146 S.E. 711 | N.C. | 1929
C. Lane Etheredge was the sole owner and proprietor of an unincorporated business which he conducted in the city of Charlotte under the name of the Etheredge Motor Sales Company. W. V. Hartman, of Pittsburgh, Pa., the plaintiff's father, gave her the sum of $45,000 in the three checks as follows: (1) A check for $10,000 dated 12 May, 1922; (2) a check for $15,000 dated 4 March, 1924, drawn by the Mellon National Bank of Pittsburgh on the National Bank of Commerce of New York, payable to the order of the plaintiff; (3) a check for $20,000 dated 11 February, 1924, drawn by the Mellon National Bank of Pittsburgh on the Bank of America, payable to the order of the plaintiff. All these checks were endorsed in due form by the plaintiff. C. Lane Etheredge *682 died on 2 July, 1926, and on 7 July, 1926, the defendants qualified as administrators of his estate.
The plaintiff brought suit to recover of the defendants the sum of $45,000, the aggregate amount of the checks alleging in substance that the intestate had received and had never accounted to the plaintiff for any part of this amount. The defendants answered, admitting that their intestate had received of the plaintiff $10,000 on 12 May, 1922, $20,000 on 14 February, 1924, and $15,000 on 7 March, 1924, and that no part of either sum was thereafter received by the plaintiff from the intestate or from the defendants. The defendants' motion for nonsuit was overruled and they excepted. Thereupon they tendered instructions to the effect that if a wife, having money in her possession which belongs to her, by her voluntary act transfers it to her husband, the law presumes the transfer to be a gift in the absence of evidence tending to show a loan; and that the burden of proving that the transaction was a loan was upon the plaintiff. These prayers were refused and the trial judge instructed the jury that if a wife, having funds in her possession, transfers the same to her husband there is a presumption, nothing else appearing, that the transaction is a loan and that the husband will undertake to repay it; and, further, that it is incumbent upon the husband who asserts it to show that the transfer is a gift.
It was admitted that the claim for $10,000 is bared and the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $35,000. Judgment for plaintiff. Exception and appeal by defendants. It is admitted that the plaintiff was the owner of the checks; that she duly endorsed them; that her husband collected them, and that the plaintiff has never been repaid. The question is whether the transfer of the wife's money to her husband raised the presumption of a loan or the presumption of a gift.
On this question judicial opinion is not unanimous, but the weight of authority and, we think, the better reasoning uphold the doctrine that where the separate property of the wife comes into the hands of her husband either from her directly or from another duly authorized to act for her there is no presumption that the transfer is a gift. The doctrine is clearly stated in Stickney v. Stickney,
This we understand to be the prevailing rule where the wife holds her separate personal property as if a feme sole. It is provided by statute and by the Constitution that the real and personal property of any female in this State, acquired before marriage, and all property, real and personal, to which she may, after marriage, become in any manner entitled, shall be and remain the sole and separate estate and property of such female, and shall not be liable for any debts, obligations or engagements of her husband, and may be devised and bequeathed, and, with the written assent of her husband, conveyed by her as if she were unmarried. C. S., 2506; Constitution, Article X, Sec. 6. It is further enacted that subject to the provisions of C. S., 2515, every married woman is authorized to contract and deal so as to affect her real and personal property in the same manner and with the same effect as if she were unmarried, but no conveyance of her real estate shall be valid unless made with the written assent of her husband as provided by section 6 of Article X of the Constitution, and her privy examination as to the execution of the same taken and certified as now required by law. C. S., 2507.
By virtue of these and other provisions the relation which married women formerly sustained to their husbands has been materially modified. Unity of person in the strict common-law sense no longer exists, and many of the common-law disabilities have been removed. Not only may they contract with each other; a married woman may now sue her husband in contract or in tort.Dorsett v. Dorsett,
We apprehend that it was considerations of this kind that led the Court to remark in Stickney v. Stickney, supra. "There are decisions of courts of some of the other States, holding that a presumption arises of a gift from the wife to the husband of moneys placed by her in his hands, unless an express promise is made by him at the time that he will account to her for them or invest them for her benefit. But the decisions we have cited are more in accordance, we think, with the spirit and purpose of the Married Woman's Act, and only be conformity with them can it be fully carried out."
The reason for the rule is thus state in Parrett v. Palmer, supra: "the trust and confidence ordinarily reposed by the wife in the husband; her natural reliance and dependence upon him for the management of her business; the fact that, as a rule, the husband is possessed of general business experience, while the experience of the wife is usually limited — *685 all these considerations sustain us in the conclusion that where the wife voluntarily delivers her money to the husband the law presumes that he takes it as trustee for her, and not as a gift, even though there be no express promise to repay."
The transaction raises not the presumption of a gift from the wife to the husband, but the presumption that he received and must account for the money. Haymond v. Bledsoe, 11 Ind. Appeals, 202, 54 A.S.R., 502;Sykes v.City Savings Bank,
By some courts a distinction is drawn between receipt of the rents or income of the wife's estate and receipt of the corpus or principal. 13 R. C. L., 1387; Estate of Hauer,
No error.