72 A. 414 | Md. | 1909
The appellant, in her bill of complaint in this case, filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, alleges that she was married to the appellee on the 7th day of September, 1894; that after her said marriage she purchased, on the 22nd day of May, 1896, four lots of the ground near Catonsville, in Baltimore County, and paid the consideration therefor, to wit, the sum of fourteen thousand five hundred dollars, out of her separate funds and estate, and that she caused said lots to be conveyed to herself and the appellant "as tenants by entireties" by the deed, a copy of which was filed with the bill; that on the 11th of December, 1905, by the final decree *692 of the "Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division of the High Court of Justice" of England she was absolutely divorced from the appellee, and that she "is advised that in consequence of said divorce she is entitled to have said property decreed to be hers, in her own right, free, clear and discharged of any interest therein of her former husband, from whom she has now been divorced." The prayer of the bill is that the property may be decreed to be the property of the appellant, clear of any interest of the appellee; that a trustee may be appointed, "if necessary," to convey the property to her, and that she may have such other relief as her case may require.
The bill, it is to be noted, does not charge that the property was purchased by the appellee and paid for with money belonging to the appellant, or that the conveyance of the property to her and her husband was procured by the fraud or undue influence of the appellee; but the theory on which the bill was filed is that the appellant having been divorced from the appellee, the mere fact that the property was paid for out of money belonging to the appellant is sufficient to authorize a Court of equity, either under the authority of Art. 16, § 37 of the Code, or independently of that section, to restore the property to her.
Without considering or determining whether said section, which confers upon the Court granting the divorce "power to award to the wife such property or estate as she had when married," has reference only to the Court decreeing the divorce, or whether Courts of equity, apart from the statute, have such power, it is clear from the decisions in this State that where a wife during coverture voluntarily and without any fraud or undue influence on the part of the husband, conveys her property to him, the effect of a decree for divorce is not to vest in her an equitable title to such property. It has been repeatedly held by this Court that if a wife gives to her husband property belonging to her separate estate, or permits him to apply it to his own use, or he does so with her knowledge and consent, in the absence of proof that it *693
was given to him to be held in trust for her use, or of a promise by the husband at the time to repay it, it will be presumed that it was intended as an absolute gift to him, and she has no claim therefor against him or his estate. Edelen v. Edelen,
In the case of Tyson v. Tyson,
A decree for divorce has no retroactive effect; per se, it does not legally restore the status quo of the parties before marriage, or annul their voluntary and legal acts during coverture.
Bishop, treating of the consequences of divorce flowing by *694 law, says: "Coming now to consider the effect of the dissolution of a valid marriage upon property rights, we must remember that the decree of divorce, so far from undoing the original marriage, expressly affirms it, and, therefore, does not restore the parties to their former condition, but places them in a new one. Consequently all transfers of property which were actually executed either in law or fact abide; for example, the personal estate of the wife reduced to possession by the husband remains his after a divorce, the same as before." 2 Bishop, 706. Again (p. 731), referring to the effect of a divorce a mensa: "This divorce does not at common law, and without statutory aid, change the relation of the parties as to property."
Assuming that the Code confers on the Court the power of awarding the wife all the property she had during coverture, as well as that possessed prior and at the time of the marriage, that power must be qualified by the rights acquired by the husband, or others through him, claiming with her privity and consent.
If the effect of knowledge and acquiescence on the part of the wife was sufficient to destroy her right as creditor in this case, unless there was an agreement or promise of the husband to repay, it follows necessarily that the conversion of the money by the husband, with the wife's concurrence, and her conjoint act and deed, must equally destroy her right to recover it as her separate property, after divorce, after the lapse of a series of years, without any promise or agreement of the husband to return or to repay it.
There was no loan or trust created between them, but the transaction amounted to an absolute gift. The wife exercised herjus disponendi absolutely and without reserve.
Under the averments of the bill, viz, that she purchased and paid for the property, and that she caused it to be conveyed to herself and her husband, the appellant would not, therefore, be entitled to the relief prayed.
But a great deal of evidence was produced by the plaintiff tending to show that she was induced against her will to have *695
the property so conveyed, by the conduct and persistent demands of her husband, and by the defendant, for the purpose of showing that the conveyance was the result of her free and voluntary act; and while, as was said in Schroeder v. Loeber,
In 2 Story's Eq. sec. 1395, the author, after stating that it is now the established doctrine in equity that a married woman may bestow her separate property upon her husband, as well as upon a stranger, says: "But, at the same time, Courts of equity examine every such transaction between husband and wife, with anxious watchfulness and caution and dread of undue influence; and if they are required to give sanction or effect to it, they will examine the wife in Court, and adopt other precautions to ascertain her unbiased will and wishes." A similar expression of the jealous care with which Courts of equity guard the interests of the wife in such transactions is found in Farmer's Executor
v. Farmer,
If, therefore, the interest of the appellee in the property referred to in this case was obtained by him by coercion or undue influence brought to bear by him upon the appellant, it is the plain duty of a Court of equity to grant her relief.
We fully concur in the conclusion reached by the Court below, and for the reasons stated and upon the authorities cited by that Court, that, as the result of the divorce, the appellant and appellee now hold the property as tenants in common. But for the reasons we have stated the decree will be reversed, and the case be remanded, in order that the bill may be amended and the parties may produce additional evidence if they desire to do so.
Decree reversed and case remanded for further proceedings inaccordance with views herein expressed, the costs in this Courtand in the Court below to abide the final decree in the case. *697