115 Neb. 882 | Neb. | 1927
This is an action in partition. It is brought by plaintiff as a widow and statutory heir of Christian Stahl, deceased, against the defendants named, who are the children of deceased by his first wife. Judgment in district court for defendants, denying partition, and adjudging plaintiff by terms of antenuptial contract with deceased, dated and entered into May 1, 1902, entitled to receive the sum of $2,000, and no more, and to be barred by virtue of the agreement from any inheritance in or further claim against the estate of the deceased. Plaintiff appeals.
Partition in this state is deemed a proceeding in equity, and the case is here therefore for trial de novo. Oliver v. Lansing, 50 Neb. 828; Arthur v. Arthur, ante, p. 781.
A careful consideration of the pleadings' and the evidence convinces us that this case is ruled by the doctrine announced by this court in In re Estate of Enyart, 100 Neb. 337. It is our view that the controlling contract in this case, when considered in connection with all the circumstances of its execution, furnishes sufficient data wherewith to test its validity.
Most of the following facts appear as undisputed in the record, at least so far as defendants are concerned: That Christian Stahl was 54 and plaintiff 44 on the day of their marriage, which was the date of signing the contract in suit; that Christian Stahl, then a widower, was
That plaintiff had emigrated to this country from Germany when 24 years of age; that she thereafter made her home in “Greater New York” until she came west to marry the deceased in 1902; that two years after her arrival in this country she became the wife of one Keller, and thereafter continued to live in Greater New York; that her then husband was an employee of a brewery, and later a saloon-keeper; the last statement may fairly be said to be conceded by appellees.’ brief. So far as shown by the record, the only real estate in which the Keller family had any interest was some city lots situated 'in that part of Greater New York known as Brooklyn. Later Keller died. The plaintiff then supported herself and children by conducting a boarding house. Up to the time of her trip to Omaha in 1902, which resulted in her marriage, there is no evidence of her ever having visited the rural districts of New York state, or indeed of her ever leaving the precincts of the city of her home.
The evidence also discloses that Christian Stahl came to Nebraska from Germany in an early day. He was married and nine children were born in his family, He had accumulated practically all the property in controversy in this action prior to the death of his first wife. After her death he continued to reside on his land in the vicinity of Grafton, Nebraska.
Decedent had relatives in Greater New York who were acquainted with plaintiff, and upon a visit there he was introduced to appellant. These two, in the two or three visits Stahl made to that city, manifested interest in each other, through which visiting and correspondence which took place ripened into an engagement to be married. This occurred in or about January, 1902. During this time it is claimed by the defendants that the separate stations and responsibilities of the then Mrs. Keller and of Christian Stahl were the subject of discussion; that the Nebraska property of the latter was described to the former;
It does not affirmatively appear that the subject of an antenuptial agreement had been discussed and agreed upon prior to the arrival of plaintiff in Omaha in 1902. There was an agreement for marriage. Decedént sent appellant $125 to pay the railroad fare of her and her children from Greater New York to Omaha, Nebraska. He evidently consulted his lawyer and had a form of antenuptial contract provided before the' arrival of his intended wife. He went to Omaha accompanied by a daughter, where he met plaintiff and her children on her arrival from her former home. The party repaired to the Drexel Hotel. Plaintiff and deceased, unaccompanied, went to the Douglas county courthouse, and en route they stopped at a jewelry store, where a wedding ring was selected. From there they, proceeded to the courthouse, where a marriage license was secured’ -The antenuptial contract was presented to his wife,
The pleadings in the instant case do not present any questions of ratification by plaintiff of the contract of-May 1, 1902, subsequent to the date thereof. Therefore, that question is eliminated from consideration. Maxwell, Code Pleading, 406; Erickson v. First Nat. Bank of Oakland, 44 Neb. 622; Hosler v. Beard, 54 Ohio St. 398; Elston v. Jasper, 45 Tex. 409. Neither is an estoppel alleged on behalf of the defendants. Burlington & M. R. R. Co. v. Harris, 8 Neb. 140; International Building & Loan Ass’n v. Watson, 158 Ind. 508.
We therefore recur to the contract as executed on the 1st day of May, 1902, to be considered in the light of the circumstances which surrounded its execution, as the just measure with which the rights of the parties to this action must be determined. “Whether an antenuptial contract, by virtue of which one party to an intended marriage, for a legal consideration, parts with marital rights in the property of the other, may be valid and a bar to dower has been settled in this state. Rieger v. Schaible, 81 Neb. 33. In fact, most courts now support antenuptial contracts if fairly made. Such instruments frequently tend to peace and happiness by settling questions concerning rights of property which, especially in the case of marriage of people in later life having children of a former marriage, often furnish grounds of irritation and friction which may defeat the very purpose of the union.” In re Estate of Enyart, 100 Neb. 337, 343. Considering the facts properly in evidence,
It is a well-established rule that — “In view of the close and confidential relation existing between affianced persons, it is the duty of the prospective husband to make a full and fair disclosure of all material facts relating to the amount, character and value of his property, so that the prospective wife may have sufficient knowledge upon which she may exercise her judgment whether she will enter into such a contract. The general principal was laid down in Kline v. Kline, 57 Pa. St. 120, 98 Am. Dec. 206, by Judge Sharswood, and has been adopted and applied in many cases. Pierce v. Pierce, 71 N. Y. 154; Lamb v. Lamb, 180 Ind. 278; Murdock v. Murdock, 219 Ill. 123; Warner v. Warner, 235 Ill. 448; Simpson v. Simpson’s Ex’rs, 94 Ky. 586; Slingerland v. Slingerland, 115 Minn. 270; Rankin v. Schiereck, 166 Ia. 10.
“Where the provision made for the intended wife by an antenuptial contract is grossly disproportionate to the interest in the prospective husband’s estate which the intended wife would acquire by operation of law in case the marriage took place, the burden rests upon those claiming the validity of the contract to show that a full and fair disclosure was made to her before she signed it of the extent and value of the property, or that she was aware to all intents and purposes of the nature, character and value of the estate which'she was relinquishing if the marriage took place. Murdock v. Murdock, supra; Warner v. Warner, supra; Mines v. Phee, 254 Ill. 60; Warner’s Estate, 207 Pa. St. 580. These principles, though not universally accepted, seem to us to be based upon sound reason, and to be most consonant with the trend of judicial thought, more particularly in the western states. 14 Cyc. 940; 21, Cyc. 1250.” In re Estate of Enyart, 100 Neb. 337, 345.
The evidence is convincing that Mrs. Stahl knew before
This contract of May 1, 1902, provides: “In the event said Theresa Keller shall survive Christian Stahl, she shall receive the sum of $2,000, and no more, which shall be in lieu of all estate of dower, homestead, or other interest or estate, and of all other claims for allowance, maintenance or other claims against the property of Christian Stahl, * * * to which she might be entitled by reason of her marriage.” The value’ of Christian Stahl’s- properties, real and personal, owned by him at the time of his death, is. not set forth in the record with the required , definiteness.
As the defense tendered by the defendants to plaintiff’s petition was wholly based upon the validity of this contract, it follows that plaintiff’s petition for partition should have been sustained by the district court, and decree entered therein as prayed. The district court therefore erred in sustaining the validity of the antenuptial contract of May 1, 1902, and in entering the judgment dismissing plaintiff’s action.
It is therefore ordered that the decree thus entered by the district court in this case be reversed and the cause be remanded, with directions to enter decree of partition as prayed for by plaintiff.
Reversed.