The defendant and Hannah (Smith) Skeels on the 28th day of August, 1899, were joined in marriage. Both were advanced in years, and each had been previously married. Neither had children at the time of the marriage, nor have they had any since. April 27, 1914, Mrs. Munsell died, leaving an estate slightly in excess of $15,000. . Previous to her death she made her will devising and bequeathing her real and personal property to her relatives without leaving anything to the defendant. The defendant filed in the probate court his waiver of the
The defendant denied in his answer that he ever made any verbal antenuptial contract, and claims .that he executed the contracts in writing without knowing their contents and through fraud and coercion.
The case was referred to a special master to find and report the facts. The case was subsequently heard by the master, and his report was filed with the chancellor, who made his decree, overruling certain exceptions by the defendant to the master’s findings of certain facts, and decreeing that defendant Munsell had no right, title, or interest in his wife’s estate, and was not entitled to any part of it. The chancellor further decreed specific performance of the antenuptial and postnuptial contracts, and directed the defendant Munsell to execute and deliver to the orators and. executors of the estate, within thirty days of the date of the decree, a full and complete release and discharge of all interest that he might have in the estate of his deceased wife.
From this decree the defendant appealed to this Court. The exceptions relied upon by the defendant in his brief are to the exclusion of certain testimony of the defendant by the master, to the admission of testimony tending to show a verbal ante-nuptial contract, and to the admission of the written antenuptial and postnuptial contracts, and to the master’s failure to find that the defendant entered into those contracts through undue influence and fraudulent practices.
The second exception taken by the defendant is founded upon the claim that the alleged verbal contract is within the statute of frauds, and not binding in law or equity, and that the bar was not removed by reducing the contract to writing after the marriage. The plaintiffs contend that the written ante-nuptial and postnuptial contracts, which the master has found were made after the marriage, removed the bar and took the verbal antenuptial contract out of the statute, as was intended when those written contracts were made; that, if those writings are not sufficient to remove the bar, the statute of frauds was not properly raised below, and therefore cannot be availed of by the- defendant to defeat the plaintiffs ’ right to the relief prayed for. If those contracts' have removed the bar created by the statute of frauds, which the defendant claims attached to the verbal antenuptial contract, it will be unnecessary to consider whether the statute was or was not properly raised below; for in that case that defence' goes out of the case. We, therefore, take up the question of what effect, if any, those contracts had upon the previous verbal contract, if that contract was within the statute of frauds, as claimed by the defendant.
As authorities holding otherwise, McAnnulty v. McAnnulty, 120 Ill. 26, 11 N. E. 397; 60 A. R. 552; Powell v. Meyers, 23 Ky. Law Rep. 795, 64 S. W. 428, and Frazer v. Andrews, supra, are cited. If we view these cases from the point taken by the several courts of review, and carefully consider the facts of each case and the precise issue raised and determined, much, if not all of the apparent conflict disappears. Some of the cases have turned on the peculiar provisions of the statutes, like the cases from New York and Wisconsin, others have turned on the relations which creditors bore to the contract, and still others have turned on the character of the writing relied upon as avoiding the statute.
The main question discussed in the McAnnulty Case was whether a marriage contracted subsequent to the making of a will revoked the will. The question of whether a subsequent written contract, purporting to be an antenuptial.contract, was sufficient as against the statute was discussed by the court more briefly and without reference to or citation of any of the long list of cases upon that subject, and this, perhaps, can be accounted for upon the assumption that the court was of the opinion that the execution of the alleged contract had not been made out. Indeed, it discusses the evidence upon that subject in a manner indicating that such was its views. As an authority upon that subject véry little weight can be given to it.
Frazer v. Andrews turned on the character of the writing. The court in that case expressly approve the -rule declared in Kohl v. Fredrick, supra, but distinguish that case from the one then in hand, in that there is nothing in the writing itself that shows it was executed to give effect to the previous verbal ante-nuptial contract. The court considers the case as if no ante-nuptial contract had been made, and as if the written contract was a postnuptial contract. The court holds, however, by fair inference, that, if the written contract had contained a provision or statement that it was executed to give effect to the verbal antenuptial contract, or in consideration of such contract, it would have taken that contract out of the statute.
Satterthwaite v. Emley, supra, is sometimes cited as authority that a verbal antenuptial contract is not taken out of the statute by being reduced to writing after marriage. But the holding in that case goes no farther than as it affects creditors; but as to a party to the contract or those claiming under such party, the court held that a subsequent writing made after the marriage, evidencing the verbal antenuptial contract, would save that contract from the operation of the statute.
Rowell v. Barter, supra, a strong and well considered case, in which many of the authorities are collected, clearly points out the effect that slight variations in the wording of the different statutes have upon the decisions of the court. In that ease it was held that, because of the statute of Wisconsin which made a verbal antenuptial contract void, subsequently reducing it to writing after the marriage did not take it out of the statute; for, being void, there was nothing to revive or to be taken out of the statute; that in this respect it differed from the English and many of the state statutes which did not render the verbal contract void, but provided the kind of evidence by which it must be proved, that the object of those statutes was not to prohibit such contracts, but was to require such evidence as would prevent
The so-called written antenuptial contract in 'this case removed the statute that otherwise would have barred a recovery on the verbal antenuptial contract, and this renders it unnecessary to consider what effect, if any, the so-called postnuptial con-, tract had upon the verbal antenuptial contract.
The exception taken to the admission of the so-called written antenuptial contract is without merit, and our holding that it removed all claim that the verbal antenuptial contract was barred by the statute of frauds disposes of that exception, and the exception to the admission of the so-called postnuptial contract is equally without merit, and is disposed of in what we have said earlier in the opinion.
“It is hereby ordered and decreed that the exceptions to the master’s report are overruledj that the antenuptial contract set forth in the plaintiffs’ bill is in full force and of binding effect upon the defendant, and the defendant is ordered and decreed to keep the same according tó its terms, and the defendant probate court, having disclaimed all interest in these procedings, is discharged ivithout costs, and the decree as altered is affirmed, and the cause is remanded with costs to the plaintiffs.