87 Mo. App. 92 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1901
The appeal is from an order of the circuit court sustaining a motion for a new trial. The object of
The marriage having taken place prior to the taking effect of the Married Woman’s Act of March 25, 1875, the right of the husband to the personal property and choses in action of his wife at the time of the marriage is not affected by that act. Winn v. Riley, 151 Mo. 61; Hurt v. Cook, 151 Mo. 416; Leet v. State Bank, 141 Mo. 584. But money and choses in action acquired by her after the passage of the act, are protected by it, and could not be acquired by the husband in any other manner than that pointed out by the act. Winn v. Riley, and Hurt v. Cook, supra.
In Hurt v. Cook, supra, it was held that a wife can not transfer to her husband a note payable to her individually by a mere blank indorsement of her name thereon. In the case in hand the evidence tends to prove that the wife by written indorsement on the notes payable to her, assigned and transferred them to Wood, her husband. In the Hurt case, to make the transfer effectual, it had to be inferred that that was the purpose of the blank indorsement and that such an inference could not be drawn when the statute required the intention to be ex
The cause was tried before Judge Turner, who gave judgment for the defendant. Pending a motion for new trial, Judge Turner died. Judge McKee, his successor, sustained the motion and granted a new trial, but failed, as the practice act requires should be done, to assign any reason for sustaining the motion. The appeal is from the order granting a new trial.
Both the petition and,,.evidence are hazy. The petition seems to be a bill in equity for the discovery of assets of the estate of Mrs. Wood- — alleged to be in the possession of Wood — but they are not set out or described with any degree of particularity, and it is difficult to discover just what the plaintiff is fishing for. A bill of discovery is not known in our system of jurisprudence. The only method of discovering concealed assets of the estate of a decedent, is the one prescribed by sections 75, 76, 77, Revised Statutes 1899. It may be that the plaintiff can amend his bill so as to conform to the rules of good pleading and on a new trial produce evidence to entitle him to affirmative relief. The learned trial judge, by granting the new trial, afforded him this opportunity. This was discretionary with the trial judge and we will not interfere with that discretion. The judgment is affirmed.