196 Mo. App. 673 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1917
(after stating the facts). — The findings of fact made by the referee, to whom the cause was referred to take the testimony and try all the issues, and which findings were confirmed hy the trial court, are sufficiently supported by the evidence, and we therefore allow them to stand. However, we cannot agree with the conclusion of law drawn therefrom by the referee and the trial judge.
The referee’s report states:
* ‘ I find that in 1891, when the lease was taken in the joint names of plaintiff and defendant, there was no fraud or imposition practiced by the defendant, Margaret Rezabek, and that thereafter when the plaintiff’s intestate signed the lease he must have seen his wife’s signature attached thereto, and that he thereby ratified her action in taking a lease in the joint name of herself and husband. The lease thus executed contained no provision for renewal, but did provide that said Joseph Rezabek and Margaret Rezabek, their heirs and assigns, are entitled to remove all buildings at the final expiration of this lease; provided, such removal be made within thirty days thereafter. Prior to the expiration of this lease, the defendant, Margaret Rezabek applied for a new lease in her own name, stating that her husband was crazed with drink, and was unwilling to renew the same. By means of such representation, she prevailed upon the Mercantile Trust Company, acting as the agent for George W. Allen, to execute to her a lease dated March 22, 1901, for a term commencing May 1, 1901, and ending April 30, 1911. This lease was made more than a month before the expiration of the lease in the joint names of defendant, Margaret Rezabek, and plaintiff’s intestate. Plaintiff’s intestate had a substantial interest in the same, including the right to remove the buildings, then located on the premises, which did not expire until May 31, 1901. Prior to the expiration of the lease in the names of plaintiff’s intestate and the defendant, Margaret Rezabek, plaintiff’s intestate called at" the Mercantile Trust Company and sought a renewal*679 of the lease, and he was then informed that a lease had already been made to his wife.
“I am of the opinion that the relation of joint owners of a leasehold estate is similar to tenants in common of a freehold, and that, where one of the parties acquires rights as • against the other and adverse to him, the same inures to the benefit of his cotenant.
“I, therefore, recommend that defendant, Margaret Rezabek, account to plaintiff for one-half of the net rental of the property from the first of May, 1901. . .
“I further recommend that a decree be entered herein, declaring that Margaret Rezabek holds a one-half interest in the leasehold estate as trustee and for the benefit of the plaintiff. And that plaintiff be required to assume one-half of the debt of $1000, which was incurred in repairing the improvements caused by the cyclone in 1896.”
The court handed down two written memoranda in the case, one after the referee’s report of his finding of facts and an accounting up to April 1, 1906, and the other at the conclusion of the accounting made by the. referee for the period from April 1, 1906 to the date of the death, of the plaintiff. Prom these memoranda of the court we quote the portions necessary for an understanding of the questions of law involved in the case:
“Counsel for defendant in this case contended with much earnestness that the lease to Joseph Rezabek and his.wife constitutes them tenants by the entirety, and that since Joseph .has died the wife holds the entire estate by right of survivorship. If this be granted, it does not by any means follow that the wife, having appropriated the entire income of the estate during the joint lives of herself and husband, may retain the same and not give account to her husband for any part of it. At common law the husband would unquestionably have been entitled to the entire income of this leasehold, and the greatest effect that can be claimed for our Married Woman’s Act is, that it would entitle the wife during the joint lives of herself and husband to one-half of the*680 income of the joint estate, so that, considering the contention made by defendant, and giving the Married Woman’s Act the construction most favorable to her, yet the husband was entitled to one-half the income of this leasehold during his lifetime.
“The question of the character of this estate must be considered and determined in this case, as Joseph Rezabek has died, and it is. claimed, - on behalf of his administrator, that the estate was not, strictly speaking, an estate by the entirety or a joint estate at all, but rather an estate in common, and. that, therefore, the doctrine of survivorship did not apply. Can there be an estate by the entirety in personal property? There are many cases which hold that there can be. On the other hand, our Supreme Court has said that there cannot be. [Polk v. Allen, 19 Mo. 467.]
.“A leasehold estate, although for some purposes it is considered real estate, as, for instance, the purpose of levying an execution, is essentially personal property. While I am not entirely clear, I am nevertheless of the opinion that the view of the referee is the correct one, and that the leasehold, which preceded the one taken in the name of the defendant alone, was an estate• in common held by her and her husband, and not a joint estate. Therefore, she is trustee for him (or his personal representatives) as to an individual one-haif interest in this leasehold. (Italics ours.)
“The court is of the opinion that the right of homestead attaches not only to an estate which had been held in common but also that it attaches to a leasehold estate; therefore, Mrs. Rezabek was entitled to her possession of this property after her husband’s death and, of course, need not account to his estate for the rental value of his half interest therein.” (Italics ours:)
The court thus held that the lease covering the period from 1890 to 1901, held in the names of Joseph Rezabek and Margaret'Rezabek (husband and wife), plaintiff and defendant herein, was “an estate in oommon held by her and her husband, and not a joint estate,” because there
“Husband and wife cannot be joint tenants or tenants in common of a chattel. A gift or bequest to the husband and wife would vest the entire property in the' husband. On the death of the husband, the property would go to his representatives, and the wife would only be entitled to her dower in it. Whatever may be the construction of the act concerning married women, passed March 5th, 1849, the gift or bequest of the slave here, was long prior to that time.”
While that case sustains the learned trial judge, that there can he no estate by the entirety in personal, property, it, at the same time, makes his conclusion drawn from that viewpoint untenable, in that the opinion clearly states that husband and wife cannot be joint tenants or tenants in common of - a chattel, but that a gift to husband and wife would vest the entire property in the husband. But we find, on examination of the decisions of our Supreme Court, that the Polk case, supra, is no longer the law in this State, and that our courts have since definitely held there can be an estate by the entirety in personal property.
Our Supreme Court, in an exhaustive opinion on this subject, written by Judge Marshall, held that “the sum of the matter, therefore, is that estates by the entirety may be created in Missouri, in personal as well as real property, and behveen husband and wife as well as between strangers, but that as to real property a grant or devise to two or more persons will be held to be a tenancy in common, unless by the terms of the grant or devise it is expressly declared to be a joint tenancy, except as to grants or devises to executors, trustees or husband and wife, which are excepted from the operation of the statute, and that as to personal property the common lam has not been changed by statute, except by the Married Woman’s Acts which have
We are of the opinion, and so hold, that Joseph Rezabek and Margaret Rezabek, his wife, held said lease made in 1891 as tenants by the entirety. [Johnson v. Johnson, supra; Bains v. Bullock, 129 Mo. 117, 31 S. W. 342; Frost v. Frost, 200 Mo. 478, 98 S. W. 527.] And that, in view of the facts found by the referee’s report, in equity plaintiff was entitled to the same interest in the new lease, dated March 22, 1901, covering the term commencing May 1, 1901 and ending April 30, 1911— namely, an estate by the entirety with his wife, the defendant. It naturally follows, and we so hold, that the wife had no right of homestead in the said leasehold after the husband’s death, January 28, 1909, but that the leasehold became the property of the wife by right of survivorship.
Having decided that the leasehold in question was held by plaintiff and defendant, husband and wife, as tenants by the entirety, it becomes necessary to determine whether the husband; under such circumstances, is entitled to an accounting of the rents and profits from the wife, it being uncontradicted that, for the period of time in question in the instant case, the wife had assumed full control and management of the property covered by the lease and had collected all the rents therefrom.
The Russell case (122 Mo. l. c. 237, 26 S. W. 677) is cited by appellant here in support of the contention that the leasehold being “a tenancy by the entirety each held per tout and not per my, each owns all and neither owns a part; each is entitled to all the rents and profits and neither to a part.” (Last italics ours.)
Neither counsel for appellant nor counsel for respondent have cited any case bearing directly' on this phase of the case, and our examination has failed to find a case in point in our Missouri decisions. We find, however, that the question has been determined in other jurisdictions.
In Pennsylvania, in the case of McCurdy v. Canning, 64 Pa. St. 39, we find the court takes the view that the rents and profits cannot be disposed of nor changed except by the joint act of both husband and wife.
In New York and New Jersey however, the courts hold that husband and wife can be tenants by the entirety, yet that (Hiles v. Fisher, 144 N. Y., l. c. 315) “the parties become tenants in common or joint tenants of the use, each being entitled to one-half of the rents and profits during the joint lives, with power to each to dispose of or to change his or her moiety during the same period, which seems to be the view taken in Buttlar v. Rossenblath, 42 N. J. 651. We think the rule adopted in New Jersey best reconciles the difficulties surrounding the subject. The estate granted is not thereby changed. It leaves it untouched, with all its common law incidents. It deals with the rents and profits and the use and control of the estate during coverture only, and gives to each party equal right, so long as the question of survivorship is in abeyance, thereby conforming to the intentions of the new legislation to take away the husband’s right jure uxor is, in his wife’s property, and to enable the wife to have and enjoy ‘whatever estate she gets by any conveyance made to her or to her and others jointly, and does not enlarge or diminish that estate. The rule in Pennsylvania not only deprives the husband of his common-law right to the enjoyment of the whole rents and profits, but of the
Again, as was said in the case of Grossen v. City of Rochester, 148 N. Y., l. c. 237-238:
“When land is conveyed to husband and wife they each become seized of the entirety, and upon the death of either thé whole survives to the other. We are aware that, by the common law, the husband before the death of his wife could possess and control the land and take all the profits thereof for his own benefit. [Bertles v. Nunan, 92 N. Y. 152.] This right, however, followed the conveyance and inured to the husband under the general principle of the common law, and was not acquired by reason of the creation of a tenancy by the entirety. So that, when the disability of the wife was removed under the Married Woman’s Acts of 1848, and subsequent acts, she was thereafter permitted to have, hold and enjoy whatever estate came to her by devise or conveyance, and the husband’s right to the sole occupancy and possession terminated. Thereafter she became entitled to hold, enjoy and possess with him as if she were a tenant in common. [Hiles v. Fisher, 144 N. Y. 306.]”
Quoting from the case of Collins v. Babbitt, 58 Atl. (N. J.) l. c. 485:
“It seems to be well settled that the effect and only effect of the Married Woman’s Act of 1852 upon the peculiar estate in land held by a man and his wife under a conveyance to them jointly is to entitle the wife to an equal right with the husband to the usufruct of the land so held during their joint lives. At the common law the husband had the right during his lifetime to the exclusive usufruct of the lands held by him and his wife jointly, as well as of the lands held solely by Üie wife, but that right was taken away by the statute. The subject was considered by the Court of Appeals in the case of Buttlar v. Rosenblath, 42 N. J. Eq., 651, 9 Atl. 695, 59 Am. Rep. 52. At page. 656, 42 N. J. Eq., page 698, 9 Atl., 59 Am. Rep. 52, Judge Van Syckei, speaking for that court, said: ‘In virtue of the mar*685 ried relation, the husband took possession, and deprived the wife of the enjoyment of her estate or interest in the lands during their joint lives. In my opinion, the object and effect of the Married "Woman’s Act is to extinguish this right.’ And at page 657, 42 N. J. Eq., page 698, 9 Atl. 59 Am. Rep. 52, he says: ‘I think, therefore, .that the just construction of this legislation, and the one in harmony with its Spirit and general purpose, is that the wife is endowed with the capacity during their joint lives to hold in her possession, as a single female, one-half of the estate in common with her husband, and that the right of survivorship still exists, as at the common law.’ ”
We believe the view taken by the New York and New Jersey courts to be more in line with the intent and spirit of our Married Woman’s Acts, and we, having already determined that the leasehold should be and is held by plaintiff and defendant in entirety, now hold that plaintiff was entitled to one-half- of the rents and' profits accruing from the leasehold, and therefore could "maintain this action for an accounting thereof.
It is assigned as error that of the sum of $1000, which plaintiff and defendant had borrowed and used ■for repairs and .improvements on the property held under the leasehold in question, the court found plaintiff below was chargeable with $500, and the defendant a like sum; that the referee, in the balancing of the accounts, only gave plaintiff credit for the sum of $500 as being the defendant’s portion which he was liable for on the said indebtedness of $1000. Inasmuch as we hold that plaintiff and defendant (husband and wife) are tenants by the' entirety in the leasehold, and that therefore, during coverture, each is entitled to one-half of the rents and profits arising therefrom, we' find that the debiting of the net rents accruing during the time-the wife collected same, in the sum of $1000, as is contended for by appellant, is not tenable, and that the plaintiff was only entitled to the crediting of the net rent account .in the sum of $500 to cover defendant’s one-half of the' $1000 borrowed, which was, in point of fact, done.
While the court below was in error in its conclusions of law, the court nevertheless entered a judgment in the correct amount and in favor of the right party. The judgment should therefore be áffirmed. It is so ordered.