119 Va. 85 | Va. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
So far as this appeal is concerned, the object of this suit is to enforce payment by the estate of G. D. De Baun, deceased, of two notes executed by him to his wife, Elizabeth De Baun, one for $2,000, dated August 5, 1869, payable on demand, and the other for $250, dated February 4, 1870, payable six months after date. The sole question to be determined is whether the lower court erred in sustaining the plea of the statute of limitations filed by the executors of G. D. De Baun as a bar to any recovery upon the claim asserted.
It appears from the record that Jameá Young, the father of Elizabeth De Baun, who lived in New Jersey, died in 1861, leaving a will by which he devised and bequeathed one-fourth of his estate to his daughter, Elizabeth, the wife of G. D. De Baun, and that in 1862 his executor paid to her, for her distributive
It is contended by the appellant -that the rights of Mrs. 'De Baun in the estate of her father were purely equitable and were enforceable only in equity, to which case no statute of limitation applies. This position is not sustained by the récord. The distinction between equitable separate estates and statutory separate estates is clearly stated as follows:
“Estates of married women which are made separate by operation of law are statutory separate estates; those which are made separate by operation of the instrument or conveyance creating them are equitable separate estates.” 25 Am. & Eng. Ency. L. (2nd ed.) 344.
In the will of Mrs. De Baun’s father there were no apt words for creating in her an equitable separate estate, but by virtue of the New Jersey act of 1852, she took a statutory separate estate. Under this statute a married woman took the legal title to property conveyed or devised to her, and not simply the equitable title thereto. Not only is the statute sufficiently clear on this point, but the Supreme Court of that State has so construed it in several cases. Vreeland v. Vreeland, 16 N. J. Eq. 512, 514; Porch v. Fries, 18 N. J. Eq. 204, 208; Armstrong v. Ross, 20 N. J. Eq. 118.
Under the provisions, therefore, of the New Jersey act of 1852, there was no occasion for Mrs. De Baun to have a trustee to hold the legal title to -the money derived .by her from her father’s estate. She took the legal title herself, and her husband was in no sense her trustee. The act is silent as to her power of disposition of the statutory separate estate created thereby, but under the New Jersey law, and -certainly under our Virginia law, which later on governed her actions, she could enter into contracts with reference to this statutory separate estate, which would be recognized and enforced by a court of equity.
In Cole v. Lee (N. J.), 18 Atl. 854, it was said to be “well settled that on proof that a husband has received his wife’s money, a court of equity will compel him and his representatives to account to her at least for the principal received, and they can only discharge themselves by showing that the husband disposed of the money according to the wife’s directions, or that it was a gift to him.”
In Burnett v. Hawpe, 25 Gratt. (66 Va.) 481, 486, Judge Staples, in commenting on the wife’s powers over her separate personal estate, says: “As an incident to this jus disponendi, a feme covert may charge the separate estate with the payment of her debts. She may charge it as principal or as surety for her own benefit or that of • another. She may appropriate it
In the light of the authorities cited, it is clear that when, in 1862, her father’s executors paid to Mrs. De Baun this statutory separate estate, she acquired both the legal and equitable title to it. Her husband had no control over it and no rights in it. And when in 1869 and 1870 she loaned him this money and took his notes for its repayment, she had the legal title to the notes in lieu of the money. Small payments were thereafter made to her and credited on the notes, and she frequently made demand on her husband for the principal and the interest. There was no trust relationship between Mrs. De Baun and her husband of any kind. When she loaned this money to him, it was his from that time on—not hers. Both considered it as a loan, and their relation to the transaction at once became that of debtor and creditor. Her claim against her husband was a legal one which, but for the disability of coverture, she could have enforced at law. She could, however, at any time have brought suit in equity and enforced payment if she had desired to do so. 1 Minor’s Inst. p. 321. In such a case the court will apply the statute of limitations by analogy to the rule which obtains in courts of law. Harshberger v. Alger, 31 Gratt. (72 Va.) 52, 67, where it is said: “In demands strictly legal, of which equity has jurisdiction concurrent with the law courts, equity follows the law literally in applying the statute of limitations,
The appellant advances as a further reason why the statute of limitations is inapplicable, that “A direct and express trust was created in him (the husband) against which the statute of limitations does not run.”
In disposing of this proposition, which seems to be based upon a misconception of the facts as we understand them, we can only repeat that the evidence shows that no trust was established or intended to be established by the parties to the transaction under consideration. The cases cited by appellant are not applicable. They are cases where the husband had received from a third party money which belonged to his wife and, therefore, held it for her use and benefit. No such fact existed in the case at bar. Mrs. De Baun did not entrust her money to her husband. She loaned it to' him and took his notes for the repayment of it. The relationship between them was, as already said, that of debtor and creditor, and not that of cestui que trust and trustee.
In the case In re Deaner’s Estate, 126 Iowa 701, 102 N. W. 825, 106 Am. St. Rep. 374, it is said: “There is no ground for the suggestion that the money was retained by the husband as a trust fund. He is not shown to have agreed to hold it for her. On the contrary, he made use of it as his own, and in the notes promised to repay. It was merely a debt of his to his wife, and would only have been enforced as such.”
And in the ease of Muns v. Muns, 29 Minn. 115, 12 N. W. 343, an instructive case on this question, it is
The ease of Riggan v. Riggan, 93 Va. 78, 24 S. E. 920, relied on by the appellant illustrates the distinction between the case of an equitable separate estate, where the husband was charged as trustee with the collection and investment of his wife’s equitable separate estate, and the case of a statutory separate estate, to which she had the legal title. In the former case it was held that the statute of limitations did not run in favor of the husband, while in the latter ease the statute was held to apply with full force against her claim upon her husband. The court said: “As to the two sums of $55.00 and $19.00, collected by Dr. Riggan on demands due his wife after the passage of the married woman’s act of April 7, 1877, while these sums of money were under this act the separate estate of the wife, they were not at all involved under the trust upon
The appellant further contends that the statute of limitations does not apply because, “Whatever was the character of her estate and her rights therein, her coverture prevented the statute from running in favor of her husband, whom she could not sue.” This contention‘has been sufficiently disposed of by what has been already said. The authorities show clearly that a married woman can and always could, sue her husband in a court of equity, and ever since the enactment of the present married woman’s law—March, 1900—she could sue him in a court of law. This being so, the statute of limitations applies as much to her claim as that of any one else.
Mr. Burks, in his recent work on Pleading and Practice, says: “While statutes of limitation, as previously stated, generally contain a saving clause in favor of infants, married women and other persons laboring under disabilities, it is entirely competent for the legislature to omit such saving clause, and, when omitted, statutes of limitations apply to such persons as though no disability existed. In Virginia the statute of limitations makes no exception in favor of married women in respect to matters relating to, or effecting, their separate estates, nor as to the right to make entry on or to bring an action to recover land.” Burks’ PI. & Pr., p. 394.
The appellant also assigns as error the refusal of the circuit court to hold that a resulting trust existed in favor of Elizabeth De Baun in the tract of land known as the Nicholson farm. It appears that the husband
In Harris v. Elliott, 45 W. Va. 245, 249, 32 S. E. 176, 178, it is said: “Another reason against such resulting trust is that what money Jasper paid he paid after the deed to Creed; as it is a rule that the payment which is to raise a resulting trust must be made at the very instant the title is taken by the alleged trustee, no subsequent payment, or even oral agreement for such trust, will raise it.”
In the ease of Donaghe, &c. v. Tams, 81 Va. 132, 142, it is said: “The resulting trust not within the statute of frauds, and which may be shown without writing, is when the purchase is made with the proper moneys of the cestui que trust, and the deed not taken in his name. The trust results from the original transaction at the time it takes place, and at no other time, and it is founded on the actual payment of money, and on no other ground.” 2 Johns. Chy. Rep. 415, quoted with approbation by Judge Bouldin in Phelps v. Seeley, 22 Gratt. (63 Va.) 573 and by Judge Christian in Miller v. Blose’s Ex’ors, 30 Gratt. (71 Va.) 744.
In McDevitt v. Frantz, 85 Va. 922, 9 S. E. 282, it is held that where, under decree of court, money was loaned to a purchaser to pay part of the price of land, a trust would not result in favor of the owners of such money.
In Levey v. Williams, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 651, 50 S. W. 528, it was held that, “a trust would not result from a purchase of land by a husband with money borrowed from his wife, so as to give her an equitable lien on the lands.”
We are of opinion that the lower court did not err in holding that the notes were long since barred by the statute of limitations, and its decree must be affirmed.
Affirmed.