98 Ky. 535 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1896
delivered the opinion op the court.
The appellee brought suit against the appellants, who are husband and wife, upon a note and mortgage executed
The question for decision is whether, under the existing law, a married woman can bind her real estate by mortgage to secure the debt of her husband.
Under the General Statutes, the separate estate of a married woman could not be mortgaged to secure the debt of her husband, for the reason that her separate estate continued in the proceeds of a sale or mortgage, and to permit her to mortgage it for the debt of another would defeat her estate in the proceeds. (General Statutes, chapter 52, article 4, section 17; Merchants & Mechanics Building & Loan Ass’n v. Jarvis, 92 Ky., 566; Hirschman v. Brashears, 79 Ky., 258; McGill v. Mercantile Trust Co., 81 Ky., 129.)
* By the act of May 16,1893, article 3, section 34, it was provided that upon a sale of the wife’s land or chattels real “the proceeds shall be her separate estate.” This provision, in effect, prohibited a mortgage of a wife’s general es-
Section 2127 provides, immediately following the provisions quoted above: “No part of a married woman’s estate shall be subjected to the payment or satisfaction of any liability, upon a contract made after marriage to answer for the debt, default or misdoing of another, including her husband, unless such estate shall have been set apart for that purpose by deed of mortgage or other conveyance; but her estate shall be liable for her debts and responsibilities contracted or incurred before marriage, and for such contracted after marriage, except as in this act provided.”
The setting apart provided for in this section clearly refers to a setting apart by the wife by the execution of a deed of mortgage or' other conveyance, and the latter part of the section distinctly provides that “her estate shall be liable * * * for such (debts and responsibilities) contracted after marriage, except as in this act provided,” that is to say, except the classes of contracts prohibited by sections 2127 and 2128.
This conclusion is strengthened by the language of section 2128. “A married woman may take, acquire and hold property, real and personal, by gift, devise or descent, or by pur
In our opinion a married woman may set apart her real property by deed of mortgage to secure the debt of her husband.
Judgment affirmed.