22 Ill. App. 442 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1887
The question presented by this record is whether the appellee established, by the evidence introduced, a title in the furniture replevied, which entitled her to recover it in an action at law against the creditor of her husband, who had levied upon it. By the common law the money and personal property of the wife, of which she was actually and beneficially possessed at the time of the marriage in her own right, and such goods and chattels as might come to her during marriage, became the absolute property of her husband, and the tangible property was transferred to him by operation of the law wherever it might be situated. For this purpose the possession of the wife was the possession of the husband, “ as for example, if she has money in her pocket, and this money never comes within his personal control, still being under her control, it is therefore in law his money and not hers, and the principle applies to all other chattels.” Bishop on the Law of Married Women, Sec. 64, and cases cited.
Such was the law of this State prior to the passage of the Act of 1861, and that act was not designed to take from the husband that which belonged to him at the time of its passage. Dubois v. Jackson, 49 Ill. 49; Cummings v. Cummings, (Mass.) N. E. Rep. 226.
When the appellee came into this State and lived with her husband prior to the passage of the Married Woman’s Act of 1861, the money which she had in possession was the money of her husband, and at law and so far at least as the rights of his creditors were concerned-, it continued to be his after the passage of that act, and all property that she purchased with it was his, and throughout all the changes and speculations and purchases and sales, the money, as well as the increase thereof, Avas his. Farrell v. Patterson, 43 Ill. 52, is conclusive of this case upon this point. There, Sarah Ann Farrell claimed certain property Avhich Avas levied upon by the Sheriff under exe-. cution against her husband, and a proceeding Avas had under the statute to try the right of property. There was an appeal from the verdict of the Sheriff’s jury and on the trial in the Circuit Court, the claimant introduced evidence that she married in 1849; that after her marriage her father gave her some means and also gave her §500 by his will; that she had íavo negroes which were sold for §1,300 and also had some household furniture which she had received from her father; that she came with her husband to this State in 1859, and from that time had been keeping hotel, the entire business being carried on in her name. The property levied upon was purchased by her inheroAA'nname. The court, after alluding to the fact that the moneys AA’hich she claimed came from a source other than her husband came to her from her relations prior to the law of 1861, said: “These moneys then, by force of well known and well established principles of law governing marital relations, became the property of her husband, and the chattels purchased with it became his likewise. The statute of 1861 was never designed to take from the husl and that which belonged to him as a consequence of the marriage, nar could it do so without violating those principles of right and justice no Legislature ever knoAvinglv and of purpose disregarded and ignored. All the well recognized presumptions arising from the marital relation with respect to the title to property of the wife still remain notwithstanding this statute. The act is prospective only, and is not designed to change and could not change the title to property possessed by the wife prior to its passage and which by the marriage vested in her lmsband.”
The same rule was applied in Dubois v. Jackson, supra, and we know of no case and have been referred to none, where it has been qualified, modified or questioned.
So with reference to the money paid to appellee by her brother for services prior to 1866: that also became her husband’s, and Avhatever chattels she purchased with it would be subject to the rights of his creditors. ■
It was not until the passage of the Act of 1869 that married women became entitled to their own earnings in this State. Hay v. Hayes, 56 Ill. 842; Jassoy v. Delius, 65 Ill. 469.
The fact that appellee went from this State to Indiana and also to Wisconsin, and resided in each of those States for a time with her husband, and there had the money in her possession and dealt with it, does not in any manner strengthen her position, but in fact rather makes against it under the evidence in this record. It is a presumption always indulged in by the courts that the common law prevails in such of the States of the Hnion as are formed from territory which once belonged to the colonies of England. Unless the contrary is proven as a fact to the court it will be presumed in this State that the common law prevails in Indiana and Wisconsin, as regards the marital rights of the husband. So when appellee proved that she resided in Indiana with her husband and had the money in her possession there, and that she also resided in Wisconsin and had this money there, and afterward came with it into this State, the presumption of law in. the absence of proof that by statute a married woman could hold her own personal property in that State is, that the common law prevailed there, and that by virtue of that law the money there became her husband’s and therefore remained her husband’s when she came into this State with it, and so the furniture purchased with it was subject to the levy by his creditors. This principle has been declared and applied by the Supreme Court in the case of Tinkler v. Cox, 68 Ill. 119. There the plaintiff, a married w'oman, purchased a horse with her own means in the State of Indiana, in 1867, and removed with her husband to this State, bringing the horse with them. The husband, in 1872, mortgaged the horse and placed him in the possession of the mortgagee, and the wife brought replevin, claiming him as her separate property. The court said: “ The proof is, Mrs. Cox purchased the horse in the State of Indiana, but it is not proved as it might have been, if the law was established in that State, that by the laws of that State property so purchased became the separate property of the wife, free from the control of her husband. In the absence of such proof we nrnst presume that the common law was in force in 1867, at the time Mrs. Cox purchased the horse, and so presuming, by that law the title of the property became vested absolutely in her husband; being so vested in the husband, by no' act of our Legislature could his title be divested.” See, also, Savage v. O’Neil, 44 N. Y. 298; Lichtenburger v. Graham, 50 Ind. 288. The Married Woman’s Act of 1861 was repealed by the general repealing act adopted in 1874; and appellee’s rights were controlled at the time of the trial by the act to revise the law in relation to husband and wife, in force July 1, 1874. Section 9 of said act is as follows: “A married woman may own in her own right, real and personal property obtained by descent, gift or purchase, and manage, sell and convey the same to the same extent and in the same manner that the husband can property belonging to him: provided, that where husband and wife shall be living together, no transfer or conveyance of goods and chattels between such husband and wife shall be valid as against the rights and interests of any third person, unless such transfer or conveyance be in writing, and be acknowledged and recorded in the same manner as chattel mortgages are required to be acknowledged and recorded by the laws of this State, in cases where the possession of the property is to remain with mortgagor.” It may be suggested that by the terms of this statute a married woman may obtain property from her husband by gift, and that the evidence would justify the inference that the husband meant to renounce all rights to the money or property which appellee held and to make a gift of the same to her. It may be that in equity the husband and his representatives would be estopped from claiming the property because of the manner in which it was treated by him, but at law, in a case in which appellee must recover upon the strength of her legal title, it is very clear that a gift or transfer of personal property from the husband to the wife could not be established unless the terms of the above statute were shown to have been complied with. A valid transfer of the husband’s goods to the wife must be in writing, and acknowledged and recorded, as required by law. It is not pretended that this was done, nor indeed is it claimed that she held the property by gift from her husband. Contention is that the property never belonged to the husband, because he never reduced it into his possession. The rule with reference to reducing the personal property of the wife to possession has application only to the wife’s choses in action. We have already seen that as to money and chattels, being choses in possession, the title to them vests in the husband absolutely under the common law, and that the wife’s possession becomes his possession.
The furniture in question in this suit was in the house in which appellee resided with her husband. He is still regarded as the head of the family, and the household furniture in possession of the family is presumed to be his until the contrary is shown. The Act of 1874 was not designed, any more than the Act of 1861, to overcome this presumption of the common law, nor was it “ designed to take from husbands rights which had vested in them prior to its passage, or to take from them such as had been acquired in another State subsequent to its passage.” Dubois v. Jackson, supra; Reeves v. Webster, 73 Ill. 307.
Appellee asserted that the legal title to the furniture was in her; "that she bought and paid for it with her own money, and the onus was on her to prove it. Starting with the presumption that the furniture belonged to her husband, what has she shown to rebut the presumption ? She has shown that she received money from her parents and brought it with her to this State before the Act of 1861. That goes for nothing; for as the law then was it became her husband’s as soon as it was given to her, or as soon as she came with her husband to reside in this State. Walker v. Reamy, 36 Pa. St. 416. She further showed that, while living with her husband in this State, money was paid to her by her brother for services rendered between 1861 and 1866. That, too, became the money of her husband as the law then stood, and his ownership of it was not divested by any subsequent statute. She finally showed that she retained all the money in'her possession and went with her husband to the State of Wisconsin and increased the amount of it by profitable investment and brought it back with her to the State of Illinois, and with a part of it purchased this furniture. Here again, as we have seen, the presumption is that money which was in her hands in the State of Wisconsin became vested in her husband by virtue of the common law, and that it remained his upon their coming into this State, and thus the conclusion of the law on the facts in evidence is that the furniture was purchased with the money of her husband, and was his property, and was, therefore, subject to attachment at the suit of his creditors. It follows that the court erred in instructing the jury to find a verdict for appellee, and the judgment must, therefore, be reversed and the case remanded.
Reversed and remanded.