49 Ky. 467 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1850
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the 7th oí January, 1846, Samuel D. Sublett executed to Mary Jackson, executrix of John Jackson, deceased, his note for $380, due twelve months after date. The payee died, and in 1848 Francis W. Jackson, a son of her intestate, brought an action and obtained a judgment at law, upon which an execution issued, and was levied by the Sheriff upon a negro man named Daniel. Mrs. Margaret Subtlett, the wife of the defendant, claimed the negro as her property, and a jury empaneled by the Sheriff to try the right of property, found
The facts upon which she founds her claim, and which are not controverted, are, that in the year 1838 John Jackson, the father of said Margaret, made and published his last will and testament, and died before April 1841, at which time the will was admitted to record. By his will he gives to his wife a life estate in his negi’oes and some other property, and makes a few specific devises and bequests to others, and then in the fifth clause says; “It is my will and desire that all of my negroes not herein otherwise disposed of together with their increase, (should there be any,) likewise all the living stock that may be in my wife’s possession, be as equally divided as possible, at her death, between my daughters Margaret C. Sublett, Martha W. Sloss, Mary Ann V. Atcheson and Antheline E. Jackson, should any of them die before such division, their children are to have their mother’s share.” The widow of the testator died in the year 1847. After her death, the slaves alluded to in the clause just quoted were by the husbands of the daughters (Antheline having in -the meantime married Valentine) divided between them. The slave Daniel, with others, fell to the share of Sublett, who immediately took him into possession, and whilst in his possession the execution against him, was levied upon the slave as already stated.
The complainant claims that by the will of her father, she has an interest in the slave separate from her husband, and that by the act of Assembly, approved February 23d, 1846, entitled .“an act further to protect the rights of married women,” the said slave is not liable to be levied on or sold for the debts of her husband. That act among other things says, “that the slave or slaves of a married woman shall, hereafter, within this Commonwealth, be held and taken to be real estate, in so far that no slave or slaves, or the increase
Before examining into the meaning of that portion of the law already quoted, we will dispose of another question raised by the plaintiff in error, viz, that the consid- , , . ©ration of the note sued upon was necessaries furnished for the family of complainant, and, therefore, the slave is not exempt from levy and sale. Without determining whether the proof is sufficient to establish the fact, the proposition is answered by saying that the debt was not “contracted or created jointly in writing by husband and wife,” and, therefore, does not come within the provision of the statute which makes the property of the wife in such case liable.
The only remaining and important matter to be determined is, whether the complainant has such a separate interest in the slave in contest as to exempt him from levy and sale to satisfy the husband’s debts. We learn from the decree in this cause, that inasmuch as the life estate did not terminate, and a division of property was not had among the daughters or their husbands, until the year 1847, the Judge regarded the slave', as not having “come” to the complainant until a period subsequent to the act of 1846, and as, therefore, not liable to the husband’s debts. Whether the Legislature, by the use of the word “come,” intended to apply it to the time when actualposession and use should take place, or to the time when the wife should acquire an interest in the property by any other means
“Tested remainders are those by which a present interest passes to the party, though to be enjoyed in future, and by which the estate is invariably fixed to a determinate person after a particular estate is spent:” (5 Dana, 441.) “When the absolute property in a fund is bequeathed in fractional interests in succession, at periods which must arrive: as to, or in trust for A for life, and after his death to B, the interests of the first and subsequent taker will vest together, and notwithstanding B may die before A his personal representatives will be entitled to receive the legacy upon the death of A.” (1 Roper on Legacies, 394.)
The facts in the case of Bowling’s Representatives vs Dobyns Administrator, (reported in 5 Dana, 434,) seem to be very analagous to the present. In the last will of Robert Bowling, made in 1809, is the following clause: “I give and bequeath to my dearly beloved wife, Polly, all my estate during her natural life, (except four hundred dollars worth of horses, which I give to Hanson Price.) And after my wife’s death it is my will and desire that my son, Samuel Bowling, shall have two mulatto men, named Hanson and Dennis; and the balance of the whole of my estate, after all just debts are paid, and schooling my two children, Samuel and Nancy, shall be equally divided between my two children Samuel and Nancy.” In that case Samuel Bowling had died leaving his mother living. The administrators of Dobyns brought a suit in chancery for a settlement of
“The person entitled to a vested remainder has an immediate, fixed right of future enjoyment, that is, an estate in presentí, though it can only take effect in possession and pernency of the profits at a future period: (1 Cruise, 181.) Again: “If there be a lease for life to A, remainder to B for life, although the remainder to B for life, may possibly never take effect in possession, because B may die before A, yet from- the very instant of its limitation, it is capable of taking effect in possession, if the possession were to fall by the death of A. It is, therefore, vested in interest, though perhaps so vested that it may determine, by B’s death
These and other authorities quoted in that opinion, brought the Court to the conclusion that although the life estate of his mother had not terminated at the death of Samuel Bowling, yet his interest in remainder in the slaves, was such as could properly be subjected to sale to satisfy his debts. In this case the devisee in remainder survived the mother to whom a life estate was given by the will; that fact, instead of weakening, increases the weight of the authority in Bowling vs Dobyns. But there is a slight difference in the two wills. By Jackson’s will, if either of his daughters should die before the division which is directed to take place at the mother’s death, the children of the one so dying shall take their mother’s share. If Mrs. Súblett had died before the division, although an estate was vested in her, it would by her death have been divested, and would have passed to her children, instead of remaining in her husband. That contingency does not affect the case.
“A devise over upon a contingency has not the effect of preventing the shares of legatees from vesting in the meantime provided the words of bequest be, in other respects, sufficient to pass a present interest. (1 Roper on Legacies, 403.) Hence if a legacy be given to A to be paid at twenty-one, and if A die before that time then to B, the legacy will vest in A at the death of the testator, subject to be divested in the event of his dying under twenty-one: (Ibid, 403.) In this and such cases, the legacy vests immediately, sub modo, i. e., subject to be divested upon the happening of the contingency, upon which it is given over:” (Ibid, 404.) We deem it it to be unecessary to extend this opinion by reference to other authorities. It seems to us to be very 'dear that by the will of John Jackson., deceased, •his four daughters, of whom Mrs. Subtlett was one, took a vested fee simple interest as tenants in common ■in the slaves immediately on the death of the testator.
It has been adjudged that a vested remainder in slaves
This is not a case where the creditor is seeking the aid of a Chancellor to subject to his demands against an insolvent or .improvident debtor, property which accrued to the debtor through his wife, nor is the bill framed to meet such a state of case. In this case the wife comes into Court asking the Chancellor to prevent the creditor from exercising his .legal remedies against the husband, solely .because of her supposed separate and exclusive interest in the property. Having come to the conclusion that she has no such separate right in the slave Daniel, it follows that the decree of .the Circuit Court is erronoeus.
It is, therefore, reversed and the cause .remanded to that Court with directions to dismiss the complainant’s bill.