracts of her husband and she may manage, sell, convey or devise the same by will, to the same extent and in the same manner that her husband can property belonging to him”: Section 7044, L. O. L.
“The property, either real or personal, acquired by any married woman during coverture by her own labor, shall not be liable for the debts, contracts or liabilities of her husband, but shall in all respects be subject to the same exemptions and liabilities as property owned at the time of her marriage or afterwards acquired by gift, devise or inheritance”: Section 7045, L. °. K .'....
“All laws which impose or recognize civil disabilities upon a wife which are not imposed or recognized as existing as to the husband are hereby repealed. * * And for any unjust usurpation of her propierty or natural rights she shall have the same right to appeal in her own name alone to the courts of law or equity for redress that the husband has”: Section 7050, L. O. L.
“It is presumed that a person takes ordinary care of his own concerns”: Section 799, subd. 4, L. O. L.
In a note on page 220 of the first American edition of Kerr on Fraud and Mistake, is found this language:
“There can be no doubt of the power of a husband to dispose absolutely of his property during his life independently of the concurrence, and exonerated from any claim of his wife, provided the transaction is not merely colorable and be unattended with circumstances indicative of fraud upon the rights of the wife. If the disposition by the husband be bona fide, and no right is reserved to him, though made to defeat the right of the wife, it will be good against her: Dunnock v. Dunnod, 3 Md. Ch. 140; Cameron v. Cameron, 10 Smedes & Mar. (Miss.) 394 (48 Am. Dec. 759); Lightfoot v. Colgin, 5 Munf. (Ya.) 42; Stewart v. Stewart, 5 Conn. 317; Holmes v. Holmes, 3 Paige (N. Y.), 363.”
This excerpt is quoted with approval in Small v. Small, 56 Kan. 1 (42 Pac. 323, 54 Am. St. Rep. 581, 30 L. R. A. 243). The same doctrine is recognized in
“A husband has power to dispose of his personal property in good faith, by gift or otherwise, during coverture, free from all post-mortem, claims thereon by his widow.”
But that:
“A transfer of personal property, which is a mere device or contrivance by which the husband, not parting with the absolute dominion over the property during his life, seeks at his death to /deprive his widow of her distributive share of his estate, is fraudulent and void as to her.”
Neither is the case like that of Weber v. Rothchild, 15 Or. 385 (15 Pac. 650, 3 Am. St. Rep. 162). There, Weber’s wife sued him for a divorce. He had transferred property to Rothchild for a greatly inadequate price, with the understanding that he should enjoy a benefit from it and be entitled to a reconveyance of the same on payment of a certain amount of money. This was held void as against the wife in her suit for divorce, because it was in fraud of her as a quasi creditor. Likewise, in Barrett v. Barrett, 5 Or. 411, it was held that the wife when suing for a divorce has a standing as such a creditor from the time the suit was begun, to inquire into the validity of a conveyance made by the husband at any time after the cause of suit arose. In that instance the husband, fearing the ad
In all these Oregon cases the husband was really the owner of the property in equity, while in the instant litigation the evidence shows without dispute that he parted with the title to the money beyond recall.
In Jones v. Summerville, 78 Miss. 269 (28 South. 940, 86 Am. St. Rep. 627), it was held that—
“Fraud on marital rights cannot be predicated of a voluntary conveyance by either husband or wife made to prevent the other from inheriting. ’ ’
In other words, if the property in question in very truth remains that of the donor or grantor and the transfer is made simply to cover it up for his benefit, and to conceal it from his wife as a claimant, it is really his and is subject to money demands his wife
“The husband has the management and control of the community property, with the like absolute power of disposition (other than testamentary) as he has in his separate estate; but such power or disposition does not extend to the homestead or that part of the common property occupied or used by the husband and wife as a residence.”
This statute seems to have been borrowed from the State of California. It was there construed in Spreckels v. Spreckels, 172 Cal. 775 (158 Pac. 537), to mean:
“That during the marriage the husband was the sole and exclusive owner of all of the community property, and that the wife had no title thereto, nor interest or*234 estate therein, other than a mere expectancy as heir, if she survived him”: Citing Van Maren v. Johnson, 15 Cal. 311; Greiner v. Greiner, 58 Cal. 119; People v. Swalm, 80 Cal. 49 (22 Pac. 67, 13 Am. St. Rep. 96); Tolman v. Smith, 85 Cal. 263 (24 Pac. 743); Corker v. Corker, 95 Cal. 309 (30 Pac. 541); Fallbrook I. D. v. Abila, 106 Cal. 362 (39 Pac. 794); Estate of Burclick, 112. Cal. 393 (44 Pac. 734); Spreckels v. Spreckels, 116 Cal. 343 (48 Pac. 228, 58 Am. St. Rep. 170, 36 L. R. A. 497); Sharp v. Loupe, 120 Cal. 93 (52 Pac. 134, 586); Cumha v. Hughes, 122 Cal. 112 (54 Pac. 535, 68 Am. St. Rep. 27); Peiser v. Griffin, 125 Cal. 12 (57 Pac. 690); Estate of Merchant, 143 Cal. 539 (77 Pac. 475).
It follows that whether we consider the money as the separate property of Charles Harder, which the evidence seems to have established, or whether it is to be treated as community property, according to the contention of the plaintiff, the result is the same, that the gift of it by Charles Harder to his brothers, absolute and unrestricted as it was, carried to them the title in the same to the exclusion of the plaintiff. It is unnecessary to consider the matter pleaded in abatement by the defendant. The decree of the Circuit Court is affirmed. Affirmed.