70 Ala. 463 | Ala. | 1881
Mrs. Ennis and Mrs. Ridley, married women, with the concurrence and co-operation of their respective husbands, entered into an agreement of exchange of certain lands, but no titles were made. The lands Mrs. Ridley proposed to part with were, according to the averments of the bill, her statutory separate estate, and we are not informed she had any other estate. It is difficult to classify the lands Mrs. Ennis proposed to convey. She did not profess to own them, and we are not informed she had any estate of any kind, unless, perhaps, her interest in her former husband’s estate constituted her a property holder. The bill is silent as to this interest, or its value. The lots in Huntsville, which Mr. and Mrs. Ennis were to convey in exchange, were of the estate of Spaulding, Mrs. Ennis’ former husband, which had neither been sold, nor ordered to be sold. The expectation and agreement were, that an order would be obtained to sell the lands or lots; that Mrs. Ennis, or Ennis and wife, would thus procure title to them, and then convey title to Mrs. Ridley, when the latter and her husband would convey to Ennis and wife the lands agreed to be exchanged for the lots. This agreement was in writing, signed on both sides by husband and wife, and attested by two subscribing witnesses. The contracting parties exchanged' posses
Mrs. Ridley was the daughter of one Robinson, deceased, from whom it is averred the lands came to her by inheritance. One clause of the agreement of exchange is as follows: “ It is further stipulated and agreed, that if, at the time of conveyance [of] said lands to said Sarah A. and John C. Ennis, the same shall be subject to any charge or liability for the debts of William Robinson, deceased, from whom said Fannie J. [Ridley] inherited said lands, she shall, by proper instrument in writing, secure said Ennis and wife against all loss by reason thereof by lien on the land conveyed by them to said Fannie I. Ridley.”
The bill avers, that Mr. and Mrs. Ennis, who were the administrators of Spaulding’s estate, obtained, by regular proceedings, an order to sell the lots they had contracted to convey to Mrs.- Ridley; that the lots were sold by them, under the order so obtained; that they became the purchasers; that they reported the sale to the Probate Court, and it was confirmed; that they reported the purchase-money paid, and obtained an order for title, and that title was made to them by a commissioner, appointed by the court for the purpose. It further avers that complainants, Ennis and wife, had a deed prepared, conveying said lots to Mrs. Ridley, with covenants of warranty; that they had signed the same in the presence of two subscribing witnesses, and that the same was ready to be delivered ; that they also had a mortgage prepared, to be executed by Ridley and wife, conveying said lots back to them as a mortgage security, to indemnify them against any debts of William Robinson’s estate, the lauds acquired from Mrs. Ridley might be made subject to. Tiie mortgage thus prepared recites, that “ there is a suit now pending and undetermined in the Chancery Court of Madison county, Alabama, and was so pending on the 19th day of December, 1872 [the date of the written agreement of exchange], wherein Morris K. Taylor, as the administrator of the estate of Byrd Brandon, deceased, is complainant, and Caroline P. Robinson, as the administratrix of Wm. Robinson, deceased, and others are defendants; in which suit, the-title of the said [Ridley and wife] to said three quarter-sections of land [the land agreed to be conveyed by Mrs. Ridley in exchange] is involved and litigated. * * If the said parties of the first part [Ridley and wife] shall save harmless the said parties of the second part [Ennis and'wife], so they shall sustain no loss by reason of said suit, then this obligation and instrument to become null and void.” The mortgage also con
The averments in the bill, tending to show said three quarter-sections of land were “ subject to any charge or liability for the debts of "William Eobinson, deceased,” are the recitals in the mortgage tendered to Eidley and wife to be signed, the material parts of which are copied above from an exhibit made part of the bill, and the following language in the body of the bill: “ Complainants show further unto your Honor, * * they had prepared a deed of conveyance, with warranty of title, conveying to said Fannie J. Eidley the property hereinbefore described as situate in the city of Huntsville, State of Alabama, and also a mortgage or lien on said property, to indemnify complainants against loss by reason of a certain suit particularly referred to in said mortgage or lien.” There is nothing else in the bill, or exhibits, tending to show the lands “were subject to any charge or liability for the debts of Wm. Eobinson, deceased.”
We do not, and will not, undertake to decide what would be our ruling, if Ennis and wife showed they had complied with all the stipulations of their contract, and asked by their bill only that mutual conveyances be coerced, of the lands they had agreed to exchange; in other words, if nothing remained but to execute conveyances. Whether such ground of relief naturally and necessarily springs out of the power of the husband and wife to sell property held as statutory separate estate of the wife, and the further power to invest the wife’s moneys thus held, is a grave question we prefer not to decide, until its decision is rendered necessary. If our rulings in the following cases suggest inquiries on this difficult and oft-recurring subject of the powers of married women under our statutory system, it will be time enough to attempt their solution when they are fairly presented before us: Marks v. Cowles, 53 Ala. 499; Smith v. Carson, 56 Ala. 457; Strong v. Waddell, Ib. 471; Prout v. Hoge, 57 Ala. 28; Peeples v. Stolla, Ib. 53; Sterrett v. Coleman, Ib. 172; Copeland v. Kehoe, lb. 246; Haney v.
The tender 'of title in this case was accompanied with the demand and condition, that Ridley and wife should execute a mortgage on her statutory separate estate. There was no offer to deliver the deed, if the mortgage was not executed. The same condition attended the demand of title from Ridley and wife. The three acts were expected to be contemporaneous, and the execution of the mortgage was made a controlling factor. This Mrs. Ridley had no power to do; and if she had executed it, it would have been void as a contract, under our uniform rulings.—Chapman v. Abraham, 61 Ala. 108; Jones v. Wilson, 57 Ala. 123; O’Connor v. Chamberlain, 59 Ala. 431; Garrett v. Lehman, Burr & Co., 61 Ala. 391; McMullen v. Lockard, 64 Ala. 56 ; Thomas v. Rembert, 63 Ala. 561; Gans v. Williams, 62 Ala. 41; Lee v. Tannenbaum, Ib. 501. Whether, if the debts of William Robinson’s estate are made a charge on the lands received by Ennis and wife in the exchange, they have an equity to go against the lots for reimbursement, is not decided.
The remaining question must be decided against the appellee. Even if Ennis and wife held a mortgage on the lots at the time the house was burned, on account of which Mrs. Ridley realized the insurance money, that would give complainants no right to it. Mrs. Ridley insured in her own name, and paid the premium, and Ennis and wife show no right to the money, by assignment of the policy or otherwise.— Vandegraff v. Medlock, 3 Por. 389; 1 Jones on Mort. §§ 401-2, and note 6.
But there is another fatal objection to this branch of relief. The bill contains no averment that the lands Ennis and wife received in exchange, are “ subject to any charge or liability for the debts of William Robinson, deceased.” It is not even averred that his estate owed any debts. The averment that Morris K. Taylor has a suit in chancery against William Robinson’s administratrix and others, in which the title of said lands is involved and litigated, is not the equivalent of an averment, that the lands are subject to a charge or liability for the debts of William Robinson, deceased. This averment would be insufficient, if Mrs. Ridley was sui juris, and the money was equitably bound for the indemnity of Ennis and wife. It fails to show any incumbrance whatever on- the lands. There are other features of this case we might comment on, but we deem it unnecessary.
Beversed and remanded.