127 Mo. 32 | Mo. | 1895
Judgment was .rendered for the defendants upon demurrer to plaintiff’s petition. Plaintiff appealed. The. petition is lengthy but contains substantially the following averments:
It was stated that six named persons owned each small adjoining parcels of land in the city of St. Louis. One of these parcels was owned by each of the plaintiffs in severalty. The land thus divided into small tracts was not susceptible of sale, but was valuable and salable as one tract. Defendants were real estate agents and dealers. Plaintiffs were husband and wife.
Under these circumstances, in the year 1877, plaintiff Marshall P. Sanguinett and defendants entered into a verbal agreement by which said plaintiff undertook to purchase and have conveyed to a trustee, to be agreed upon, each of these small tracts, in order that the whole might be sold, as one tract, and the profits •realized therefrom divided between them. Defendants agreed to furnish all the money necessary to purchase the land, and it was agreed that they should control the title, pay taxes and other expenses and sell the land to the best advantage, and account for the profits.
In pursuance of said agreement said plaintiff did purchase the four tracts owned by the other four parties and caused the same to be conveyed to a trustee agreed upon by said plaintiff and defendants. Plaintiffs also, without other consideration, conveyed their respective tracts to the same trustee, who was a clerk in defendant’s office. About April, 1878, said plaintiff assigned to his coplaintiff all his interest in the agreement and the profits.that might be realized; of which defendants had notice from September 12, 1878.
Afterward by agreement of parties the said trustee conveyed the land to defendant Webster, who was thereby substituted as trastee, In March, 1889, said
Plaintiffs charge that out of the purchase and sale of said land, under said agreement, profits to the amount of $20,000 were realized, and that defendants refuse to account therefor to said plaintiff, Annie E. Sanguinett, though requested.
I. The contention on the part of defendant, as we understand it, is, that, inasmuch as plaintiff, Annie E. Sanguinett, was a married woman, she was incapable, by herself or her agent, of making the agreement relied upon by plaintiffs and she could not, therefore, take by assignment from her husband the rights he may have acquired thereunder; that she could not do indirectly what she had no power to do directly.
It has been settled, it is true, by a long and consistent line of decisions, in this state, that, prior to enabling statutes, a married woman was incapable, except as to her separate property, of binding herself by contract. Attempts to do so were uniformly held null and void, both in law and in equity. Hord v. Taubman, 79 Mo. 103, and cases cited.
But we think the proposition falls short of supporting the position of counsel in this case. Equity has ever been active in enforcing and protecting the rights of married women in trust estates created for their benefit. It has never been disputed that, independent of any statute, a married woman may be the recipient of property by gift, grant or devise, and that her rights' thereto will be upheld. Nor has the proposition ever been denied that she can, with her own money, purchase and hold property in her own name and right, and after paying the purchase money, enforce a conveyance in equity. Pitts v. Sheriff, 108 Mo. 115; Walker v. Owen, 79 Mo. 563.
It stands admitted by the demurrer that the agreement was made with plaintiff Marshall P., the husband. Under it plaintiff Annie E., without other consideration, conveyed to the trustee her parcel of land. By the negotiations and procurement of plaintiff Marshall P., the other tracts, including his own, were also conveyed to the trustee. The contract was then fully executed and the title was vested in the trustee. The property was afterward sold by the trustee for a profit. Defendants received the proceeds and refused to account, for the reason that plaintiff, who claims the right, is and was a married woman. If equity would refuse relief under such a state of facts it would be misnamed. Nor would it matter that the'original contract was made by, or for, the benefit of the wife. Defendants took and sold the property and should account for the profits to the person entitled to them under the contract.
We only pass upon the case as stated in the petition. We can not resort to an abandoned answer or to
II.' The husband had the undoubted right to assign to his wife as a gift his interest in the profits realized in the transaction, provided the rights of creditors of the former were not thereby affected. Bettes v. Magoon, 85 Mo. 586; Clark v. Clark, 86 Mo. 123; Thomas v. Thomas, 107 Mo. 463 and cases cited. Judgment reversed and cause remanded.