222 F. 659 | 8th Cir. | 1915
The defendants in error, T. A. Johnston et al., who will be called the plaintiffs, commenced suit in the circuit court of Yell county, Ark., in February, 1913, against one W. W. Bynum, claiming of him damages in the sum of $20,000 for an alleged tort which caused the burning of a cotton seed oil mill of the plaintiffs and the machinery connected therewith, to their damage in said matter. Upon the filing of the complaint a writ of attachment issued against the property of said defendant, and thereunder certain household goods, furniture, a piano, and some other property were levied upon as his property to satisfy said liability.
The plaintiff in error, Mrs. Lena Bynum, wife of W, W. Bynum, in due time filed in said suit an interplea claiming that the household goods and furniture seized under the writ of attachment belonged to her and were a part of her separate estate, and not subject to seizure under the attachment, and asked that she recover judgment for the immediate possession of said property. The suit was later reifioved by W. W. Bynum to the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas, upon the ground that when it was commenced he was a citizen of Tennessee and the plaintiffs citizens of Arkansas. He then moved in the United States’ court to quash the attachment upon the.ground that the writ was wrongly issued, and the property attached thereunder was not his property, but belonged to his wife,
The interplea of the plaintiff in error, who will be called Mrs. By-num, was then tried to the court, a jury having been duly waived, and judgment was rendered in her favor for a part of said property, and against her for the remainder thereof, and she prosecutes this writ of error to reverse so much of the judgment or order as denies her claim to a part of said attached property.
Mrs. Bynum and defendant W. W. Bynum were married in Memphis, Term., some 20 years before this trial, and removed to Dardanelle, Yell county, Ark., early in 1913, where he intended to engage in business. The property attached consists of Xour sets of bedroom furniture, some sitting room, dining room, and kitchen furniture, a piano, couch, and tables, and other articles of household goods, appraised at some $1,500. The testimony shows without any dispute that shortly after her marriage Mrs. Bynum received from her mother’s estate some $5,000 in money, which she then placed in the hands of her husband while they were living in Tennessee, to be kept and handled by him for “their mutual benefit,” as she says, which amount has never been returned to her in full; that three of the bedroom sets and other furniture attached were purchased by her in Tennessee some years before they removed to Dardanelle, she selecting the same, having them charged to her husband, and sent to their home, and for which he paid. The fourth of the sets was purchased and paid for by her with money that she had personally earned after their marriage, whether as sole trader or not does not appear. All the property so purchased was always called her property by herself and husband, and she claimed it as her separate property from the time it was purchased, and he says that he "gave it to her” and never made any claim to any part of it thereafter. Among the property attached was a walnut dresser, which she says was given to her by her grandmother; that the kitchen furniture was selected and purchased by her and paid for by him in the way above stated, the piano was given to her by her grandmother, and the couch was left to her by her mother, and some of the tables also came from her mother’s estate. Mrs Bynum testifies that her husband did not give her any note for the money that she let him have, that she just turned it over to him as a common fund, that he managed the business affairs, that she let him have this money to invest in his own business as he saw lit, and supposed that he did, that he never kept any separate account of it, that she turned the same over to him for the best interests of both, and if she needed anything he would pay for it. Mr. Bynum testified as follows:
“Q. I see a description of household goods, dining room, bedroom set, stoves, etc. You bought all of this, I presume, from time to time as the needs of your family required? A. Yes, sir; that is, I did not buy them. My wife usually bought those things, had them charged to me, and at the end of the month was paid for by me. Q. The same Is true of the bedding, I presume? A. A good big part of that bedding was my wife’s before we were married. A part of that was bought afterwards, in the same way. Q. You say it would last for 22 years? A. I know it did. Q. (By counsel for Mrs. Bynum.) I will ask you if when you purchased and paid for various articles of furniture, if you considered them as your wife’s and gave them to her? A. Yes, sir. Q. Yon never claimed any ownership in them yourself? A. No, sir.”
Upon these facts the trial court awarded to Mrs. Bynum the following items of the attached property: Oak set, consisting of three pieces, wash stand, dresser, and bed; walnut dresser, given to her by her grandmother; piano, couch, and table, left to Mrs. Bynum by her mother and grandmother — and awarded the remainder thereof to the plaintiffs in the attachment proceedings as the property of W. W. Bynum to which order awarding the remainder of the property to the plaintiffs Mrs. Bynum duly excepted. The bedroom set awarded Mrs. Bynum was no doubt intended as the set purchased and paid for by her-from her personal earnings since her marriage, as the other property awarded to her was that given to her by her mother and grandmother.
.That Mrs. Bynum let her husband have some $5,000 of her own money shortly after their marriage, which came from her mother’s estate, is not controverted, and could not well be under the testimony; and she and her husband both say that the furniture was always called hers, and that he never made any claim thereto after its purchase, but “gave it to her.” There is no testimony that this furniture was paid for with any of the specific money that was left with him, and the most that could be claimed is that the amount paid for it was a repayment to that extent upon his debt to her for the money she left with him; but the testimony is silent as to any understanding, agreement, or conduct between them to this effect. True, he says that he gave the furniture for which he paid to her; but, if it was given to her, it must have been his to give, or he could not haye made the gift, and, if a gift, it would not have been a repayment to that extent upon his indebtedness to her. If the testimony clearly showed that this furniture was paid for with the separate funds of Mrs. Bynum, and the purchase of it was in Arkansas, where the “Married Woman’s Act” (Kirby’s Dig. Ark. §§ 5207-5230) is in force, they should not be held to that degree of strictness in dealing between themselves in regard to the loaning and repayment of the wife’s money that would be held between strangers. See the cases cited in Re Remmerde (D. C.) 206 Fed. 826, 835. But the testimony does not so show, and plainly shows a course of dealing between Mr. and Mrs. Bynum that is ustial between husband and wife living together in harmony, where the wife not infrequently selects the household furniture, which is paid for by the husband, the title to which vests in him as the head of the family.
Under the act of Tennessee of March 23, 1875 (chapter 89), personal property belonging to the wife, whether acquired bef.ore or after marriage, is exempt from the debts, contracts, and other liabilities of the husband before marriage. Otherwise, her general personal property, whether acquired before or after marriage, becomes, after being reduced to possession by the husband, his property, and subject to his debts, contracts, and disposition as his own. By the act of March 27, 1877 (chapter 79), the husband is not liable for his wife’s antenuptial debts, contracts, or obligations, and has not such interest in property owned by her at the time of, or acquired by her as heir or distributee after, marriage as to prevent her creditors from subjecting her property to the satisfaction of their debts. Her separate property is not subject to his debts, contracts, or disposition, otherwise than as authorized by the instrument under which she acquired it. When engaged as sole trader, she is liable for debts so acquired as if a feme sole. Acts 1897, c. 82.
By the act of February 20, 1913 (Acts Tenn. 1913, c. 26), effective January 1, 1914, married women are fully emancipated from all disability on account of coverture; and the common law as to the disabilities of married women and its effect on the rights of property of the wife is totally abrogated. But as this was not in force at the time of the transactions in question it has no bearing upon them. Under the law of Tennessee this money left by Mrs. Bynum with her husband, when reduced to possession by him, as it clearly was, became his individual property and subject to his liabilities; and whether the furniture in controversy was paid for by him from such money, or as a repayment thereof to the extent of the amount paid for the furniture, would be wholly immaterial.
The judgment must therefore be affirmed.
And it is so ordered.