1 Foster 385 | Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Berks County | 1873
Opinion by
The property out of which the fund in court has been raised was conveyed by Samuel Marberger to Rebecca Spohn, on the 27th of March, 1868. The sum of $150 was paid on account of tire purchase money, and a mortgage for $1650, in which her husband joined, was executed by Mrs. Spohn. It is shown by the depositions read on the argument, that the $150 paid at the time of the conveyance was furnished to her by Mrs. Spohn’s sister as a loan, and she states that she still owes her sister the entire amount. There is no proof of any separate estate belonging to her. The whole transaction was an effort to invest a married woman with title to real estate by a series of fresh contracts, while she was living with her husband, with no means of any kind which she could have the right exclusively to control. The property having been sold by proceedings under the Marberger mortgage, the balance, after the payment of the purchase money, is claimed respectively by Mrs. Spohn and by Joseph Reber, a judgment creditor of her husband.
The rights of these parties are defined by rules which have been settled by the supreme court. The proof contained in the depositions that Mrs. Spohn kept boarders does not help her case, for, notwithstanding the act of the nth of April, 1848, the husband is still entitled to the labor of his wife and the benefit of her industry and economy. • Her earnings and savings, not out of her separate estate, do not become her separate property, but belong to her husband as before the act. Raybold v. Raybold, 8 Harris 308. “ Where a married woman claims property in opposition to her husband’s creditors, which has been purchased since the marriage, she must show affirmatively that she has received money or other property 1 by will, descent, conveyance, or otherwise,’ and invested in the property claimed.” Walker v. Ramsey, 12 Casey 410. “ She must prove her ownership by clear and satisfactory evidence.” Rhoads v. Gordon, 2 Wr. 277. “She must clearly show that the purchase money was her own, in some way, within the recognition and protection of the act of 1848, for the law presumes it to have belonged to her husband.” Hoffman v. Toner, 13 Wr. 231.
The whole claim'of Mrs. Spohn is against the policy of the law, and in contravention of settled and unquestioned rules.' Any effort to clothe a woman with title to land when she has the control of no means and no credit, which are exclusive of her husband’s rights, must always, as against creditors, be a fruitless labor, until an organic change shall be made both in our legal and in our social systems.
The rule to show cause on behalf of Joseph Reber is • made absolute. The rule on behalf of Rebecca Spohn is discharged. *