199 A. 242 | Vt. | 1938
This is an action in contract. The declaration alleges that on June 4, 1932, the defendant Ernest LaFrance and Alice M. LaFrance, his wife, were, and had been for some time then past, living separate and apart from each other; that, desiring to come to an amicable settlement, they executed a written contract with Walter H. Cleary, the plaintiff, as trustee, the material parts of which were as follows: In consideration that he was released from all obligation and liability for the future support of his wife the defendant transferred to the plaintiff, as trustee, certain household goods and furnishings, agreed to discharge certain outstanding indebtedness, and to pay each week to the plaintiff, as trustee, a certain sum of money, for the care and support of his wife; in consideration of these weekly payments to the plaintiff, to be used for her support, and the payment of the specified debts, Alice agreed with the plaintiff, as trustee, that she would undertake and assume her own support, without further expense to, or liability on the part of, the defendant; in consideration of the performance of the agreement by the defendant and his wife, the plaintiff agreed to accept the trust, to receive the money and to disburse it for the support of Alice; and "the further consideration for this contract is the agreement of the other parties to the contract and the performance of the contract by each of them." It is alleged that Alice M. LaFrance has performed her part of the contract, and the plaintiff, as trustee, has been willing to perform his part, and has done so except in so far as he has been prevented by the failure of the defendant to carry out his promises and undertakings, but the latter has failed to make all the stipulated weekly payments, and is now in arrears, to recover which this action is brought.
The defendant demurred upon the grounds that the contract was void as being without consideration, and against public policy, in that it contemplated a continued voluntary separation between husband and wife, and the prevention of a reconciliation between them, and was an agreement by mutual consent for a separation from bed and board. The demurrer was overruled in the trial court, and the cause is here on defendant's exceptions. *425
However askance the law may once have looked upon agreements, contemplating the separation of husband and wife, they are no longer regarded with such disfavor as to condemn them under all circumstances. It is now well settled in England, and in the great majority of jurisdictions in this country, that it is not against public policy to allow the spouses, where the separation has already taken place, or is immediately to take place, fairly to define by contract their mutual rights and obligations with respect to property and to the wife's support whether such agreement is made directly between the spouses or through the intervention of a trustee. Peters v. Peters,
Our own decisions are in harmony with this view. In Squires v.Squires,
The contract before us cannot be said to be against public policy. At the time of its execution the separation was already in existence. There is nothing in its terms that would be a bar, or even a hindrance, to a reconciliation and the resumption of marital relations; it is not to be construed so as to effect a permanent separation when a different construction is possible. Carl v. Carl, 166 N.Y.S. 961, 962. Nothing appears to warrant a suspicion that it is the result of fraud or duress. There is no claim that it is unfair or inequitable in its provisions; indeed, in the absence of a showing to the contrary, it is presumptively fair. Daniels v. Benedict (C.C.A.), 97 Fed. 367, 370; Morton v. *428 Fuller,
The mutual promises of the parties to the agreement supply an ample consideration. Huffman v. Huffman,
The statutory disability of contract between husband and wife (P.L. 3074) presents no impediment to the proceeding. Such contracts, if fair and just, are enforceable in equity, Travelers' Ins. Co. v. Gebo,
Judgment affirmed and cause remanded. *429