25 Gratt. 393 | Va. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the court.
The court is of opinion that the following may be laid down as sound and well settled principles of law, and are applicable to this case, viz:
1st. A married woman is regarded by a. court of equity, as the owner of her separate estate; and, as a general rule, the jus disponendi is an incident to such estate; that is, it is an incident thereto, unless, and ’except so tar as it is denied or restrained by the instrument creating the estate.
2d. But it is subject to such limitations and restrictions as may be contained in such instrument; which may give it sub modo only, or withhold it altogether.
3d. In regard to separate personal estate, and the rents and profits of separate real estate, this power of disposition, if it be unrestrained, may be exercised in the same way, by deed, will or otherwise, as if the owner were a feme sole. But in regard to the corpus of separate real estate, it can be disposed of only in such mode, if any, as may be prescribed by the instrument creating the estate; or, unless prohibited by such instrument, in the mode prescribed by law for the alienation of real estate by married women.
4th. While the rents and profits of a wife’s separate real estate remain subject to her power of disposition as personal estate so long as they continue in that form, yet, when they are, by the wife, or by her direction, converted into realty, such realty can be disposed of only as other separate real estate of a married woman; that is, in the mode, if any, prescribed by the instrument by which it is conveyed to her or to trustees for her separate use; or, unless prohibited, or except so far as it may be restrained by the instrument, in the mode prescribed by law for the
Other principles of law on the subject, no less sound or well settled, might here be laid down, but it is unnecessary for the principles of this case. Hor is it necessary in this case to express any opinion upon the much vexed and yet unsettled question, whether, where the instrument creating the separate estate, prescribes a mode of disposing of the estate, that mode is in exclusion of any other; upon the principle of expressio unius est exclusio alterius. Certainly, the instrument may, either expressly or by plain implication, exclude any other.
The court is further of opinion that in regard to the two hundred acres of land in the county of Augusta, conveyed by the deed of the 21st day of July, 1856, in the proceedings mentioned between Samuel B. Brown of the first part, Mary Ann Brown, his wife, of the second part, and Thomas J. Michie and Wm. H. Harman of the third part, the said land could be disposed of either by an act to take effect during her lifetime, or by an act to take effect after her death. The only mode by which it could be disposed of, in order that such disposition might take effect during her life was under that trust of the deed which declares that the “ said Mary Ann Brown may by writing, under her hand and seal, attested by two witnesses, or acknowledged before a justice of the peace, direct said trustees (Michie and Harman) to sell said tract of land, or any part thereof; but said trustees shall invest and hold the proceeds of said tract of land for the sole use
The deed expressly provides, that “ if she fail to make any such will, or to execute any such writing, then the said trustees shall convey the said tract of land,” &c., “to all such children of said Mary Ann Brown born of her marriage with the said Samuel B. Brown, as may be then living, and to the descendents of such as may be dead, per stirpes, whether such children be now in esse or hereafter to be born of such marriage; or, in case no such issue shall be then in being, to the right heirs of the said Mary Ann Brown.” She died without having made any such will, or executed any such writing; and under the limitation of the said deed, the corpus of the trust supject devolved on her children then living born of her marriage with the said Samuel B. Brown, of which there were several, there being no descendants then living of any such children as were then dead. The only mode by which she could possibly have defeated the said limitation in favor of the said children, was to dispose of the corpus of the trust subject by will, duly executed, as if she were a feme sole, or by other writing attested by at least three witnesses, as prescribed by the said deed. . She had no right to spend the proceeds of sale, or any part thereof, of the corpus of the trust subject, or any
The court is further of opinion that the exchange in the proceedings mentioned, of the said two hundred acres of land for the American Hotel property was a valid sale of the said two hundred acres of land, and a valid investment of the proceeds of said sale in the said American Hotel property under the trusts and powers created by the said deed, whereby the said American Hotel property, to the extent of the said investment, to wit: the sum of $12,000, the agreed value in said exchange of the said two hundred acres of land, became subject to all the trusts and powers created by the said deed, just as if the said hotel property had been the subject conveyed by the said deed instead of the said two hundred acres of land.
The court is further of opinion that the said American Hotel property, to the extent to which the purchase money thereof was paid by the said Mary Ann Brown out of its profits after the said exchange was made, became also the separate estate of the .said Mary Ann Brown. So that the whole of the said hotel property thus became the separate estate of the said Mary Ann Brown, subject, however, to the payment of the balance of the purchase money yet remaining due and unpaid to those who sold the property to her or her trustees.
The court is further of opinión that after the said exchange was made, there was no other sale or investment under the trust and powers created by the said deed; but the said American Hotel property, subject to the lien thereon as aforesaid, having become the separate estate of the said Mary Ann Brown as afore
To the extent that the said property represents or was purchased with the original trust subject, it was, of course, subject to the limitations and restrictions declared by the said deed. To the extent that the purchase money was paid out of the profits of the property after the said exchange was made, it seems also to be subject to the said limitations and restrictions. The profits of the separate estate, whether it be the original subject or that for which it was exchanged, were as they accrued, separate personal estate of Mrs. Brown, and might have been disposed of by her according to her pleasure, as if she had been a feme sole. She had power to spend them, or she had power to invest them in real or other estate, and on such trusts and limitations as she thought proper. She chose to invest them in real estate, to wit: in the American Hotel property. They then ceased to be personal estate, subject to her general right of disposition as of separate personal estate, and became real estate, subject only to such right of disposition as she had, either under the powers created by the original deed, or under the law in regard to the real estate of a feme covert. The case of West v. West’s ex’ors, 3 Rand. 373, shows that while the profits of her real estate before they were invested were personal estate, subject to her general jus disponendi, yet so soon as they were invested by her in real estate, they became thenceforward separate real estate, sub
But however that may be, the effect is precisely the same, whether that part of the property in which the profits were invested be subject to the limitations and restrictions of the original deed, or be separate real •estate free from such limitations and restrictions; and it must, as we have seen, be one or the other. Pre
The court is further of opinion that the appellants purchased the said American Hotel property not of the said Mary Ann Brown, nor of her said trustees, Miehie and Harman, or either of them, but of the appellees, A. S. Lara and Samuel B. Brown, Jr., who claimed to have derived it from Samuel B. Brown,. Sr.; and the whole amount of the purchase money contracted to be paid by them, to wit: $80,000 in Confederate currency, was paid by the said purchasers to the said Lara, -for himself and the said Samuel B. Brown, Jr., on his giving a bond of indemnity with surety; and no part of the said purchase money was paid to the said Mary Ann Brown, or ever enured to her benefit. The acts and conduct of the said Mary Ann Brown, and of her trustees, the said Miehie and Harman, after the said purchase was made, and the
The court is further of opinion that it does not sufficiently appear that the said purchase money, or any part thereof, was invested in the purchase made by the said Samuel B. Brown, Sr., and Lara, of land and slaves in Georgia-, or was applied to the payment of
The court is therefore of opinion that there is no error in the decree of the Circuit court, and that it ought to be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.