169 Iowa 622 | Iowa | 1915
— The petition alleges that on or about the 17th day of June, 1909, plaintiff and the decedent, Flynn, who had theretofore been betrothed, because of Flynn’s breach of agreement to marry the plaintiff entered into a written stipulation, the terms of which are as follows:
“My Dear Miss McCoy:
I will pay you the sum of five thousand ($5,000.00) dollars on or before June 18th, 1909. And upon receipt of same you will agree to relinquish all further or future claim on me of any hind whatever, except that there is a mutual understanding between us that in case you do not marry before July 1st, 1912, I will on that date pay to you, if living a further sum of five thousand ($5,000.00) dollars.
Your acceptance and agreement to this proposition to mahe its terms binding on each of us from and after date of its acceptance and each will abide by same.
Yours very truly,
T. J. Flynn.
Terms and conditions of above letter have been accepted by me this 17th day of June, 1909.
Tella McCoy.
It is averred that this was accepted in full and complete satisfaction and settlement of all demands and claims of the plaintiff against the said Flynn, occasioned by his breach of promise to marry the plaintiff; that the deceased paid the plaintiff the sum of $5,000.00 on or about the 17th day of' June, 1909; but neglected to pay the. $5,000.00, maturing
The grounds for attachment, as stated in the amendment to her petition, were that Flynn fraudulently conveyed to Ida May Flynn and to the Iowa Loan and Trust Company substantially all of his property, both real and personal, for the purpose of cheating and defrauding his creditors, and especially this plaintiff.
Little is said in argument regarding the correctness of the latter ruling, and it merits little or no attention.
At the time the petition for the attachment was filed, the property of the deceased Flynn was in the possession of his executors for the purpose of being administered under his will, and was not subject to attachment.
If plaintiff sometime recovers a judgment on her claim, and the executors fail and refuse to bring action to set aside the conveyances because in fraud of Flynn’s creditors, plaintiff might have some remedy; but it would not be by attachment of the property of the deceased, after it had passed to his executors. No authority need be cited upon so plain a proposition. The other question is much more difficult of solution.
The payment of the second $5,000.00 was not to be made unless the plaintiff did not marry before July 1, 1912. The proposition was accepted by the plaintiff, and; so far as it is possible to make an agreement, it became mutually binding upon the parties thereto. In order to obtain the $5,000.00,
In the early case of Lowe v. Peers (1770) Wilmot 364 (4 Burr.-2225), Lord Mansfield declared:
Matrimony is “one of the first commands given by God to mankind after the creation, repeated again after the deluge, and ever since echoed by the voice of nature to all mankind. ’ ’ See also: Hartley v. Rice, 10 East. 22; Baker v. White, 2 Vern. 215; Grace v. Webb, 15 Sim. 384.
In Hartley’s case, the restraint was for six years, and in Sterling’s ease, supra, for six months. In,Grace’s ease, the court said: “It is most beneficial to a state to have a multitude of subjects; and, therefore, restraints on marriage are objectionable as being against public policy. A man may make a provision for his wife, and declare that it is considered that a husband has a sort of interest to preserve the viduity of his wife, for the sake of his children. But the grantor of the annuity in the present case could not have had any motive whatever for inserting the proviso in the deed, except that the larger annuity might operate as an inducement to Elizabeth Castle not to marry.”
Many exceptions exist to rules above stated.
In Hogan’s case, supra, it is said: “A condition prohibiting marriage before twenty-one without consent, is by the common law valid and lawful. It is otherwise of conditions in general restraint of marriage, they being regarded as contrary to public policy, and the common weal and good order of society. But the reasonable conditions designed to prevent hasty or imprudent marriages, and to subject a child, or other object of the testator’s bounty, to the just restraint of parents or friends during infancy, or other reasonable period, are upheld by the common law, not only because they are proper in themselves, but because by upholding them the law protects the owner of property in disposing of it under such lawful limitations and conditions as he may prescribe. Story Eq. Jur., Sec. 280 et seq., and cases cited. Now it is the general rule of law that a breach of a lawful condition annexed to a legacy, either divests it, or prevents an estate therein arising in the legatee, depending upon whether the condition is precedent or subsequent. In accordance with this general principle, it was held in In re Dickson’s Trust, I Sim. (N. S.) 37, a condition subsequent, that the legatee should not become a nun, was valid, and that the legacy was forfeited by breach of the condition, although there was no gift over. But it has been settled law of England for a long period, that a condition subsequent annexed to a legacy, in qualified restraint of marriage, although the restraint was lawful and reasonable, nevertheless did not operate upon a breach to divest the title of a legatee, unless there
“In Lloyd v. Branton, Sir William Grant, referring to the subject, says: ‘Whatever diversity of opinion there may have been with respect to the necessity of a devise over in the case of conditions precedent, I apprehend that, without such a devise, a subsequent condition of forfeiture on marriage without consent has never been enforced.’ It is not necessary to state at length the reason of the apparent anomaly in the law upon the subject. This is fully explained in the judgment of Lord Thurlow in Scott v. Tyler, 2 Bro. Ch. 432, and of Lord Loughborough, in Stachpale v. Beaumont. Suffice it to say, that it grew out of the adoption, by the English ecclesiastical courts and the courts of equity, of the rules of the civil and canon law, by which all conditions in restraint of marriage (with very limited exceptions), or conditions requiring consent, were held to be void. The ecclesiastical courts, having jurisdiction to enforce the payment of legacies, adopted the rule of the civil law in all cases, without considering that by the common law, reasonable conditions in restraint of marriage were valid. The distinction made in cases where there was an express devise over, does not seem to be founded upon any principle, and may possibly have grown out of an effort to partially restore the harmony of the law.
“It is a clear proposition, therefore, that, according to the-settled law of England, the legacy in this case, if it is regarded as a purely personal legacy, was not forfeited by the marriage of the testator’s daughter without consent. There was no devise over on breach of the condition. The only; gift over was in the event of the daughter’s dying unmarried before twenty-one. It has been frequently decided that a
“But the legacy is not a purely personal legacy. The testator charges the lands devised as an auxiliary fund for the payment of debts and legacies, and there is no personalty out of which the legacy can be paid. If it is paid therefore it can be only by a sale of the land on which the legacy is charged. This presents a case where the condition must be construed and effect given to it according to the general rule of the common law. Beynish v. Martin was the ease of a legacy upon a condition in restraint of marriage without consent, charged upon land in aid of the personalty. The legatee married without consent, and afterward suit was brought to compel a sale of the land to pay the legacy, and Lord Hardwicke denied this relief, saying that ‘where a legacy is a charge upon the lands, to be raised out of the real estate, as the ecclesiastical courts have no jurisdiction, it must be governed by the rules of another forum, to which the jurisdiction properly belongs;’ and in Scott v. Tyler, Lord Thurlow said, ‘Lands devised, charged upon it powers to be exercised oyer it, money legacies referring to such charges, money to be laid out in land (though I do not find this yet resolved), follow the rule of the common law and are to be executed by analogy to it.’ And Judge Story, speaking of the distinctions between conditions in restraint of marriage, annexed to. a bequest of personal estate, and the like, conditions annexed to a devise of real estate, or to a charge upon it, says: ‘In the latter cases (touching real estate) the doctrine of the common law as to conditions is strictly applied. If the condition be precedent it must be strictly complied with in order to entitle the party to the benefit of the devise or gift. If the condition be subsequent, its validity will depend upon its being such as the law will allow to divest an estate.’ Story Eq. Jur., See. 288.” See also Cornell v. Lovett, 11 Casey
Quite analogous to these exceptions is another, relating to the disposition of property by gift or will, where it is generally held that the donor or testator may impose such conditions to his gift or devise as he may elect. Although even in this case there are some refined exceptions to the exception.
This is most clearly stated by Pomeroy in his work on Equity Jurisprudence, Vol. 2, Second Edition, Sec. 933:
“Intimately connected with contracts in restraint of marriage, and depending upon the same principle, are conditions and limitations operating in like manner’ annexed to or forming part of testamentary dispositions, or of family settlements, or similar gifts. Although the subject, in some of its special applications and phases, is still more confused and uncertain than perhaps any other branch of equity jurisprudence, yet certain general rules have been established beyond all further controversy. Two propositions lie at the foundation, and are recognized by all the authorities:
“1. It is ordinarily said that all conditions annexed to. gifts which prohibit marriage generally and absolutely are void and inoperative. This, however, is a very inaccurate mode of statement, since a condition precedent annexed to a devise of land, even if in complete restraint, will, if broken, be operative and prevent the devise from taking effect. With this limitation all conditions in general restraint are void. Also if a condition is not in absolute restraint, but.is of such form that it will probably operate as a general prohibition, it is, under the same limitation, void.
“2. On the other hand, conditions annexed to testamentary or other gifts, in partial and reasonable restraint of marriage, are valid and operative; such, for example, as that a devisee or legatee should not marry under age, or should not marry without the consent of parents, guardians, or trustees, or should not marry a particular person, or a person*631 belonging to a particular religious communion. In the application of these two propositions, certain special rules have been settled with more or less certainty, depending upon the •facts of the condition being precedent or subsequent, of there being, or not, a gift over upon its breach, and of the original gift to which the condition is annexed being one of real or of personal estate. The system which has been developed is a partial compromise between the technical common-law rules concerning conditions, and the doctrines of the Roman law, which made void all attempts to restrict the perfect freedom of marriage; and, like most compromises, it has some incongruous features. If a condition is precedent and annexed to a gift of land, it operates as at the common law; when broken, it prevents the estate from vesting, whatever be its nature; - when annexed to a gift of personal property, if general or unreasonable, it is wholly void, and the gift takes effect, if partial and reasonable, it is operative. When a condition is subsequent and annexed to a gift of land, if general, it is void, and although broken, the estate of the donee continues; if partial and reasonable, it is operative, and on its breach the estate of the donee is defeated. When a subsequent condition is annexed to a gift of personal property, if general, it is void; if partial and reasonable, and there is a gift over, it is operative, and upon its breach the interest of the first donee ceases, and the gift over takes effect; but if. there is no gift over, then the condition is said to be in terrorem merely, and is inoperative. It seems to be settled by an overwhelming weight of authority that limitations and conditions, precedent or subsequent, tending to restrain the second marriage of women are valid, and by the most recent decisions the same rule has been applied to the second marriages of men. Where a partial and reasonable condition has been imposed, requiring the consent of certain persons to the marriage of a donee, courts of equity are very liberal in construing the provision so that the gift shall not be defeated • by a mere formal omission.”
The reason for this exception is:
*632 ‘ ‘ The reason for the rule as to first marriage has no substantial force when applied to a second marriage. Neither the conservation of morals nor public policy furnish a basis for the rule as applied to the right of a husband or wife to withhold his or her estate from passing to the support of a second husband or second wife, as the case might be; and the authorities declare that the rule has never been extended to second marriages. The precise question arose in Allen v. Jachson, referred to above, and the court distinctly held that the rule did not apply to a second marriage. The question was fully considered in Bostick v. Blades, 59 Md. 231, 43 Am. Rep. 548, a case involving a devise by the wife of certain property to the husband, so long as he should remain unmarried after her death. The court held the will valid on the ground that the rule referred to did not extend to second marriages. The court also considered at some length whether the rule should be limited to the second marriage of the wife, or whether it included both husband and wife. Upon that subject, the court said: ‘In the absence of any binding authority to the contrary, we are of opinion that there is no good and substantial ground for maintaining a distinction between a condition imposed in restraint of a second marriage of a woman and a like condition in restraint of a second marriage of a man. As the one is valid and effectual, so is the other. ’
“In Knight v. Mahoney, supra, the testator gave his property to his wife, ‘so long as she remains my widow.’ She married again after her husband’s death, and the controversy arose whether the provisions of the will were valid. The
*633 “It is unnecessary to discuss the reasons for the rule. The welfare of children by the first marriage is an element entering into consideration in determining the validity of such limitations, as well as the right of persons freely to enter into the marriage relation as their station in life and inclinations may justify and prompt. But no sound principle, founded upon either moral or legal obligation, extends the right of either husband or wife to retain the property of the other, in the face of lawful restrictions to the contrary, for the purpose of supporting and maintaining another spouse. The fact that appellant had no children by this marriage does not, as a matter of law, relate back and render the restrictions or limitations of the antenuptial contract unreasonable. ’ ’
Again, in all these eases, a distinction has been preserved between conditions precedent, limitations and conditions subsequent, the latter of which are disregarded. See cases cited in note to In re Estate of Fitzgerald deceased v. Fitzgerald, 49 L. R. A. (N. S.) 615.
We have never before had the questions here involved for decision and the authorities generally are not in entire harmony. We have endeavored to state the rules and exceptions generally recognized in this country and in England, and, in applying them to this ease, we are constrained to hold that the contract in question is in restraint of marriage, and that it does not fall within any of the exceptions noted.
Of course, plaintiff’s action for breach of promise of marriage still remains, unless barred by the statute of limi-tations; but she cannot have recovery upon the agreement, for that is contrary to public policy. This was the conclu