43 Ala. 377 | Ala. | 1869
This is a suit in chancery, in which Mrs. Belinda Sampley, the wife of David J. Sampley, by her next friend, complains, that she and her said, husband sold to Perry Watson, on the 25th day of December, 1863, a certain tract of land, lying in the county of Lowndes, in this State, for the sum of seven thousand dollars. Said land was the statutory separate property of Mrs. Sampley. Four thousand dollars of the purchase-money was paid, at the date of the sale, in negro slaves; and three thousand dollars, being the residue of the purchase-money for said land, was secured by the promissory note of said Watson, payable to said David J. Sampley, or bearer, on the first day of January, 1861. Under this sale, Watson took pos
The defendant Watson, answered the bill, and, among other things, set up in his defense said submission and award, made by the husband.
The learned chancellor was of opinion, that the husband had authority to bind the wife by a submission to arbitration, and dismissed the bill because of such arbitration and award. This seems to have been the only question considered in the court below.
In this construction of the husband’s powers, we think, the chancellor erred ; because the husband has no power to bind the wife by a submission and award, in such a controversy, touching the corpus of her statutory separate estate.
Here the note of Watson, being given for the price of a portion of Mrs. Sampley’s land, was a part of the corpus of her separate estate. This is so settled by this court.—Sessions’ Adm’r v. Sessions, 33 Ala. 522, 525.
The powers conferred by the statute on the husband, over the separate estate of the wife, are special and limited, and not general. And though the property of the wife is vested in the husband, as her trustee, his authority over it extends only ..to “ the right to manage and control ” it, so
Moreover, arbitration is a mode of adjudication in a court created by the parties themselves, into which they may go, by consent, for the adjustment of controversies pending between them. And it is the duty of the courts to encourage such adjustments. — Eevised Code, §§ 3148, 3161. It is a mode of suit. And if the husband were the general trustee of the wife’s estate, with general powers over it, he could, possibly, consent for her to submit controversies touching her estate to arbitration, and bind her by the award. — 3 Bouv. Inst., p. 48. It was upon this principle that the chancellor based his decree in the court below. But the husband is not the general trustee of the wife’s estate. He is only the special trustee, with powers limited and defined, by statute, to very narrow bounds. He is authorized to “ manage and control ” the body of her estate, so far as its business relations are concerned. And he must confine his action to the limits of his powers, else he acts without authority, and his acts do not bind her — 32 Ala. 723. The husband can not bring suit for the wife, nor in her name. She sues for herself, and in her own name, without his concurrence or consent. — Eev. Code, § 2525, note 3. A submission to arbitration is the commencement of a suit in a court of arbitration, and, by analogy, it should be com
The decree of the chancellor in the court below is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings in the court below, in accordance with the principles of this opinion. And the said Perry Watson will pay the costs of appeal in this.court and in the court below.