30 How. Pr. 193 | The Superior Court of New York City | 1865
The question to be determined in this case is, can Mrs. Mcllvaine, by and with the consent of her husband after she arrives at majority, sell and convey the property mentioned in the trust deed given to Tracy. I am clearly of opinion that she and her husband can. The only effect the trust deed had was to vest in the trustee the legal title to the property in question, subject to be divested by the wife's disaffirmance of the deed on arriving at full age. (Bool agt. Mix, 17 Wend. 119 ; Sandford agt. McLean, 3 P.aige, 121.) The deed of
The judgment must be for the plaintiff with costs, requiring the defendants to specifically perform the contract.
Monell, J. The deed of Mrs. Mcllvaine, the plaintiff,” having been executed by her while an infant, is voidable, not void. Such, I think is the clear weight of authority, (Roof agt. Stafford, 7 Cow. 179 ; Bool agt. Mix, 17 Wend. 119; Temple agt. Hawley, 1 Sand. Ch. R. 153; Wetmore agt. Kissam, 3 Bosw. 321.) The instrument of November
Independently of the statutes for the more effectual protection of the property of married women, the trust deed , could not be avoided by the plaintiff during coverture. Such seems to be the preponderance of authority on the subject. (Temple agt. Hawley, Wetmore agt. Kissam, supra ; and the cases there cited and reviewed) The act of 1849 (Laws of 1849, p. 528, chap. 375), enables a married woman to hold to her separate use, and to; convey any real or personal property, and the rents, issues and profits thereof, in the same manner, and with the like effect, as if she were unmarried; and such property and rents were not subject to the disposal of her husband, nor liable for his debts. This act has been held to be constitutional and valid. (Clark agt. Clark, 24 Barb. 581; Thurber agt. Townsend, 22 JY. Y. Rep. 517.) The effect of the statute referred to, is to deprive the husband of all right to, or interest in his wife’s property, during her life. By the unity of persons, the common law transferred to the husband, all the personal property of the wife absolutely, and gave him the usufruct of all her real estate during their joint lives, and after her' death, issue being born, an estate for his life. The intention of the legislature was to overturn all those provisions of the common law which bestowed upon the husband the property of the wife, and confer upon the latter the unrestrained right to, and control over such property, as if the .marital relation did not exist.
The reason which founded the doctrine that an infant’s deed cannot be avoided during coverture was, that it might interfere with, or in some way affect the marital rights of the husband,-or defeat the settlement. Lord Chancellor Elden says, in Milner agt. Lord Harewood (18 Ves. 275), that the husband being seized jure vxoris, would have a
I have assumed that the weight of authority was against the right of disaffirmance during coverture, of real property conveyed by an infant. It seems to be equally well settled that the rule does not apply to a settlement of personal estate. (Simpson agt. Jones 2 Russ, & Milne, 371; Temple agt. Hawley, Wetmore agt. Kissam, ubi supra.) In settlements of personal estate, it is said that it is bound, because it would otherwise become the husband’s, and, therefore, it is his , settlement and not hers; whereas the real estate of a female infant was not bound, because it does not become the absolute property of the husband, though he took a limited interest in it. The antiquity of the distinction, and the uniform concurrence of judges in it, entitles it to much weight; otherwise it would be difficult to perceive wherein the distinction lies. In the one case the husband takes, all the personal estate,' in the other he takes all the usufruct of the real. During his life she is as wholly deprived of her real as of her personal estate. The end to be gained by ante nuptial settlements was, to secure the real or personal estate, or both, to her future use, with a jus dispon- , endi by will. Why should a different rule be applied to these settlements-? Why can one be disaffirmed during coverture, the other not ?
All the cases in the books, and there are.many, are cases where the court has been invoked to aid parties in annulling
In the case before us, the trusts created were for the sole benefit of the plaintiff: No other person had any interest, •beneficial or otherwise, in either the trusts or the estate. The trustee was required to collect the rents and pay them to the plaintiff; he was invested with power to sell, and upon the death of the plaintiff he was directed to dispose of the estate according to her will, or in default of a will, to the persons entitled by law to inherit from her. Under the statute referred to, this conveyance in trust was probably unnecessary. The protection afforded by the law to the property of a married female, is quite as effectual as it can be made by the contract of parties. In leaving this branch of the question, it is perhaps sufficient to say that the rules respecting the irrevocability of marriage settlements during coverture, are supported by very slight if not altogether insufficient reasons, when applied to the facts in the case before us.
The act for the protection of the property of married ' women, has worked a complete radical change in the marital rights of husbands. Their old common law right to the personal, and the use of the real is, gone; and they have no estate or interest, or right whatever, absolute or contingent, except that upon the death of the wife, after issue born, without exercising the jus disponendi, he has
The natural if not inevitable effect of the statute -we are considering, is to destroy the reason on which the common law rule of disability during coverture was founded. None of the marital rights of the husband are invaded, nor are the courts called upon to aid in the avoidance. In respect to her separate estate the wife is a feme sole. There was an apparent reluctance in the courts at first, to give to the act of 1849 the wide and sweeping effect which it has since been conceded was intended by the legislature; it was radical and startling, as it was in plain derogation of a long established common law right. The court in Blood agt. Humphrey (17 Barb. 662), uses this emphatic language: “ The legislature intended to remove the entire disability which the common law and the statute had thrown around married women, not only as regards their right to take and hold, free and independent of their husbands, but also to remove the obstacles which the law had interposed against their conveying, both by grant and devise, and to place them, so far as the lands which they held in their own rights are concerned, on the same basis precisely as unmarried females.” And Comstock, J., in! Yale agt. Dederer (18 N. Y. R.) says : “ In respect to estates acquired and held under the protection of this statute, the disabilities of coverture would seem to be removed.” I will extract but from
It remains to examine the case'of 'Wetmore agt. Kissam, in this court ■ (supra), which is apparently opposed to the view I have taken. In that case an ante nuptial agreement had been executed in New Jersey, conveying the intended wife’s property to a trustee. The trusts were, to pay the income of the estate to the wife during life : upon her death, leaving her husband surviving, and no child, or the issue of any deceased child, to pay the income to her husband during life, The wife (who was an infant when the settlement was made) on attaining her majority, without any act of disaffirmance, sought hy her action to Obtain possession of the trust estate in the Bands of her trustees. Her husband was made a party defendant, but it= does not appear (further than that he did not answér the complaint) that he consented to the attempted avoidance of the deed of settlement by his wife. The learned justice (Hoffman)
But I regard the case of Wetmore agt. Kissam, as settling nothing more than that a court of equity will not entertain a suit by a wife to avoid her settlement during coverture. It does not decide that she may not disaffirm it by some distinct and unequivocal act of avoidance of her own. But even if that case stood in the way, the more recent decisions in the court of appeals, to which I have referred, are broad enough to cover the views I have expressed.
I have examined and considered this case with much care. The question is new, not having been directly passed upon by any court that I am aware of, and I am brought to the conclusion, clearly and without doubt:
First. That the trust deed from Mrs. Mcllvaine, having been executed by her while she was an infant, was voidable by her on her attaining full age; and
I concur, therefore, in the opinion that the plaintiff should have judgment with costs, requiring the defendant specifically to perform his contract.