10 Nev. 43 | Nev. | 1875
By the Court,
This action was brought by plaintiff to recover possession of a certificate of the capital stock of the Dayton Silver Mining Company, representing five shares of said capital stock, or, for its value in case a delivery cannot be had. The plaintiff claims the stock as the assignee of one Casper Haupt, the divorced husband of the defendant; and the defense interposed is, that the mining stock was the common property of the defendant and her late husband, and that by the decree dissolving the marriage between them, and by operation of law consequent thereon, the whole, or at least one-half of the stock then vested in and still remained the property of defendant. Whether the mining stock in controversy was such common property, is the first question in the case. Casper Haupt and defendant intermarried at St. Louis, Missouri, in the year 1848, and after-Avards removed to this State and' engaged in the business of keeping a saloon and boarding-house. The husband purchased the certificate of stock in question, on or about the 4th of June, 1864, and paid therefor about the sum of fifty dollars from the proceeds of their joint earnings while engaged in the said business. The certificate of stock was acquired before the adoption of the Constitution of this State, and before the passage by the legislature of any statute providing for the separate or common property of husband and wife; hence their rights to the property in question must be governed by the rule of the common law. At common laAV the existence of common property is not recognized in the marital relation. By the marriage, the legal existence of the wife is suspended or incorporated into that of the husband; she becomes sub potestate viri; is incapable of holding any personal property, or of having the use of any real estate; her earnings belong to her hus
The only statute enacted by the legislature prior to the decree dissolving the marriage relation between the defendant and her husband, providing for the common property of husband and wife, was passed March 7,1865. (Stats. 1864-5, 239.) This statute, however, did not operate retrospectively so as to affect the rights or interests of husband and wife to property previously acquired; nor did the legislature intend to give to it such operation, but, on the contrary, by the fifteenth section of the act, expressly limited its provisions to property acquired after its passage. But it is urged on the part of the defendant, that under section 25 of the “Act regulating marriage and divorce ” (Stat. of 1861, 98), that upon the divorce, the husband being the guilty party, and the property in controversy not having been disposed of or regulated by the order of the court, was, by virtue of the divorce and operation of law, divested out of the said Casper, and vested in the defendant. That section reads as follows: “In granting a divorce, the court shall also make such disposition of the property of the parties as shall appear just and equitable, having regard to the respective merits of the parties, and to the condition in which they will be left by such divorce, and to the party through whom the propei'ty was acquired, and to the burdens imposed upon it for the benefit of the children. And all property and pecuniary rights and interests, and all rights touching the children, their custody and guardianship, not otherwise disposed of or regulated by the order of the court, shall by such divorce be divested out of the guilty party and vested in the party at whose instance the divorce was granted.” * * * If it was necessary to interpret this section independent of other provisions of the act, and in view of the fact that the
The judgment of the court below is therefore affirmed.