66 A. 37 | Md. | 1907
It is admitted that the only question presented on the record *292 in this case is whether a husband and wife, holding property as tenants by the entireties, can give to a purchaser of the property a good and merchantable title, as will enable them to enforce specific performance against the purchaser, free and clear of an outstanding judgment against the husband. In other words whether the husband's interest in case of tenancy by the entirety can be subjected to the claims of his creditors during the life of the wife, and whether the right of execution is suspended during the life of the wife but enforceable on her death.
The facts are undisputed and the question arises upon a bill in equity filed by the husband and wife against the purchaser, asking for the specific performance of a contract of sale dated 16th of October, 1906, for the purchase of certain leasehold property, situate in Baltimore City, held by the husband and wife as tenants by entireties.
The defendant by his answer admits the allegations of the bill to be true, but denies the relief asked by the bill upon the ground that on the 24th day of June, 1903, a certain August Strauff obtained in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City a judgment against George A. Reynolds, one of the plaintiffs in the case, for the sum of $950, and this judgment is still unpaid and unsatisfied. That the judgment is a lien upon the property described in the contract of sale, and that the title to the property, in consequence thereof, is not good and marketable as the contract of sale required it to be. And for this reason he refused to pay the purchase price and accept a deed.
The case was heard on bill, answer and exhibits and from a decree requiring the defendant to comply with the contract of sale, this appeal has been taken.
The character of an estate held by tenancy by entireties, similar to the one here in controversy, has been settled by numerous decisions of this Court.
In McCubbin v. Stanford,
In Clark v. Wooten,
And in Brewer v. Bowersox,
Applying the principles enunciated in these cases, we cannot see how the judgment in this case can be regarded in any *294 legal sense as a lien upon the property in question, during the life of the wife.
The law is well settled in this State that judgments create liens only because the land is made liable by statute to be seized and sold on execution. A judgment creditor stands in the place of his debtor and he can only take the property of his debtor subject to the charges to which it was justly liable in the hands of the debtor at the time of the rendition of the judgment. Valentine v. Seiss,
An execution is a lien on personal property only because the personal property can be sold in satisfaction of the execution.Eschbach v. Pitts,
It seems therefore to be clear both upon reason and authority that the judgment in this case is not a lien upon the property, in the lifetime of the wife. There is nothing that can be seized and sold under an execution upon the judgment. Property held by this tenure cannot be sold without the joinder of the wife,McCubbin v. Stanford, supra, and the judgment creditor can acquire no greater rights than those possessed by the judgment debtor. Valentine v. Seiss, supra; Clark v. Wooten, supra;Marburg v. Cole,
The case of Corinth v. Emory,
The case of Chandler v. Cheney, 37 Indiana, 391, is an express decision on this point. The Court said, there can be no partition between tenants by the entireties, while such an estate exists, no interest in it can be sold on execution *295 for the debts of the husband or wife. From the nature of the estate and the legal relation of the parties, there must be unity of estate, unity of possession, unity of control and unity in conveying or encumbering it. A mortgage upon such an estate executed by the husband alone is void.
There is a class of cases interpreting the statutes and legislation, in some of the States, which hold that the husband has a right to mortgage his interest which is a right to the use of an undivided half of the estate during the joint lives and to the fee in case he survived his wife and by the foreclosure and sale, the plaintiff acquired this interest and became a tenant in common with the wife, subject to her right of survivorship.
These cases, however, are in direct conflict with the decisions of our own State, and are against the weight of authority upon this question.
The result of a decision according to the appellant's contention, would practically destroy the wife's estate and turn her entirety into a joint tenancy or tenancy in common with the purchaser, under either a mortgage sale, or a sale under an execution, on a judgment.
An insuperable objection to the position urged by the appellant, here is the provision of our Constitution (sec. 43, Art. 3), which declares that the property of the wife shall be protected from the debts of the husband. If the judgment creditor possesses a lien against this property, he could collect the debt by an execution, take away the wife's property without her consent, and thereby destroy the nature of the estate as it now stands.
To hold the judgment to be a lien at all against this property, and the right of execution suspended during the life of the wife, and to be enforced on the death of the wife, would we think likewise encumber her estate, and be in contravention of the constitutional provision heretofore mentioned, protecting the wife's property from the husband's debts.
It is clear, we think, if the judgment here is declared a lien, but suspended during the life of the wife and not enforceable *296 until her death, if the husband should survive the wife, it will defeat the sale here made, by the husband and wife to the purchaser, and thereby make the wife's property liable for the debts of her husband.
In Logan v. McGill,
We have been referred to no case in this State and none can be found, where it has been held that a judgment such as the one here sought to be enforced, has been declared to be a lien upon an estate possessing the qualities and character, incident to an estate by the entireties.
In Vinton v. Beamer,
We, therefore, hold according to the spirit and policy of our law, that the judgment creditor has no lien upon the property conveyed by the appellee to the appellant, in this case.
There being no lien under the judgment, the purchaser will take a good and valid title by the joint deed of husband and wife.
The decree requiring the specific performance of the contract of sale, will be affirmed.
Decree affirmed with costs. *297