53 Mo. 595 | Mo. | 1873
delivered the opinion of the court.
The petition alleges that defendants, Frank arid Mary S. Leavitt, are husband and wife, and that the said Mary made and executed her promissory note to the plaintiff, and that for the payment of the same she charged her separate property. There was a prayer for judgment against her alone, and that her separate estate might be subjected to the payment of the note. The defendant, Mary S., filed her separate answer to the petition, in which she denied the averments, that she had or possessed any separate property.
Upon this single issue, -as to whether defendant had any separate estate, the trial was had.
For the purpose of maintaining the allegations of the petition, the plaintiff introduced several deeds of general warranty conveying certain real property to the defendant, Mary S., by a fee simple title. He then called as a witness, and had sworn, the co-defendant, Frank,who testified that the money of his wife paid for the lands,*and that the deeds were taken in her name in consequence thereof; that he had acted as her
This was all the evidence in the case, and the court found for the plaintiff, and awarded a special execution against the lands of the female defendant.
We will first notice the question raised in regard to the admissibility of the evidence of the husband, who was made a co-defendant.
No rule was better settled at common law than that husband and wife could not be permitted to give evidence either for or against each other. Whatever modification there is in that rule is made by the statutes. Where the statute has made no innovation on the rules of evidence as they previously existed, they remain the same as they were. The exceptional cases, in relation to the removal of the disability of the wife to testify where her husband is a party, are contained in the ' fifth section of the Witness Act. That section provides, that, the wife shall not be disqualified in certain specified instances where the husband is a party to the suit, but there is nothing said in reference to the husband being permitted to testify either for or against the wife.
By the first section, where the husband and wife are adverse parties to the action, they may give evidence in the case in their- own behalf in the same manner as other parties (Moore vs. Moore, 51 Mo., 118.)
But these sections afford no warrant for the course pursued in this case, and I do not think that the statute, by the most liberal interpretation, can be construed to permit it. Aside from the disqualification of the witness, his evidence was clearly illegal. The deeds were definite and unambiguous,
The court evidently erred in finding that the defendant, Mary S-, was possessed of a separate estate. The proper-' . ty was conveyed to her by deeds of general warranty, in the usual and ordinary form. They vested in her a title in fee, and that was all. The husband clearly had a marital interest in the property, and therefore there could be no separate estate. It is true, the current of authorities now is, that no special or technical words are required to create a separate estate in a married woman. • Any provision that negatives or excludes the marital rights of the husband, while giving the property to-the use of the wife, will be held to create such estate. But the instrument conveying the property must indicate such an intent. In the present case there is an absolute absence of anything tending to show that a separate estate was intended. As the deeds simply conveyed the property in fee, no separate estate was thereby created.
It follows that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.