53 Ky. 301 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1853
delivered the opinion of the court.
In January 1850, Margaretta Gorsuch, who owned a considerable estate consisting of land, slaves, and personalty, intermarried with Alfred So ward. She died tn May 1851, intestate, without any issue, Ieaving her husband surviving. Prior to their'marrriage, but in contemplation thereof, the parties executed the following anti-nuptial agreement, which was after-
The plaintiffs relied upon three grounds to sustain their right to a recovery of the slaves in this action:
First. It is contended, that by the anti-nuptial agreement the husband surrendered all his marital rights in the property of his wife, and consequently that he has no more right to any part of it, after the death,than he had during her lifetime.
The wife died without having exercised the powers conferred on her by this agreement, and did not make any disposition of her slaves in her lifetime. The law, therefore, has to dispose of them, and the question is, how far the disposition which the law would make of them, independent of the anti-nuptial agreement of the parties, is to be controlled or affected by it ?
If this agreement contained any provisions on the subject of the right of succession to the propertv, af
Second. But it is argued, that under the operation of the act of 1846, (Session Acts 1845-6,.page 42,) farther to protect the rights of married women, that the slaves of the wife become real estate, and the husband has only the same interest in, and right to them after her death, that he has in her other real estate, and that, as in this case, there was no issue of the marriage, the husband not having a right to the land which belonged to her, as tenant by the curtesy, has not a life estate in her slaves under the statute.
This argument is based upon a misconception of the statute in question. It does not make the slaves of the wife real estate for all purposes, but the first section points out specifically the purposes for which it is to be treated as real estate, and the second section provides, that on the death of the wife her slaves “shall descend to her heirs at law,' as lands descend by the laws of this commonwealth, subject to a life estate of the husband surviving for his life and no longer.” The effect of this provision is to reduce his estate, which before the passage of the statute was absolute, down to a mere life estate. But his life estate is not conditional or dependent upon there having been issue of the marriage. The slaves of the wife, descend to her heirs at law, but subject to this life estate of the husband, which he is permitted to retain in them. The statute expressly allows him a life estate in. them, in all cases where he survives his wife, and there is nothing in any of its provisions that indicates an intention upon the part of the legislature to confine his right therein to such a state of case as would make him tenant, by the curtesy, of his wife’s lands. Whenever the husband survives the wife he is entitled to a life estate in her slaves. The same con-'
Third. The husband appears to have claimed the slaves as Ms own absolute property-) and not merely as tenant for life, it is therefore contended that he had forfeited his life estate therein by acts inconsistent with the reversionary right of the heirs at law.
Although, by the ancient law, a tenant for life might forfeit his estate by claiming the fee in a court of record, yqt no parol disclaimer of the right of the reversioner or remainder-man operated as a forfeiture of his estate. Robinson v. Miller, 2 B. Mon., 292; Merriman v. Caldwell’s heirs, 8 B. Mon., 32. Nor has this doctrine of the forfeiture of the life estate in lands, in any state of case, been as yet practically applied in this state, and there does not seem to be any good reason for its application in reference to slaves, except in the case provided for by the statute, of the removal of them out of the state by the tenant for life, without the consent of the person in reversion or remainder. A claim of absolute property in slaves by a tenant for life might justify the person in reversion or remainder to bring an equitable action to establish his right, and to restrain the tenant for life from the commission of any act inconsistent with that right; but as the legislature has not made any other act of the tenant for life, but that of a removal of the slaves out of the state without the consent of the person in reversion or remainder, operate as a forfeiture of the life estate, wo do not feel at liberty to extend the principle beyond the limits thus prescribed, nor apply it to any case where the slaves are still within the jurisdiction of the courts of this state, and subject to such restraining orders as may be deemed equitable and proper for the protection of the rights of the person in reversion or remainder. Besides, there is no cause for the application of the principle in a case like the present, where the surviving husband may have made, and probably did make, a'mistake with respect to the extent of his title to the
The law of the case was correctly expounded by the court below, in the instructions given to the jury upon the trial, and the verdict and judgment against the plaintiffs was proper under the circumstances of the case.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.