41 Kan. 236 | Kan. | 1889
The opinion of the court was delivered by
By this action Julia P. Munger seeks to recover valuable real estate in the city of Wichita, which was formerly owned by D. S. Munger, her husband. He conveyed the same by warranty deed in 1877, which was executed by signing his own name thereto, and also that of his wife as her attorney in fact, under a power of attorney previously given by her. Long after the conveyance, and when the property has become valuable, she questions the validity of her own act, and now asserts that the power of attorney is invalid for want of capacity to make the same, and that it and the deed of conveyance are defective in form. She contends that by reason of being a married woman she was incapable of appointing her husband by letter of attorney as her agent to convey the inchoate interest which she held in her husband’s real estate. The arguments and authorities cited to sustain this view proceed upon the common-law theory that the marriage rendered the wife incapable of making contracts, and hence incapable of appointing an agent or attorney to act for her. These arguments and authorities are inapplicable in this state, where the disabling rules of the common law have been largely changed by the statute. By legislative enactment the wife has been placed on an equality with the husband in
In respect to conveying property, or any interest which she may hold therein, she stands on an equal footing with the husband and is governed by the same rule. No restrictions are placed upon the wife, and no other or different methods of conveying property, real or pei’sonal, are prescribed. As has been seen, she is in respect to property a distinct person, with distinct and separate rights from her husband, authorized to “ enter into any contract with reference to the same, in the same manner, to the same extent and with like effect as a married man in relation to his real and personal property.”
“ One-half in value of all the real estate in which the husband at any time during the marriage had a legal or equitable interest, which has not been sold on execution or other judicial sale, and not necessary for the payment of debts and of which tbe wife has made no conveyance, shall under the direction of the probate court be set apart by the executor as her property in fee simple upon the death of the husband if she survive him.” (Comp. Laws of 1885, ch. 33, § 8.)
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.