65 W. Va. 471 | W. Va. | 1909
In a suit for divorce, pending in the circuit court of Mo-nongalia county, it was decreed “that the plaintiff, Mary Y. üartigan, be divorced from bed and board from her husband,
At the common law a.divorce a, mmsa et thoro had no effect whatever upon curtesy or dower nor indeed upon any of the marital rights of either party touching property. 2 Minor’s Inst. (4th ed.) 121. And in Yirginia such divorce has no more effect than at the common law, in the absence of any order of court, in the sentence of divorce, to-the contrary. 2 Minor’s Inst. 122. The same is true in this state. Our statutes on the subject are the same as those of Yirginia. The jurisprudence of the two states in this behalf is the same. And in the Yir-ginias a divorce a mema ei thoro, with a decree of perpetual separation added, such as is now in question before us, provided
It is true that Mr. Minor indicates throughout his dissertations on the subject that in granting a divorce it is competent for the court to make an order barring or affecting curtesy or dower where without such order the decree would npt have that effect. 1 Inst. 303; 2 Inst. 118, 119, 138. It would seem that this view is based on that which is see. 11, ch. 64, of our Code. In granting any kind of divorce, the court is by that section given power to make any order it may deem expedient concerning the estate and maintenance of the parties or either of them. It is insisted that this relates only to alimony. But a thorough review of the origin and growth of this statute, from the first enactment on the subject, throughout the revisáis, to the existing law, leads us to favor that -which Mr. Minor advisedly recognizes; that is, that the court may, by a special order in the sentence of divorce, cut off or bar curtesy or dower where the decree without such special order would not have that effect. And this is suggested in Harris v. Harris, 31 Grat. 13. The- discretion given, by our sec. 11, ch. 64, to the court as to an order relating to the estate of the parties is there denominated as “a broad and comprehensive one.” Certain it is that the language formerly employed in the older statutes and recommended by the revisors for the Code of 1849, in this behalf expressly author
But we deem it unnecessary to decide the foregoing question, since in the decree before us there is no such special order off the court. As we view it, the decree is silent, as is the statute upon which it is based, in relation to curtesy in the property of the wife owned at the time of the decree. The decree, following the statute, expressly bars curtesy as to after-acquired property. As to after-acquired property the statute makes the decree of perpetual separation to operate as would a deeree a vinculo mat-rimonii. A decree from the bonds of matrimony has the effect to bar curtesy or dower in existing property, even for superveni-ent cause. Porter v. Porter, 27 Grat. 599. As to existing property, however, the decree under consideration does only what section 12 empowers the court to do in making an order of perpetual separation; that is, it protects the wife in the possession and control of the property during the separation. That protection is personal to her; it cannot exist after her death.t Then, it can be of no service to her. The decree is made for her; it is not intended as a protection to those who come after her. If the court had power under section 11, or other part of the chapter, to bar the curtesy right in question, it has not done so. It could do so only by the use of plain terms. We are not justified in annihilating a sacred property right by strained contstruction, or in basing an act of such annihilation upon mere implication. As to existing property of the wife, the decree makes no reference to the curtesy of the husband therein. .That curtesy still exists. The divorce was simply from bed and board. The bonds of matrimony were not dissolved; they existed until the death of Mary Y. Hartigan. Though the parties were separated by legal decree, they were still man and wife. “No interest of the husband in the wife’s lands, either during their joint lives or after her death, is taken from him by this divorce.” 2 Bish. on Mar. & Div., § 1678. “A decree of divorce a mensa et thoro, pronounced against the husband, does not bar him of the right of curtesy.” Smoot v. Lecatt, 1 Stew. (Ala.) 590. “As a divorce a mensa et thoro does not destroy the relation of marriage,
At the common law, unless for causes, existing cib inilio, an absolute divorce eouid only be obtained by Act of Parliament. A parliamentary divorce, being for a supervenient cause, when a marriage not void at initio- had for á time existed with all attendant rights of the relation, did not have the effect to bar those rights unless there was a special provision in the act to that effect. “If an Act of Parliament dissolving the marriage contract do not divest dower except a special clause excluding it be inserted, it is difficult to conceive upon what principle a judicial decree can have that effect in the absence of legislation providing that such shall be its operation.” 2 Scribner on Dower, 543.
There is another reason justifying the holding that the husband’s curtesy remained in the particular property in question even if it could be‘held that the effect of the decree was to bar curtesy in all existing property of the wife but that expressly excepted. This decree expressly excepts from its force the property now in litigation. In the clause of the decree we have quoted it will be observed that there are the words “except as hereinafter provided.” Now, looking further to the decree to see to what this exception relates, we find that as to the very property now sought to be recovered the court expressly reserved “for future order * * * * the question of the interests of each of the said parties in the said property.” It is argued that this reservation relates to interests other than curtesy. But the language used is sufficient to include such marital interest. Curtesy is an interest — a contingent one it is true and yet an interest, nevertheless. The word “interest” is usually construed as embracing a contingent interest. Young v. Young, 89 Va. 675; Godman v. Simmons, 113 Mo. 122; Madigan v. Walsh, 22. Wis. 501. Whatever may have been the cause for this reservation in the.decree, it is there. And by it the court expressly reserved the question of whether or not it would eventually end the husband’s contingent curtesy interest in the property. That
It cannot be seriously contended that in this case it is shown that the husband deserted his wife, and thereby lost, under Code, ch. 65, sec. 16, his right of curtesy in her lands. The record and final decision of the divorce case negative this contention. They are before us, in the agreed facts, and we look'to them in this particular.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Hote by
I do not differ with Judge Robinson in his statement of law in this case. Code, chapter 64, section 11, empowers a court to make decree, in cases both of divorce from the bond of matrimony and from bed and board as to the property of the parties owned at the date of divorce, and to cut off by its decree right of curtesy and dower. That section, however, does not authorize it to do so in case of decree of perpetual separation as to property acquired after the decree. The Legislature deemed it advisable to give this power in such case, and by section 12 made such decree operate as would a divorce from the bond as to such after acquired property. My doubt in this ‘case is, whether we should not hold the decree in this case, under its broad language, as made under both sections, cutting off curtesy as to both present and after acquired property.