84 Ala. 585 | Ala. | 1887
Mrs. Untreiner acquired, in March, 1885, by conveyance, which created an equitable separate estate, the real estate, which appellees seek by the bill to charge with debts contracted by her. In May, 18815, by decree of the chancellor, she was relieved. of the disabilities of coverture as to her sej)arate estate, “so far as to invest her with the right to buy, sell, convey and mortgage real and personal property, and to sue aud be sued as a feme sole.” Tho debts due complainants were contracted after the rendition of the decree, which is specially pleaded in defense of the suit. The ground of defense is, that the effect and operation of the decree is to convert the equitable separate estate into a legal estate discharged of the trusteeship of the husband; and that complainants dealt with her, not as a feme covert, but as a feme sole, having credit by reason of her personal liability, and of possessing a legal estate, and that their remedy is by action at law, and not in equity. The statute which authorized chancellors to relieve married women of tho disabilities of coverture, and decrees rendered thereunder, have been considered and construed in several cases. The result of these decisions is, that the statute did not operate to remove the husband from the trusteeship of the wife’s separate estate, or to deprive him of any right conferred, or to relieve him of any duties imposed, by the pre-existing statutes; and the wife was relieved of the disabilities of coverture only as to her separate estate, and as to this, only so far as the statute provides. In the execution of the specified powers, she was discharged from any restraint, or control of her husband, and was vested with power to make contracts touching and concerning property, which may create a personal liability on which a personal judgment could be rendered, but had no general power to contract. — Cook v. Meyers, 73 Ala. 580; Parker v. Roswald, 78 Ala, 526. By the statute and the decree, the character and status of the separate estate of Mrs. Untreiner were not changed, but remained the same as prior to the rendition of the decree, except her capacity to buy, sell, convey and mortgage real and personal property was enlarged.
That the chancery court had original .jurisdiction to subject the equitable separate estate of a married woman to the payment of any debt contracted by her with the intention to charge it, is undoubted. It is a well settled and general principle, that a statutory enactment is essential to take from a court of equity its original jurisdiction of any subject mat-
The bill does not seek to set aside the conveyances made by Mrs. Untreiner and her husband to Mrs. McMahon, and by the latter and her husband to Mrs. Rooney, as fraudulent, but on the ground that they are purchasers pendente lile. The admitted facts are, that prior to the filing of the bill, Mrs. Untreiner had agreed to sell the property to Mrs.- McMahon at a stipulated price, and caused a deed to be prepared, which was signed and acknowledged by her March 25, 1887, two days before the bill was filed. The deed was signed by her husband on the day succeeding the filing of
Mrs. Untreiner, having been relieved of the disabilities of. coverture, which, under the statute, invested her with capacity to sell and convoy the property, without her husband joining in the execution of the conveyance, it may be, could have made a binding contract of sale. — Robinson v. Walker, 81 Ala. 404. Had the statute been in force when the agreement to sell was made, there would have been some basis for the contention of defendants. But the act of February 28, 1887, which is comprised in article 3, chapter 1 of title 5 of Code 1880, repeals the pre-existing statutes, creating and regrdatiug the separate estate of married woman, including the statute under which the decree was rendered, and establishes an entirely new system of laws. Section 2351 provides: “All property of the wife, whether acquired by descent or inheritance, or gift, devise or bequest, or by contract, or conveyance or by gift from a contract with the husband, is the separate property of the wife within the meaning, and is subject to all the provisions of this article, saving and excepting only such property as may be conveyed to an active trustee for her benefit.” The distinction, which had heretofore prevailed and been preserved between equitable and statutory separate estates, is abrogated, except in cases
Defendants further contend that the doctrine of Ms pendens does not apply, because process was not served upon the husband of Mrs. Untreiner, until after the delivery of the conveyances. This contention is founded on the settled rule, that a holder of the legal title must have been impleaded at the time of the purchase to affect a purchaser, who comes in under him, with constructive notice of the equity claimed
It is insisted that the doctrine of Us pendens, on account of its harshness, should be confined within narrow limits. Its harshness has been frequently acknowledged by learned jurists, and that it does operate harshly in particular cases must be admitted, which fact disposes the courts to give the purchaser the benefit of all technical objections to the regularity of the proceedings in the suit. But the doctrine has been long established in equity jurisprudence as founded on public necessity, and firmly adhered to as essential to the due administration of justice, and to give effect to the decrees of the courts. Considerations of harshness in individual cases do not require that it shall be confined within such narrow
Affirmed.