70 Mo. App. 330 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
Plaintiff’s intestate and defendant were married in St. Louis on February 20, 1895, the defendant husband being then a citizen of New York and residing at Rochester in that state. Prior to her marriage the wife was a resident of this state. On February 25, 1895, she gave her check for $1,900, requesting the bank upon which it was drawn, in exchange therefor, to deliver to her husband a New York draft. This was done and defendant returned to Rochester, New York, were he cashed said draft. There was evidence that the wife sent the money, represented by said draft, to New York, to be used in improving the home which she and defendant would occupy after their marriage. The evidence was undisputed that she intended after her marriage to move to Rochester, New York, where her husband lived. It was arranged that she would remain a short time in St. Louis disposing of her business affairs, and that her husband would return to St. Louis for her in the early spring and take her to New York. While she was arranging some business affairs she was taken sick, and died on the twenty-second of March, 1895.
Neither does the case of McGuire v. Allen, 108 Mo. 403, bear on the question under consideration. That case decides that the mere blank indorsement by the wife of a check for money due her and delivery of the check to the husband, does not constitute a sufficient written assent within the meaning of the statute to work a reduction to possession of the money represented by the check. In the case at bar, had the domicile of the husband and wife been in Missouri, the decision cited would have been in point. As their domicile was in New York, under the law, making the domicile of the husband that of the wife, the decision has no bearing on the title to the money in that state at the time of the death of the wife. Our conclusion is that the judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.