Holthaus v. Hornbostle

60 Mo. 439 | Mo. | 1875

Hough, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complainants'are husband and wife, and obtained, in the Circuit Court of Buchanan County, an injunction perpetually restraining the defendant from proceeding to sell under an execution in his favor, and against the husband, certain personal property claimed by the wife, as her separate estate.

It appears from the record, that the complainants were married in 1862, and lived in Atchison, Kansas, and that the husband, who was a baker and confectioner, was then possessed of considerable real estate and personal property ; that in the year 1870 he failed in business, and after surrendering all his property, real and personal, for the benefit of his creditors, was still in debt to the amount of twenty-five hundred dollars, and being without the means of supporting his family, *441his wife, Mrs. Holtbaus, who then had three children, went to the house of her step-father, Henry Lipps, in Atchison, who provided for them until March, 1870, when he purchased and put her in possession of a bakery, confectionery and ice-cream saloon in the city of St. Joseph. This property, which was all personal, cost about seven hundred dollars.

At the timé of this gift to his step-daughter, Lipps, who knew that her husband was in debt and insolvent, was careful to inform them both that it was intended as a provision for the support of Mrs. Holtbaus and her children, and was for her separate use and benefit, and that neither the property, business nor profits should ever be claimed, interfered with, managed or controlled by the husband. This arrangement was acquiesced in by the husband, and the purchase was made with that understanding, and he afterwards worked in the bakery for his wife, and received a stipulated sum for his services, no part of which earnings of his went into the business conducted by her. These facts distinctly appear, and are not contradicted.

Soon after his failure, Holtbaus executed, jointly with his former partner, a note to the defendant, for the sum of one-hundred and forty dollars, for goods purchased by them in their business, several years previously. Sometime in June, 1871, the defendant obtained judgment against the complainant, Emilie Holtbaus, on this note, and in August following had an execution issued and levied upon a portion of thé property given, as before stated, to Emilie D. Holtbaus, by her step-father, Lipps. The defendant offered no testimony.

No questions as to pleadings or evidence are saved in the record, and the case comes before us solely on the propriety of the decree awarding the perpetual injunction.

A court of equity is undoubtedly the tribunal to which a married woman should appeal for the protection of her separate estate from the creditors of her husband, and a deeree against the plaintiff in the execution, as sole defendant, would be as effectual as though the officer having the process had *442been made a party and included in the decree. (Olin vs. Hungerford, 10 Ohio, 269.)

It is contended by the appellant, that the property levied upon was subject to seizure and sale under the execution against the husband, by reason of the common law rule, that the husband, by marriage, acquires an absolute right to all the personal property in possession, belonging to the wife, and all subsequent acquisitions by her of choses in possession.

The statute exempts from levy under execution against the husband, except for debts contracted by him for necessaries for his wife and family, the rents, issues and products of her real estate, and all moneys and obligations arising from its sale, and any stocks and bonds of any kind, given by a parent to a daughter, together with the proceeds thereof. These exemptions include only such personalty of the wife as would not be entitled to protection in equity, and which would not, but for such enactment, be secured to the wife against the claims of the husband, or his common law right to reduce the same to possession.

' It is plain that the property seized in this case does not fall within any of these statutory exemptions, and it is argued that it is therefore subject to a sale as the property of the husband. But it must be remembered that it is an established doctrine of courts of equity, that a married woman is capable of taking personal estate, to her own separate and exclusive use, and that such property will be protected against the marital rights and claims of the husband, and of his creditors also. (Woodford vs. Stephens, 51 Mo., 447; 2 Sto. Eq., §§ 1378, 1380.)

Nor is it necessary that such property should be either conveyed or transferred to a trustee to hold for her. Though it should,in fact, be in the hands of the husband, he will be held to be a mere trustee for her. (2 Sto. Eq., § 1380.) Nor need the creation of such estate in personalty be evidenced by writing, as in the case of land. While prudence would-dictate that it should be so evidenced, and public policy might seem to require it, yet, as the law now is, a separate estate in personal *443property may be created in a married woman, by a parol gift. (Finley and wife vs. Roll, 2 Metc., [Ky.] 509: Walton vs. Broaddus, 6 Bush., 328.) In every such case, however, the proof must be clear and positive, and free from any suspicion of a fraudulent combination for the concealment of the husband’s property from his creditors. The indebtedness and insolvency of the husband, however, are matters of no moment, when the gift is clearly shown to have proceeded from a third person, and not indirectly from him. These facts furnish the very best reason for creating such estate and frequently constitute the only reason for such donations from generous relatives and friends, for the benefit of wives of unfortunate, or improvident and dissolute husbands, and their children. Genuine beneficence of this kind there is every inducement to encourage and uphold. It is partly from such considerations as these, that what is known as the wife’s equity to a settlement, arises, when she receives personal property during coverture, without any limitation to her separate use. (Wickes vs. Clark, 8 Paige, Ch., 161.)

The gift, in this case, having been clearly established to have been made for the separate use of Mrs. Holtliaus, by her step-father, and the husband having agreed to so regard it, before and at the time of the gift, and having ever since acquiesced in it, and as it does not appear that the character impressed upon this property at the time of its acquisition, has, at any time since, been lost or in any way altered, it is our duty to preserve its enjoyment to her, according to the terms of the gift.

The decree of the Circuit Court will therefore be affirmed ;

all the jndges concur except Judge Tories, who is absent.
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