Jones v. Semple

91 Ala. 182 | Ala. | 1890

CLOPTON, J.

Section 2502 of the Code of 188(1 authorizes : “When any unmarried man, over twenty-one years of age, is, by reason of intemperance, unfit to manage his estate, or is wasting or squandering it, and thereby in danger of being reduced to poverty and want, his brothers or sisters, or next of kin, or any or either of them, may themselves, or by their next friend, if minors or married women, file their bill in chancery to preserve the estate of such intemperate person from further waste, and for general relief” And section 2503 declares: “The bill provided for in the preceding section must specify the cause for which relief is prayed, and the estate proposed to be secured, and such person of intemperate habits must be made a party defendant thereto; if the allegations of *183file bill are admitted, either expressly, .or by a failure to answer thereto, or it is established by .proof that, the allegations of the bill are time, and that such person is wasting his estate, or is for the cause alleged unlit for its'management, so that such person will probably be reduced to want, the chancellor must, deprive him of all further control over it, and provide tor its safe-keeping by the appointment of a trustee.”

Under these sections, a bill was filed by R S. Williams, who is the father of William T. Williams, against him; and on admission of the truth of the allegations, a decree was rendered, July 13,1887, depriving him of all power and authority or control over his estate, and appointing his father trustee of the same. The present action was brought by appellant to recover certain personal property, to which lie derives title by amortgage, executed by W. T. Williams to secure a debt contracted after the rendition' of the decree. ít was originally brought against Williams, but, his death having occurred during the pendency of the appeal, was revived in the name of his personal representative. The special pleas of defendant set up the proceedings in equity and the decree rendered thereon, and aver with minute detail that the debt was contracted, and the. mortgage, executed, after its rendition. A demurrer to the jileas having been overruled, plaintiff' filed replications thereto, the demurrer to which was sustained.'

The first question raised hv the pleading relates to the jurisdiction of the City Court, sitting in equity, to render the decree; plaintiff contending that the jurisdiction, being statutory and limited, does not attach, and is not drawn into exercise by a bill filed by the father, when there are brothers and sisters living; that, in such case, the lather does not occupy the relation which the statute provides must be occupied by the person instituting the proceeding. While- the question admits of serious doubt, in view of the ease made by the record, of the construction we place, upon the statute, and especially the death of Williams, which terminated the powers and authority of the trustee, the question does not seem to he practically important or material, and its decision is unnecessary. We shall, therefore, avoid passing upon the validity of the decree, and address our consideration to an inquiry which is of practical importance; that Is, whether the decree operates to deprive the person of intemperate habits of the power to contract debts after its rendition, which hind him personally, and are not charges against the estate under the management of the trustee, and to secure the same by mortgage on property not mentioned in the hill, or subsequently acquired by purchase or otherwise.

*184The statute confers a new jurisdiction, encroaches upon the rights of person and property, and imposes disabilities. A well recognized rule is, that statutes of such or like character will not be enlarged by construction, so as to affect common-law rights,' beyond the express declaration of the terms employed, or clear implication, when fairly and reasonably construed according to their natural import. Accordingly, a statute invalidating preferences in assignments for the benefit of creditors has been construed not to avoid a conveyance, by deed or mortgage, of a part of a debtor’s property to a creditor in composition of his debt. — Endlich on Stat. §§ 341, 342. Under this rule, a statute prescribing that an inn-keeper may exempt himself from his common-law liability by keeping posted on his door, or other public places in his hotel, written or printed notices that his guests might leave their valuables. with him, his clerk or agent, for safe-keeping, was construed to mean that he must keep the notices posted on the doors of all the rooms occupied by guests.—Lanier v. Youngblood, 73 Ala. 587. Under this rule, the statutes creating and defining the separate estates oí' married women, formerly in force, were construed not to enlarge the capacity of the wife to contract, or to take, hold or administer property, in exclusion of the marital rights of the husband, further than the words expressly declare, when construed according to their natural and general signification. Cook v. Meyer, 73 Ala. 580. These instances illustrate the application of the rule, that a statute which affects the right of the citizen to contract with reference to his own property! should not be enlarged by construction, so as to restrict or destroy this right, beyond the manifest intention of the legislature.—Collier v. Paulk, 69 Ala. 58.

The implication may be conceded, that the effect and operation of the decree are to deprive the owner of the power to contract any’debt which is a charge against the estate over which the powers and authority of the trustee extend. This may be implied from the provisions of the statute, conferring jurisdiction of person and property upon the Chancery Court, with power to displace the owner’s control, and appoint for the safe-keeping of the estate a trustee, with authority to manage and superintend its affairs.—Ex parte Dowe, 54 Ala. 258. But, beyond the requirements requisite to the accomplishment and preservation of the legislative purpose and policy, the statute was not intended to encroach upon any rights of person or property, which the owner has by statutory or common law. The statute expresses its purpose and policy — to prevent an unmarried man of intemperate habits from wasting or squandering his estate, whereby he will be in danger of be*185ing reduced to poverty and want, and of becoming a burden to bis relatives, or a public pauper. General capacity to make contracts would not defeat the object of the enactment — contracts which can not affect the estate, of the control over which he has been deprived. For the accomplishment of the declared purpose of the statute, and the'furtherance of its -policy, deprivation of the capacity to contract debts which shall be a charge upon said estate is sufficient. Deprivation of the control of property does not imply abrogation of the power to make contracts binding the party personally, though there is no power to charge the property. A construction of the statute otherwise, would be an enlargement unwarranted by well established rules. The power to contract remains and exists, but the statute interposes and declares, by the clear import of its terms and provisions, that such contracts shall hot be charges against the estate.

The next inquiry is, what estate is-it against which the displaced owner has no power to charge debts contracted after the rendition of the decree? The proceeding is quasi in tern, in that it fixes the status of the 'property, and the relation of the owner to the estate. The estate,, which the statute is intended to prevent being wasted or squandered, consists of property having a potential existence" which is liable to be wasted, at the time of the institution of the proceeding; an estate -which the court can take into custody, and the chancellor is authorized, by section 2505, to secure, by injunction or otherwise, against further waste; a tangible estate which can be placed under the management and superintendence of a trustee, and from the avails of which it is his duty to provide for the support of the inebriate in a manner suitable to his means and estate. — Section 2504. All the provisions of the statute manifestly refer to and provide for an estate existing at the time of the commencement of the proceeding.

Also, the statute in terms requires that “ the estate proposed to be secured^ must he specified in 'the bill. Specification of the estate in the bill is essential to put this statutory jurisdiction into exercise, and to bring the estate within the power and jurisdiction of the court. .By this requirement, the power of the court is restricted to the estate proposed to be secured and specified in the bill. This is the particular estate, over which the chancellor has power, under the statute, to deprive the inebriate of control, and to-provide for its safekeeping by the appointment of a trustee. The court can only act on the subject-matter brought under its statutory power by appropriate and essential averments.

Governed by well established rules, we construe the statute *186not to confer power over property not specified in the bill as the estate proposed to be secured, and not to abrogate the power to make contracts, though it prohibits debts contracted after the rendition of the decree being charged against such estate. It certainly is not the intention or policy ol' the statute, by depriving the unfortunate inebriate of power to transact any business, to place him in a condition, comparatively, of compulsory inactivity and idleness, and subject him to the temptation to descend to lower depths of intemperance — to confirm his intemperate habits.

The estate specified in the bill is, the land known as the “Bradshaw plantation,” a residence and store-house in the village of Mt. Meigs, a lot conveyed to Williams by Lawrence Judkins, one horse and buggy, a gold watch, and a diamond ring. The presumption is, this constitutes all the property which he owned at that time, or, at least, all the estate which it was deemed necessary to be secured. While the proceeding and decree are set up in defense, the pleas fail 1o aver that the property included in the mortgage was any part of the estate mentioned in the bill. But this is not assigned as ground of demurrer. The specific grounds are, want of jurisdiction to render the decree, and the failure of the pleas to aver that the trustee had no knowledge of, and did not consent to the arrangement with plaintiff, and the execution of the mortgage. The trustee’s knowledge and consent are immaterial; he could not. sell or mortgage the trust estate, and could not invest another with that power. The third replication does aver that the debt was contracted, the mortgage executed, and most of the property included therein was purchased, after the rendition of the decree. The demurrer to the replication should have been overruled. The court also erred in excluding the evidence offered by the plaintiff, tending to show that the four mules embraced in the mortgage were purchased by Williams after the decree -was rendered, with money obtained from plaintiff

Reversed and remanded.