20 Mo. 170 | Mo. | 1854
delivered the opinion of the court.
The questions in this case arise upon the instructions given by the court below. These instructions involve the construe
§1. “ In addition to the property now exempt from levy and sale under execution, by the tenth, eleventh and twelfth sections of the act of which this is amendatory, the property owned by a woman before her marriage, and that which she may acquire after her marriage, by descent, gift, grant, devise or otherwise, and the use and profits thereof shall be exempt from all debts and liabilities of her husband contracted, or incurred by him previous to their marriage, or previous to the time the wife came into the possession of such property.”
1. This statute cannot have any operation upon debts contracted before its passage. It must operate from its date prospectively. Debts contracted before its passage, and property liable to be sold for these debts before its passage, remain unaffected by it. The constitution of the state prohibits the legislature from passing any “ law impairing the obligation of contracts or retrospective in its operation.” (State Const., art. 13, sec. 17.) It may be then safely assorted that this act of the legislature does not operate, and was not designed to operate upon debts contracted before its passage.
From the record in this case, it cannot be ascertained when the debt on which the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of St. Louis county was rendered in February, 1850, became due. This judgment is alleged to have been rendered on the 6th of February, 1850. Take this date, then, as the time the indebtedness of the defendant accrued, and it will be after the passage of the act, for the act was passed in March, 1849 ; and from the evidence preserved in the record, it will also be after the property had come into the possession of the wife. ■ Now the act exempts the wife’s property from debts and liabilities of her husband, contracted or incurred by him previous to their
In either view, then, the third instruction, given by the court in this case, is erroneous. This instruction is as follows : “If the said property and money were so acquired by Mrs. Gray after said debt accrued, and were used by her for the purchase of the lot in question, then he did not furnish the money, and the plaintiff cannot recover.” Nowit may be that the money and property were acquired by Mrs. Gray after the debt accrued, and yet be acquired before the passage of the act under which she claims exemption.
The legislature intended that after 5th March, 1849, the property which a woman owned before her marriage, as well as that which she might acquire after her marriage, by descent, gift, grant, devise or otherwise, should be exempt from all debts of the husband, contracted or incurred previous to the marriage, or previous to the time the wife came into the possession of such property. The creditors of the husband, under such contracts, could not be presumed to have become such by means of any such property. It was not in his possession before his marriage; it was not in his possession when he contracted debts after his marriage, but before his wife acquired the property, as mentioned in the statute. Such property and money then, coming to the wife in the manner pointed out in this statute, could not be considered a fund in the husband’s
The judgment below must be reversed, and the cause remanded, to be further proceeded with, in accordance with the views set forth in this opinion.
I have not thought it necessary to notice each particular instruction, supposing that many of them will not be required in the further trial of this case. The other judges concurring, the judgment below is reversed,- and the cause remanded.