26 Miss. 245 | Miss. | 1853
delivered the opinion of the court.
The facts of the case are as follows, to wit: Mrs. Knight was the wife of James F. Bibb, whose estate was reported and declared insolvent by said court. During the marriage between Bibb and the appellant Mrs. Knight, Bibb received $492 which was alleged to be the separate estate of the wife. This money was her distributive share of the proceeds of the sale of certain real estate which had descended to her, during the marriage, jointly with others as the heirs of F. O. Love, deceased, and which was sold for a division under a decree of the court of probates.
The question, whether the husband Bibb was authorized to receive and give an acquittance, without the joint act of his wife for her separate property, does not arise in this case, as she has, by electing to proceed against his estate, recognized his authority to do so. Nor does the question arise whether, if the money be considered her separate property, it was competent for her to bestow it upon her husband by way of donation, as there is nothing in the record, besides the fact that the money was appropriated by him .to the payment of his own debt, from which it could be inferred that such was his intention.
The conversion of the land into money for the purpose of a division produced no change in the rights of the wife. Her right of separate property attached to the fund arising from the sale to the same extent which it existed in regard to the land. Hence the money is not to be regarded as property of the wife, to which Bibb, by virtue of his marital rights, was entitled. The only question then is whether the estate of Bibb, in consequence of the reception and appropriation by him of the money, is chargeable with its repayment.
When a feme covert joins in a mortgage of her estate for a debt of her husband, or to raise money to pay his own debt, she will be entitled after his death to have her estate exonerated out of his assets. Ropes, Hus. & Wife, 143; Robinson v. Gee, 1 Vesey, sen., 252; 3 Bro. Ch. R. 200. In such case the wife is regarded as a surety, and whatever may be the legal effect of
Let the order of the probate court be reversed, and the cause remanded.