139 Mass. 202 | Mass. | 1885
The demandant claims title under a mortgage made by Abigail Curtiss. The report states that the title to the demanded premises is now in the tenant, unless the demandant has a valid title.
During the coverture, the husband of the mortgagor advanced money for the benefit of her separate estate, and she, in consideration thereof, on February 17, 1871, made a note, and a mortgage of her separate estate, to one Seeley, for the benefit of her husband, the note being payable to said Seeley or bearer. Seeley assigned the mortgage to the husband, and delivered the note to him at some time during the life of the mortgagor. The husband afterwards, on May 21, 1877, and during the life ■ of the wife, assigned the note and mortgage to the demandant, who entered to foreclose the mortgage.
The tenant contends that the transfer to the husband extinguished and discharged the note and mortgage, so that the assignment to the demandant conveyed nothing to him. Such a result is palpably unjust, and subversive of the intentions and purposes of all the parties to the transaction.
But our statutes have made great changes as to the rights and liabilities of married women. Under them no one doubts that the note and mortgage in question were valid while in the hands of Seeley, although the entire beneficial interest in them was vested in the husband. Under the present law, the husband is not entitled to the property of the wife, and is not liable for her debts contracted before marriage, or for those contracted after marriage in relation to her separate estate, and therefore the main reason for the rule that a debt of the wife is extinguished when he becomes the owner has ceased to exist.
It is true that our statutes provide that they shall not be construed to authorize a married woman to make contracts with her husband, or to authorize suits between husband and wife. Pub. Sts. c. 147. She cannot now make a contract directly with her husband, such as a note payable to him. Such a contract is void ab initia. Roby v. Phelon, 118 Mass. 541. But it does not follow that every contract made by the wife which is valid in its inception becomes invalid or extinguished because by subsequent events the husband becomes the owner of it. It has been held that, if a woman makes a mortgage to secure the debt of a third person, and subsequently marries the mortgagee, the mortgage is not extinguished or discharged. Bemis v. Call, 10 Allen, 512. So, if a wife holds a mortgage, and the equity
In the case at bar, a married woman made a note and mortgage, valid in their inception, which were afterwards assigned to her husband; the consideration went to the benefit of her separate estate; the note has never been paid in fact; as the husband was never liable to pay the note, the" assignment to him was not a payment by operation of law, and we do not think that such assignment extinguished and discharged the note and mortgage. It is more consistent with justice, with the intentions and equities of the parties, and- with the spirit of the existing laws, to hold that in such case the note is not paid and extinguished, although the right to enforce it by suit is suspended.
We are therefore of opinion that the assignment of the note and mortgage to the demandant was valid, and he, being under no disability, had the right to foreclose the mortgage.
We are aware that the reason given for the decisions in Chapman v. Kellogg, 102 Mass. 246, and Abbott v. Winchester, 105 Mass. 115, is inconsistent with the view we have taken. The reason stated is, that there can be no valid contract between husband and wife. All the cases cited in support of this view are cases where contracts were made directly between husband and wife, which were void ab initia. We are unable to concur in the reasoning upon which those cases were decided. We are not aware of any case in this Commonwealth in which it has
In Model Lodging House Association v. Boston, 114 Mass. 133, a husband made a mortgage to secure his promissory note, and then conveyed the equity; the mortgage and note were after-wards assigned to his wife. It was held that the assignment to the wife did not extinguish the mortgage, and that a transfer of it by the wife to a third party was valid.
We are therefore of opinion, in the case at bar, that the assignments of the note and mortgage to the demandant were valid, and that his proceedings of foreclosure gave him a good title. Judgment for demandant.