131 Mich. 213 | Mich. | 1902
George W. and Antoinette C. Webber were husband and wife. It was a childless marriage, and she died April 11, 1890. While George W. Webber was a member of the United States Congress, Antoinette Webber spent some time in Washington; and while there she was seen to wear the diamonds in controversy in this suit, and she frequently wore them afterwards. They were kept in a jewel box, of which she had the key; the box being deposited in the safety vault in a bank in Ionia, of which George W. Webber was a part owner. There is no evidence that they were a part of her separate property, except the foregoing. There is a possible inference that she did not purchase the property; her sister haying testified that she received no property from her father, and nothing being shown to indicate that she had any property; and there is a possible inference that George W. Webber purchased the diamonds for her use, from the testimony of his nephew, who said to his uncle, George W. Webber, that “the diamonds that auntie had were very nice ones; ” that Webber simply made some remark that they were nice, — some thing of that kind, — and did not enter into any discussion with him as to when,he bought them, or how much he paid for them, or the fact that he had given them to his wife.
The relatives of Mrs. Webber caused letters of administration to issue upon the estate of Antoinette O. Webber, and their claim to be filed against the estate of George W. Webber, deceased, for the amount of the certificate of deposit, and payments of interest thereon from the date of its first issue, and also for the value of the diamonds mentioned. The case was tried in the circuit before a jury. The court held there could be no recovery for the diamonds, and submitted to the jury the question whether or not George W. Webber was the real owner of the fund represented by the certificate of deposit. A verdict was rendered for the defendant.
The evidence shows that, after the death of Antoinette Webber, George W. Webber married again, and the diamonds continued to be kept, as before, in the jewel box and in the bank vault, and they were used at will by his second wife. At her death, Mr. Webber married the lady who is now his widow, — Mrs. Ella Webber. She has worn the diamonds, and kept them, when not being worn, at the bank, in the same way that the first, and second Mrs. Webber did. It is contended on behalf of the defense that the jewels were a part of the paraphernalia of Antoinette Webber, procured for her use by her husband, and that, in the absence of proof that they became part of her separate estate through gift from her husband, the claimant should not recover.
In the case of Hawkins v. Railroad Co., 119 Mass. 596 (20 Am. Rep. 353), it was held that personal apparel furnished by a husband to his wife, or purchased by the wife, with the consent of her husband, with money given her by him from a fund formed by their joint earnings, remained the property of the husband, and the wife could not maintain an action against a carrier for the loss thereof.
“The statutes of the State have made no change in the common-law rule that the obligation to furnish the wife with her wearing apparel, the same as in the case of a man with minor children, is imposed upon the husband still, and, as in the case of a man with minor children, the wearing apparel belongs to the husband, as between himself and a third person who undertakes to remove it.”
This court said further:
The husband “may insure it as his own property; * * * [and] the purchase of the property for her use is no more a gift to her than is the purchase of apparel for a minor child such a gift to that child as would devest the parent of a right to recover it from a third person.”
Again it was said:
“ The statute of distribution of estates of intestates, re-enacted since the married woman’s act, provides that the widow shall be allowed all her articles of apparel and ornaments. This would indicate that, without such a provision, these articles would constitute a part of decedent’s estate, and would be liable, as such, to be sold for the payment of his debts.”
In the case of Curtis v. Railroad Co., 74 N. Y. 122 (30 Am. Rep. 271), it was said:
“At common law, during coverture, the wife’s paraphernalia belonged to the husband. * * * The statute has not changed the rule, except that the wife’s paraphernalia is secured to her, even against creditors. The title is in the husband, when he has paid for the articles and furnished them. Nor do the statutes in reference to the rights of married women, and gifts of personal property from the husband to the wife, affect the husband’s right, until a gift has been actually made and is proved. * * * Where there is a gift, the wife may bring an action, but otherwise the husband must sue.”
The other item was properly left to the jury. There was testimony in the case tending to show that the stock in the national bank was received by the wife without consideration, and that such stock, and the certificate of deposit which was afterwards given, with its proceeds, were never beyond the control of the husband. He seems to have had at all times the earnings of both the stock and the certificate. The jury having passed upon that question, we must take it as settled.
Many errors are assigned upon the proceedings. Of these, several relate to the testimony of Herbert B. Webber, who was asked to state how the certificates of deposit were left with him, and for whom he was handling them. The court sustained objections to these questions, and in this he did not err. It was for the jury to determine, from what was said and done, whom this deposit was made by, and for whom it was held. We think it was competent to show the history of the transaction between George W. Webber and his wife which culminated in the giving of the certificate of deposit. It was also competent to show by Herbert B. Webber that there was no secrecy upon the part of George W. Webber in his dealings with this fund.
We are also of the opinion that the view taken in this case by the jury excludes any right on the part of the administrator of Antoinette Webber to the property in question. If it was the property of George W. Webber, it was not necessary that it should go through the hands of the administrator of Antoinette.
We find no error in what the court said regarding the long delay in filing this claim. George W. Webber lived some 10 years after the death of Antoinette, and no steps were taken during his life to obtain any part of this property; nor, so far as we can discover, was any claim made that she left any property. The court instructed the jury that, while the statute of limitations did not run against this claim, this delay was a circumstance which might be taken into consideration by them in determining the probabilities of the justness of the claimant’s claim. For this purpose it was competent.
It becomes unnecessary to discuss the question of the rule of damages, or other assignments of error.
The- order of the circuit court is affirmed.