44 Ky. 352 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1845
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This bill was filed by Martha Moore, to have her dower in a tract of land in Harrison county, of which her husband had been seizedjn fee, during the coverture, and which the defendant claimed by virtue of a purchase at a Commissioner’s sale, under a decree which bound her husband’s title. The claim of dower was resisted on two principal grounds, viz : first, that at the death of T. H. Moore, the complainant’s husband, she was an alien, in consequence of her husband’s having left the United States, and having become a citizen of Texas, and of her having followed him and resided there until after his death: and second, that although she had not joined in his deed of trust, nor relinquished her dower, as a party thereto, assurances had been given at the decretal sale that she would immediately relinquish her dower to the purcha
The bill having been dismissed absolutely, the only question for oúr consideration, is whether the decree is justified by any of the circumstances referred to.
I. The case of Alsberry vs Hawkins, (9 Dana, 177,) is relied on to defeat the claim of dower, on the ground of alienage. But though we should concede what is not entirely certain, that when the husband went to Texas in 1838, he determined to become permanently a citizen of that Republic, and to renounce his citizenship of the United States, that this determination continued till his deathin 1840, and that the complainant, his wife, knowing this to be his intention, followed him to Texas, about the close of the year 1838, and continued there with him until his death, contented while she was his wife, to abide by his election of a country and a home: and though it should be farther conceded, which we need not decide, that so long as the coverture might last, and they should continue their residence in Texas, both the husband and wife might be regarded as citizens of Texas, and as aliens to the United States; still we are not prepared to admit that upon the death of the husband, the surviving wife is so bound by his election, and by such acquiescence on her part as may have been prompted by conjugal affection and duty, that her character and rights as a citizen or alien, must be irrevocably identified with those which her husband had assumed before his death. The case of Alsberry vs Hawkins does not decide that she would be thus irrevocably bound, but that the facts above stated, constitute prima facie evidence that the wife was an alien at the death of her husband, which was sufficient, in the absence of repellent testimony. And as in that case,
If expatriation be a matter of election, a wife who as in duty bound, has shared the lot of her husband, and abides by his choice during the coverture, ought to be allowed upon its termination, to have the privilege of electing for herself, and of fixing, by her election, not only her future, but her past character. In contemplation of law, the domicil of the husband is, and should be, the domicil of the wife. He has the right to choose, not only for himself, but also for her. And her acquiescence, however willing, should not be considered as her own free and independent act, but as the effect of that dependence and constraint which by law as well as by nature, belong to her condition. It has often been decided, that in case of a revolution, by which one portion of an empire has been separated from another, when the inhabitants of the separating portion may elect to which dominion they will adhere, infants and others under disability, though bound for the time, by the election of those having authority over them, have still the right, within a reasonable time after the disability is removed, to determine for themselves, and that a disaffirmance of the election which had been made for them, relating back, defeats, so far as they are concerned, the election itself, and fixes their character from the beginning according to their own choice, made when they had the right to choose for themselves. And the cases show that such subsequent disaffirmance may, like the original election itself, be inferred from the conduct and residence of the party, Harrison, &c. vs Trimble, (1 B. Monroe, 140,) and cases there cited.
Whatever then may have been the condition of Thos. H. Moore, with regard to his political and civil rights, as dependent upon the question of allegiance and citizenship, we are of opinion, that Mrs. Moore, having shortly after his death, and within reasonable time, returned to Kentucky, and reassumed her residence and citizenship here, it should be assumed that she had merely submitted herself temporarily, and as a wife, to the dominion of Texas, without having renounced her native allegiance, that she therefore never has been an alien, and that her rights of property remain, as if instead of having-been a temporary resident of Texas, she had during her absence from Kentucky, been a resident of one of the other States of the Union. She cannot, therefore, be debarred of her dower, on the ground of having been an alien at the death of her husband.
II. Upon the second objection made to the claim, two questions present themselves. The first, whether the instrument relied on by the defendant, is effectual as a release or relinquishment of the complainant’s fight of dower. The second, whether, though the instrument be void, and the legal right of dower unquestionable, the circumstances attending the decretal sale, followed as they were by the attempt to relinquish dower, are not such as should induce a Court of Equity to withhold its aid for the enforcement of the right, and leave the dowress to her remedy at law.
1. In considering the first of these questions, we have examined the several statutes of conveyancing, and are of opinion, that they do not confer upon a feme covert, the faculty of divesting herself of any freehold or fee simple interest in land, by her separate deed, made during the life of her husband and the continuance of the marital relation; and that they neither contemplate nor provide for the exercise of any such faculty. The 3d sention of the act of 1792, has been referred to in support of a contrary opinion. But were it even conceded that that section contemplated the execution of a separate deed by the wife, still, according to its plain import, it provides only for cases in which the husband had conveyed before the date of that statute, and in which, in consequence of
It is the common law, and not the statute, that incapacitates the wife from binding herself or her lands by deed, and it is only so far as this incapacity has been removed by statute, that her deed, made in her own right, can be effectual. As all the enabling statutes, (unless the 3d section of the act of 1792 be an exeeption,) seem to com template and give effect to a joint deed only, and none of them have provided for the execution of a separate deed by the wife, there can be no presumption that they intended to authorize such an act.
These enabling statutes prescribe the privy examination of the wife as the means of securing her interests against an improper influence on the part of the husband, but they look to the consent and co-operation of the husband as evidenced by his execution of the joint deed, as the best protection against all other dangers; and as they provide no other, they should not be understood as dispensing with this, without(express words or plain and necessary implication to that effect. But there are no such express words, and for the reason already stated, and because the separate action of the wife in reference to her
The absence of Moore at the date of the deed, and the fact that he was then in Texas intending to reside or to become a citizen there, can have no effect upon the present question. His wife was at that very time, preparing, by his request, to join him in Texas. Each acknowledged the reciprocal rights and duties of husband and wife, and the rights and duties, privileges and disabilities of that relation subsisted in full force. We are of opinion, therefore, that the instrument of release is wholly inoperative against Mrs. Moore, and presents no bar to her right of dower, either in law or equity.
2. But notwithstanding the inefficaey of this instrument as a deed, and as a bar to the complainant’s right of dower, still it may be a serious question whether if Mrs. Moore had authorized the annunciation made at the decreia^ sale> that she would • relinquish her dower to the Purc^aser the intention and effect of enhancing the price of the land, this circumstance should not induce a Court of Equity to refuse its aid in enforcing her claim and to turn her round to her legal remedy. We are relieved, however, from the decision of this question in the present case, because the fact of previous authority is not established. And although her subsequent execution of the deed may be regarded as in some sense sanctioning the promise which had been made, yet as the unauthorized promise of another imposed no obligation on her to make the deed if she could 'have made it effectually, so her execution of the void instrument, though in pursuance of the promise, did not make it more obligatory upon her conscience; and if she did not make the promise nor authorize it, the fact, if true, that it was the cause of enhancing the price, from which she received no benefit, constitutes no more ground in equity for refusing her dower, than would exist in every case where a husband gets full price for his land, by inducing the purchaser to expect that his wife will relinquish her dower. To refuse dower to the wife in such cases and on such a ground, would contravene the entire policy of the law-on the subject, by allowing the husband or any other who would assume, with semblance of probability, the authority to make sueh a promise to bar the wife of her dower or obstruct its recovery, without any áct of relinquishment or estoppel on her part. And although there may be some suspicion in this case, that the promise was authorized by Mrs. Moore, yet as the remedy for dower in chancery, as now established by practice, is the ordinary remedy, and independent of any peculiar circumstances requiring the intervention of the Chancellor in the particular case, we should not feel authorized to make so strict an application of the peculiar doctrines of the Court of Equity, as to refuse the remedy on the ground of a suspicion or uncertain inference that a claim which can only be
The decree dismissing the bill is reversed, and the cause is remanded, with directions to allow the claim of dower set up in the bill, and have it assigned in the usual mode, by Commissioner.