40 Fla. 97 | Fla. | 1898
On May 3rd, 1884, Amanda M. Colcord executed a paper writing purporting to be her last will and testament, whereby she devised and bequeathed to Russell E. Colcord, her son, and to the heirs of his body, all of her “estate, real, personal and mixed, wherever found and wherever situated,” with a proviso that if her said son should die without wife or issue, then the property was devised and bequeathed to the St. Johns Episcopal Church of Jacksonville, to hold to its associates and successors forever. In case her son should die, leaving a wife and no issue, the wife was to be provided for as though the property devised to her son was absolutely his. The will made no reference to any future husband or children. Mrs. Colcord subsequently intermarried with the appellee and died April 5, 1891. On June 23, 1891, this will was offered for probate before the county judge of Duval county, which was resisted by appellee upon the ground, among others, that by the subsequent marriage of the testatrix to appellee, the will was revoked. On December 21, 1891, the county judge refused to probate the will upon the ground that “the marriage of a feme sole revokes a will made prior thereto,
This case involves new, novel and important questions relating to the revocation of wills, and the conclusions we announce become, to a certain extent, rules of property. Cases involving similar questions are likely to arise very frequently in this State, and for these reasons we depart from our usual custom of affirming cases without written opinion.
1. The appellants present only one point for our consideration in their brief, viz: Did the marriage of Mrs. Colcord revoke her antenuptial will? It is admitted that at common law the will of a feme sole was revoked by her marriage. It was assumed in the court below that Mrs. Colcord was unmarried when the will in question was executed, but there is nothing in the record to show that she was not the wife of Mr. Colcord at that time. If she was, then it may be questioned whether the common law rule enforced by the' lower
In determining the questions which we conceive to be necessarily involved by this appeal, it will be proper to refer to certain constitutional and statutory provisions in force at the time of making the will in question, and which are still in force. By the act of March 6, 1845, it was provided that thereafter whenever any female citizen of Florida should marry, or whenever any female should marry a citizen of Florida, the female being possessed of real or personal property, her title to same should continue separate, independent and beyond the control of her husband, and should not be liable to execution for his debts, provided, however, that the property of the female should remain in the care and management of her husband; and further, that married women might thereafter become seized or'possessed of real and personal property during coverture, by demise, bequest, gift, purchase or distribution; and by the sixth section of the same act it was provided that if a married woman die in Florida possessed of real or personal property, the husband should take the same interest in her said property, and no other, which a child would take and inherit, and if the wife should die without children, the husband should be entitled to administration and to all her property, both real and personal. Section 26 Article IV of the Constitution of 1868 provided that all property both real and personal of a wife owned by her before marriage or acquired afterward by gift, devise, descent or purchase should be her separate property and not liable for the debts of her husband, and this provision was continued by the Constitution of 1885 — section 1 Article XT. Chap. 3249, approved February it, 1881, provides that a married woman may dispose of her prop
It is admitted by appellants that the statute last quoted adopted that provision of the common law which revoked the will of a feme sole upon her marriage, but insisted that the rule is inconsistent with the statutes regulating married women’s property, and authorizing them' to make wills subsequently enacted and therefore no longer of force in this State. They insist that the reasons for the common law rule, viz: that after marriage a woman had no power to make a will or to change or alter one previously made, having ceased to exist upon the passage of the act of 1881, the rule itself ought to cease agreeably to the rules of logic, and a maxim- of the common law to that effect. Upon this principle many American courts have held that statutes securing a married woman’s property to herself, and authorizing her to make wills the same as if unmarried, rendered inapplicable the common law'rule under discussion, and we think the position taken by them is impregnable. In re Tuller, 79 Ill. 99, S. C. 22 Am. Rep. 164; Webb v. Jones, 36 N. J. Eq. 163; Noyes v. Southworth, 55 Mich.
2. In this case the will purported to convey all of
The decree of the court below is affirmed.