60 Ky. 503 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1861
delivered the opinion of the court:
In 1837, serious disagreements having arisen between Thos. Gaines and his wife, a contract was made between said Gaines, of the one part, and the appellee, Poor, and Jacob Spears, as his surety, of the other, in which it was recited that said Gaines and his wife “have separated, and both desiring to be free from any duty or obligation or charge to eách other have come to the following agreement, to-wit: that hereafter they will live separate and apart from each other, and that as to their estate the following agreement is made: that said Thomas Gaines will convey to Edward Poor, in trust for his said wife, all her wearing apparel” and other property described, and that “the said Catharine agrees to make no claim on said Thomas or his estate for maintenance, alimony or dower in case she shall survive him;” and by which said Thomas conveyed said wearing apparel and other property to said Poor, “in trust for the üse and benefit” of his said wife; and said Poor, and said Spears
Gaines and his wife continued to live apart after the making of said contract, and in 1842 she brought a suit against him for alimony, pending which he died. In 1844 she revived the suit against his representatives, and by amended bill claimed dower, and obtained a decree for $184 07, being one-third of the personal assets of her husbands estate, and recovered dower in two tracts of land, one of which said Thomas Gaines had devised to his son, R. H. Gaines, and the other to his sons Thomas and Francis.
Said R. H. Gaines qualified as executor of said Thomas, and afterward died; and the appellant Elizabeth A. Gaines, having qualified as his administratrix, with the will annexed, and also as administratrix de bonis non, with the will annexed, of said Thomas, sued said Poor upon his aforesaid contract to recover the value of the dower and personal estate recovered by Mrs. Thomas Gaines, and the costs of Mrs. Thomas Gaines’ suit, and the attorney’s fees paid in defending same. There were a verdict and judgment for Poor, from which judgment this appeal was taken.
1. Mrs. Thomas Gaines was not a party to the contract between Thomas Gaines and Poor and Spears. She did not sign it, and it is evident from the contract itself that the parties did not contemplate that she would sign it, although it recites certain agreements between her and her husband. It is the contract of Thomas Gaines with Poor as principal and Spears as surety.
It necessarily follows:
First. That Poor cannot avoid the contract on account of any duress practiced by Thomas Gaines upon his wife.
Second. That the lapse of seven years between the recovery of dower by Mrs. Gaines, and the bringing of this suit, cannot bar the appellant’s right of recovery against Poor. Even if Mrs. Gaines had signed the contract as principal and Poor as
Third. That the appellant is not barred by any thing contained in the record of the suit between Thomas Gaines and his wife. The fact that Thomas Gaines, in that suit, pleaded and relied upon said contract between him and Poor and Spears as the contract of Mrs. Gaines, did not make it her contract; and the court in that case held, as we do now, that it was not her contract and did not bar her right of suit against Gaines and his representatives for alimony and dower.
2. The covenant to save Thomas Gaines, his heirs, &c., free from any claim of dower on the part of Mrs. Gaines, ran with the land, (Smith’s Leading Cases, 5th Am. Ed., vol. 1, pages 123, 124,) and passed pro tanto to the respective devisees of the land. (Dougherty vs. Duvall’s heirs, 9 B. Mon., 57.)
R. H. Gaines, to whom one of the tracts was devised, had the right of action so far as dower was assigned out of that tract; and, the breach having taken place during his lifetime, the right of action to that extent passed to the appellant as his administratrix. The appellant, as administratrix of Thomas Gaines, also had the right of action upon the covenant so far as it stipulated that Mrs. Gaines should not claim her share of her husband’s personal estate. Hence the court below did not err in holding that the petition stated a cause of action.
3. It is contended that the contract between Gaines and Poor was against public policy and therefore void. Unquestionably a contract by a husband, made before marriage, or afterward when living in amity with his wife, to pay an allowance
According to the answer of the appellee, Mrs. Gaines had for a length of time been treated by her husband “with such barbarity and cruelty as utterly to destroy her peace and happiness.” If so, a court of equity would have decreed her alimony and divorce a mensa et ihoro. If, in such a case, the wife and her friends choose to make an arrangement with the husband for her separation and support, instead of exposing her troubles and grief to the public gaze by resorting to a court of equity, we are not prepared to say that sound policy demands that the husband’s provision for her support shall be pronounced a nullity. The doctrine supporting such contracts is too well settled to be disturbed now. Gaines’ conveyance to Poor, as trustee for Mrs. Gaines, being valid, formed a sufficient consideration for Poor’s covenant against any further claim by her.
4. But appellee’s counsel contend that the conveyance to Poor being merely “in trust for Mrs. Gaines,” did not give her a separate interest in the property, but left it as much under
No particular form of words is necessary to create a separate use. Any words showing an intention to do so will suffice. It is well settled that a deed or devise by a stranger in trust for a married woman, with nothing to indicate that it is for her separate use, will not give her a separate interest. But if the deed or will. directs the trustee to collect the rents and profits and pay them to her, or uses any other language showing that a separate use is intended, the law will carry that intention into efFect. In the case before us, though the contract does not employ any of the usual technical words to create a separate use, yet as it shows that a separation was intended between Gaines and his wife, and'that the property was conveyed to Poor, in trust for her, in view of such separation, it is clear that a separate use was intended. The property, therefore, was held by Poor for the separate use of Mrs. Gaines.
5. As we have already shown, R. H. Gaines had the right of action so far as the covenant related to the personal estate of Thomas Gaines, and so far as it related to the tract of land devised to himself, and to that extent he had the power to release the right to damages, and if he did so, the appellant had no cause of action.
6. As to the costs and expenses of defending the suit brought by Mrs. Gaines, the appellant has a right to recover the legal costs, unless R. H. Gaines relinquished the right of action, but no right to recover attorney’s fees. Thomas and R. H. Gaines having notified Poor of the suit, it was Poor’s duty to defend. He would have been liable on his covenant if a greater amount had been recovered by Mrs. Gaines. The defense was a voluntary thing on the part of Thomas and R. H. Gaines, ' not at the request of Poor, and they must pay their attorney’s fees.
7. We have already shown that it is immaterial whether Thomas Gaines and his wife had separated before the execution of the contract or not. Mrs. Gaines’ testimony tending to prove that they had not then separated, and her statements.as to the conduct of her husband toward her, his
Having stated the principles applicable to the case, it is unnecessary to notice in detail the action of the court below upon the pleadings and instructions.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial, and other proceedings consistent with this opinion.