58 Miss. 614 | Miss. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the court.
By her will Mrs. A. P. Stokes gave her lands to her children, and conferred upon her husband, M. M. Stokes, power to sell the same,- in the following words : “And I hereby authorize and empower said M. M. Stokes to sell and dispose of any of the property hereby bequeathed in this will, when it shall appear to him to be advisable so to do, having an eye to the support and education of the children.” After the death of Mrs. Stokes, M. M. Stokes mortgaged the land to secure the payment of an account for family supplies necessary for the support of the children, which were sold to him on the faith of the security afforded by the mortgage. The mortgagees filed this bill against the children of Mrs. A. P. Stokes to subject the
In Sessions v. Bacon, 23 Miss. 273, it is held that, under the act of 1839 relative to the power of married women over their estates, a married woman having- authority to sell takes by implication the power to mortgage ; and since this decision such has been the well-settled rule. The decision in that case, we think, was correct. The law had conferred upon married women capacity to take, hold, and dispose of legal estates ; to make certain contracts relative thereto, which might- be enforced against their separate estates by action at law as well as in equity ; to sell and convey the property owned by them, their husbands joining in the deed when real estate was conveyed. The beneficial interest in the property was in the woman, and the object of the Legislature was to permit her to deal with it as owner, subject to such restrictions and limitations as the statute preserved or established to prevent improvidence or coercion. The powers conferred were given to married women as a class, and the courts, in construing the statute, looked to the policjr of the law and the intention of the Legislature,as gathered from other provisions in pari materia, and held that the power to sell conferred on her included the power to mortgage.
We have examined a largo number of the very numerous cases in which the rule as to the extent, construction, and execution of powers has been examined and explained. The fundamental principle that the donee of the power is authorized to exercise it only to the extent and in the manner specified, is recognized in all the cases; but the application of the equally well established rule that courts of equity, in determining whether or not the thing done is within the power conferred, will look to the ends and designs of the parties, and will aid defective executions of powers, has led to diverse and conflicting adjudications. In the cases of Allan v. Backhouse, 2 Ves. & Bea. 65 ; Mills v. Banks, 3 P. Wms. 1; Ball v.
Such power has been denied in Stone v. Theed, 2 Bro. C. C. *243 ; Holdenby v. Spofforth, 1 Beav. 390 ; Page v. Cooper, 16 Beav. 400 ; Devaynes v. Robinson, 24 Beav. 86 ; Stronghill v. Autrey, 1 De G. M. & G. 635 ; Shaftesbury v. Duchess of Marlborough, 2 Myl. & K. 111; Coutant v. Servoss, 3 Barb. 128; Albany v. Fire Ins. Co., 4 Comst. 9; Cumming v. Williamson, 1 Sandf. Ch. 17 ; Wood v. Goodridge, 6 Cush. 117 ; Patapsco Guano Co. v. Morrison, 2 Woods, 395 ; Head, Admr., v. Temple et al., 4 Heisk. 34 ; Hubbard v. German Congregation, 34 Iowa, 34; and Bloomer v. Waldron, 3 Hill, 361 (overruling Williams v. Woodward, 2 Wend. 492).
In Stronghill v. Autrey, Lord St. Leonards, after an examination of many of the English cases, said : “ My own opinion is that, generally speaking, a power of sale out-and-out, or for a purpose, or with, an object beyond the raising of a particular charge, does not authorize a mortgage; but that when it is for raising a particular charge, and the estate is settled or devised subject to that charge, then it may be proper, under the circumstances, to raise the money by mortgage, and the court will support it as a conditional sale — as something within the power.”
A more liberal construction is made in those cases in which the person who has the power is also interested in the estate on which it is to be exercised, than in those in which the power is given to one to encumber the property of another. In the one case the power is to be liberally, in the other strictly, construed. Sayles v. Freeland, 2 Vent. 350.
Cumming v. Williamson, 1 Sandf. Ch. 17, illustrates both the principle that no other power than that delegated can be exercised, and the other principle that a substantial execution
An examination of the authorities has impressed us with the correctness of those decisions which hold that, as a general rule, mere power to sell does not include the power to mortgage. In most of the cases in- which such power has been declared, it is stated to be because a mortgage is a sale on condition. In this State, as in many others, a mortgage is now treated at law as in equity — as a mere security for a debt. The legal estate can only be used for the purpose of enforcing the payment of the debt secured. The words of the testatrix conferring the power on her husband are, to “ sell and dispose of” the property, and evidence, we think, an intention on her part simply to authorize a conversion of the property into money by an out-and-out sale; and under this power the husband was not authorized to execute the mortgage.
The decree is reversed and bill dismissed.