78 Me. 17 | Me. | 1885
Beal estate directly or indirectly conveyed to a married woman by her husband, or paid for by him, or given or devised to her by his relatives, cannot be conveyed by her without the joinder of her husband; except real estate conveyed to her as security or in payment of a bona fide debt actually due to her from her husband. R. S., c. 61 § 1.
In the case before us it appears that a farm, with buildings thereon, was purchased in the name of a wife and paid for fully by her husband. They afterwards separated, now living apart. After the separation, he remaining upon the place, she let it under a sealed lease, in usual form, for two years, on a rent payable annually, to the complainant, who seeks to remove the husband from the possession. The only question presented by the case, is, whether the lease is a conveyance within the meaning of the statute above quoted. It is the opinion of the court that it is not. There is much to sustain such a conclusion.
The word convey or conveyance must rqfer to an alienation of the estate —a transferrence of the title. It is " real estate” that cannot be conveyed. A lease is personal property. It bargains away a temporary possession, — does not dispose of any fee or title. There is no inhibition against a sale of personal property by the wife alone, although given to her by the husband.
Real estate " conveyed to ” a married woman is the property described; " cannot be conveyed by her ” are the words to be interpreted. A lease may be in a sense a conveyance, but such is not the commonly accepted nor the accurate meaning of the term. When we say premises are leased we generally mean that the use of them is transferred ; and by the term conveyed that the title is deeded. It is a significant fact that the word convey is many times used in the revised statutes, and especially in chapter seventy-three relating to conveyances, and generally, if not at all times, in the sense of an alienation of the title to real estate. The distinction is clearly observed in section eight, which pro
If the legislature intended that the wife should not lease property acquired by her through her husband, it would have beem easy to declare its intention in explicit terms. It is hardly to be-supposed that it was left to be implied. A married woman is not limited in the management of her property, however obtained by her. She may control its income, unless she releases it to her-husband. How can she manage this property or control its income,, when not occupying it, unless she can rent it? The counsel for-the defendant argues that if the wife could lease at all, she can. lease the farm for ninety-nine years ; a lease practically equivalent to a conveyance of title. This argument is quite plausible,, but not in our judgment sound. If the wife cannot make a lease-for two years, it must be because she cannot lease at all. If the lease is for ninety-nine years, a rent -will be presumed to be reserved. It would be different from an absolute conveyance which, might result in a waste or loss of the property. If the statute-needs amendment the legislature can amend it. We construe it: as it stands.
An appeal to the authorities sustains the view advocated by the complainant. Jacob’s Law Dictionary gives this as the old. common-law definition of the word which is the key to the dispute :■ " Conveyance is a deed which passes laud from one man to-another.” In Abendroth v. Greenwich, 29 Conn. 356, a party - was to convey a bridge to a town. The court said: "To convoy-real estate, is, by an appropriate instrument, to transfer the legal title to it from the present owner to auother. ” In Mayor v. Mabie, 13 N. Y. 151, a question arose as to the meaning of the-word conveyance in a statute which provides that "no covenants-shall be implied in any conveyance of real estate : ” and it ivas-held that a grant of wharfage for one year was not a conveyance of real estate. In Tone v. Brace, 11 Paige, 566, it was decided that a lease for a term of years was not, in the ordinary sense of the term, a conveyance of land. In the ease of In re Hunter, 1 Edw. Ch. 1, it was decided that, where a person was to convey
We think the statutory provision under review, should not be very generously interpreted for the husband, when the interests •of third persons are likely to be imperilled thereby. The statute is very broad, and in many instances has been a stumbling-block iin the way of innocent purchasers. The expediency of the statute us doubted by many. It adds one more opportunity for a defect iin titles which the public records cannot disclose. With what •■safety or certainty can a purchaser ascertain whether an inter'vening grantor was a married woman when she obtained the '•estate; or whether the estate was paid for by her husband or .herself; or who the husband’s "relatives” are or were; and whether any of them gave her the property? Complete protection :is attained only by taking no real property from any married ‘woman without the joinder of her husband; and this rule of ■caution would operate harshly against married women who may •wish to sell property held strictly in their own right.
Defendant defaulted.