“An 'еxamination of the brief filed by counsel for the appellant in
Hardy
v.
Holly,
After a cursory review of the previous cases in our reports bearing upon the subject, the Court said in
Hardy
v.
Holly, supra,
“ "When the question next arose in
Knox
v.
Jordan,
It is true that the Court of Appeals of New York is among the appellate tribunals of this country, which have adopted the English doctrine. Counsel called attention to the fact that the case of Methodist Church v. Jacques, 3 Johnson Ch. Rep., 78, in which Chancellor KeNT held that a married woman must, as to separate property settled on her, be considered a feme sole only to the extent of the power expressly given her in the marriage settlement, was subsequently overruled by the higher Court. That fact was noticed in Hardy v. Holly, supra, and the Court expressed its approval of the doctrine as announced by the learned Chancellor, and its dissent from the views of the higher Court.
The suggestion that the constitutiоnal provision (Art. X., Sec. 6) was intended to abrogate the right to restrict the wife’s power of alienation by deed of settlement is not a new question. The brief of appellant’s counsel in Hardy v. Holly shows the contention of the defendants there to have been that the Constitution of 1868, Art. X., Sec. 6, substituted the husband in the place of the trustee in all marriage settlements so far as to establish it as the universal rule that the wife could with liis assent make a good title to realty regardless of the wishes of a trustee. *259 The contention was that the Constitution restricted her right of disposition in no way beyond the requirement that the assent of the husband should be given, and that any attempt to impose further limitations by deed upon her power of alienation was an invasion of her constitutional rights. The Court uttered nо dictum in answering the contention as it did, when it announced its holding to be not only that the Constitution was not to be construed as a universal enabling act for the benefit of married women, but that in all cases where the legal estate was vested in a trustee to hold for the sole and separate use of a feme covert, the intent of the grantor would prevail, and such deeds would be construed as indicative of an intention to protect her against the solicitations of a possibly imprudent husband by placing her under common-law disabilities except in so far as the instrument emancipated her from them. Knox v. Jordan, supra. A principle, which a court finds it necessary to announce in order to meet the contentions of an appellant and to constitute the basis of one of the stagеs by which it reaches the opposite conclusion, is in no sense a dictum. The application of it to the case in hand does not destroy its weight as the bedrock upon which the adjudication rests. No matter what would be the view of this Court were the matter now before it res nova, it cannot disturb a rule of property announced fifteen years ago and declared to be but an affirmаnce of the principle laid down over twenty years before. Wills Res Adjudicata, Sections 598 to 603.
Some time after the enactment of the Statute of Uses-, the courts of England held that it did not transfer the possession to the use, where the trustee was charged with a special duty, such as paying over the rents, which could not be performed if he were deprived of the legal estatе. When the courts of England subsequently held that a mar
*260
ried woman, to whose sole and separate nse an estate had been limited, was to be deemed a
feme sole
except in so far as her power to do so was restricted in the deed of settlement, it followed of course under such a theory that, in the absence of restrictions, the legal estate was transferred by the operаtion of the Statute. The English construction of such deeds was based upon the idea that if the grantor intended to restrict her powers, he would give expression to his purpose in the deed. The American courts, which have followed the load of the English tribunals, have proceeded upon the same rule for ascertaining the intent. Put in
Knox
v. Jordan, 5 Jones’ Eq., at p. 176, the Court finally settled down upon and adopted exactly the opposite theory as the true exposition of the law. After
Harris
v.
Harris,
The difference in the two lines of authorities grows out of the fact that deeds of settlement are interpreted under different rules of construction. The theory upon which this Court has heretofore acted is, that grants, like statutes, will be construed strictly in determining whether they abrogate a common-law rule. The idea present in the mind of this Court was that while the right of the grantor to enlarge the powers of a feme covert was conceded, his intent to do.so must be plainly expressed in order to prove operative in relieving a woman from her common-law disability. Chancellor IÍENT said in Methodist Church v. Jacques, supra, at p. 113: “ Her (the wife’s) incapacity *261 is general, and the exception is to be taken strictly and to be shown in every case, because it is against the general policy and immemorial doctrine of the law. These very settlements are intended to protect her weakness against her husband’s power, and her maintenance against his dissipation. It is a protection which this Court allows her to assume or her friends to give, and it ought not to be rendered illusory.”
It is like putting new cloth upon old garments to attempt to fit the English doctrine, or any rule that grows out cf it as a logical sequеnce, to the principle adopted here. If, as Chancellor KeNT says supra, “ the very settlements are intended to protect her weakness against her husband’s power, and her maintenance against his dissipation,” it must follow that the duty of shielding her from such evils devolves upon him ipso facto by the limitation of an estate to him as trustee for the sole and separate use of a feme covert. If the special duty and authority of protecting her by the exercise of the veto power upon attempted sales by her with the joinder of the husband are imposed upon him by the grantor, then it follows that the Statute of Uses does not transmit the legal estate and thereby disable the trustee to give the contemplated protection, and if it does not pass out of him by force of the statute, it can only pass by his joinder in a deed. It is not sufficient to cite authorities from the English and other courts where it is held that no special duty devolves upon the trustee outside of what is specifically mentioned in the deed of settlement, for under that theory of course the trustee is charged with no special trust, and the legal estate passes to the feme covert. The rule that where in a conveyance tо uses the grantee is charged with a special duty in reference to the propert}7, á trust is created, is universal, whatever may be the differences in its application. But *262 when we hold that a special trust is created by certain language, and the English courts or others in this country hold that it gives rise only to a naked trust, it must follow that, under one theory the legal estate is put into the trustee for thе protection of the cestui que trust, while under the English doctrine it is transmitted by the statute.
“The same considerations (says Dr. Minor, 2 Inst., 187, 218) which before the statute induced the courts of equity to decline to interfere with the possession of the person seized — namely, because such possession ■was requisite for the purposes of the transaction, led to the construction that special trusts were not executed by the statute, but remained as before, equitable estates only.”
Before the passage of 27 lien. YIIL, the
cestui que use
could as a general rule invoke the aid of the Ecclesiastical court to compel a recusant feoffee to uses to convey the legal estate to him or to any other person he might designate (2 Minor’s Inst., 211 (185) but where the conveyance to the
cestui que trust
would disable the feoffee from performing or prevent the performance of a duty, which it was intended by the feoffor, as evidenced by the very terms of the declaration made cotemporaneously with the livery, should devolve upon the feoffee, the court of equity refused to aid in defeati g instead of carrying out the intention of the feoffor. Washburn in explaining the nature of indirect trusts arising from the failure of the statute to exeсute says: “Thus, for illustration, a grant or devise to A. in trust for B., or to permit B. to take rents and profits, wronld be an executed trust in B. unless B.
was a feme
covert, when in order to carry out the grantor’s or devisor’s intent it w'ould be a trust or use not executed.” 2 Wash. Real Prop., 488 (163). Acting upon the mle laid down in
Knox v. Jordan
that a
feme covert
was emancipated from her common-law disabilities only to the extent
*263
that the deed of settlement expressly clothed her with greater power, and upon the doctrine of Chancellor KeNT, approved in
Hardy
v.
Holly
that the conveyance to the sole and separate use of a married woman
ex vi termini
implied a purpose on the part of the grantor to protect her against the solicitations of a thriftless husband, this Court could not have reached any other conclusion than that the transmission of the possession to the wife, where it vested in the trustee for a special purpose, would tend to defeat the express object of the grantor, and that it would be divested only by a conveyance in which he and the
cestui que trust
should join. The Statute of Uses substituted for 27 Hen. VIII. (Code, Sec. 1330) provides that the possession of the bargainee shall be transferred to the bargainee as pеrfectly as if the bargainee “had been enfeoffed at common-law with livery of seizin of the land intended to be con ve_yed,” &c. The case of
Wilder
v.
Ireland,
Upon the direct authorities cited from our own Reports as well as upon the fundamental principles as interpreted by this Court, we conclude :
1. That where a woman acquire s the title to land before or after marriage without any qualification of or restriction upon her right of alienation, she can dispose of it during her lifetime only-in the way pointed out in the Constitution (Art. X., Seс. 6).
2. That the Constitution imposes no limitation upon the right of a grantor or devisor to restrict or enlarge, by the terms of the instrument, through which title passes, her jus disponendi.
3. That the words “ for the sole and separate use,” or equivalent language qualifiying the estate of a trustee for a married woman, must be construed as manifesting the intent on the part of the grantor to limit her right of alienation to the mode аnd manner expressly provided in the *265 instrument by which the estate is created. In the former-opinion the case of Norris v. Luther was referred to, and some obvious distinctions between the facts there and in other authorities cited were mentioned. But there was a broad intimation that in so far as the opinion in that case could be construed as antagonizing the doctrine of Knox v. Jordan, Hardy v. Holly and the later adjudications, it must be considered as modified. The petition is dismissed.
Dismissed..
