62 Pa. 324 | Pa. | 1869
The opinion of the court was delivered,
The opinion of the learned judge below demonstrates so ably and conclusively that the contract between A. J. Jones and the appellant, in contemplation and consideration of marriage, and not pretended to have been fraudulent in fact, at least as far as she was concerned, was valid as against creditors, that it is unnecessary to add anything upon that subject.
The contract was broken on the death of the husband without having performed its stipulations. His obligation was to secure an annuity to his wife after his death. What should be the measure of damages which the appellant ought to recover, was undoubtedly a question of considerable difficulty — more especially as there is not, as far as the industry of the counsel has been able to discover, any authority which throws light upon it. But that is no reason for rejecting her claim altogether, or confining it, as the learned judge below thought it ought to be confined, to the arrears of the annuity due her at the time of presenting her demand or commencing her action. On that theory, if the husband’s estate had been sold and converted into money and a distribution made within a year from his decease, she would receive nothing or at most only a proportional sum for the time which had elapsed, considering the annuity as apportionable, which, as it was evidently intended for her support, would doubtless be the rule. But she might have commenced her action against her husband’s administrators immediately upon his death. She certainly could have recovered something, otherwise here would be an acknowledged right violated — and no remedy, which would be an anomaly. Had the annuity been to her absolutely for life, there would be no difficulty in ascertaining from the evidence of experts in the business of granting .life annuities what was its worth at the time of breach — in other words for what sum such an annuity could be purchased, taking into consideration the age an'd sex of the proposed annuitant, and
We think the court below erred in setting aside the contract altogether for want of a stamp. We do not mean to decide the point, raised by the counsel of the appellant, and for which they cite Carpenter v. Snelling, 97 Mass. 452, that the Act of Congress does not apply to evidence in the state courts, because the decision of that question is unnecessary in this case. Whatever may have been the proper construction of the Act of July 1st 1862 (12 U. S. Stat. at Large 475), that act was superseded by the subsequent-Act of June 30th 1864, §§ 151, 163 (13 Id. 291, 295), as amended and supplied by that of March 3d 1865 (Id. 481), and of July 13th 1866, 14 U. S. Stat. at Large 143.
Decree reversed at the costs of the appellee, and record remitted for further proceedings.