2 N.J. Eq. 243 | New York Court of Chancery | 1839
There can be no doubt that the complainants in this case are entitled, upon the general rule, to an account at the hands of the defendants. The bill was filed by William Donnington-, in his life-time, as administrator of his wife, for an account of her personal estate. He died, and the complainants have obtained letters of administration of the husband’s estate, and also, de bonis non, of the estate of his wife. On the death of a wife the husband may administer on her estate, and in that character take to himself, for his own benefit, jure mariti,
But this rule, it is equally clear, must and will be controlled by any legal instrument which shall make a different disposition of the wife’s estate. Prior to his marriage, the complainants’ intestate and his wife did enter into articles respecting her separate estate, and the whole case turns upon the true construction of that instrument.
The father of Mrs. .Donnington died a few years prior to her marriage, and left to his family, consisting of his wife and two children, a very considerable estate. The marriage agreement was signed by these parties just before their marriage;, and while there are some general expressions in it which look like a total abandonment of all claim on the part of the husband to any interest in the estate, yet it manifestly was intended to guard against the husband and his creditors only during the coverture. There is no disposition made of the property in the event of the wife’s death before her husband, but that is reserved for the future appointment of the wife, and she died without making any such appointment.
It would have been very e ;¡: Síí $ e n t i o n of the parties, to have declared the trus^B=^®)Wí»íi*t4íe next of kin, or in some other manner to have shown a determination to exclude the husband. No such trust having been declared, nor indeed any disposition whatever made of the property after the death of the wife, 1 can consider this instrument only as a provision during coverture, leaving the rights of all parties, on the death of the wife, to be settled by the law. It leaves the estate as if no settlement had been made.
Some objections were stated on the argument to the settlement, which did not, I confess, strike me as being well founded ; but it is unnecessary to examine them, because, taken as a valid deed, it no way, in my opinion, impairs the rights of the husband.
I shall direct an account to be taken by a master, of the personal estate of the wife, and of the rents and profits of her real estate to the time of her death.
Order accordingly.
[An appeal was taken by the defendants from the decree in this cause, which is still pending undecided.1