14 Vt. 107 | Vt. | 1842
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The question, now presented for the decision of this court, is important in principle, and deeply involves the well-being of, at least, a portion of the community. It is due to the counsel in the cause, that we should say that our investigations have been in no small degree facilitated by their industry, and the ability with which it has been argued.
Though the court are not unanimous in their views, yet a majority of the judges concur in affirming the decree of the chancellor.
What shall be the effect of the conveyance in question upon the rights of widow ? The question is important, and, especially so, as shifts, like the one before us, are easily resorted to with a view to affect the interests of the wife. The wife is not to be barred of her dower, without her consent, by the will of her husband, even, though he has thereby made an ample provision for her support. Her claims to dower are paramount to those of creditors, and it has long since become
If she, during the treaty for marriage, without the knowledge of her intended husband, makes a voluntary disposition of her property, it is a fraud upon his marital rights,
The statute gives the widow, at least, one-third of the personal estate, after the payment of debts, &c.; and this she cannot be deprived of by the will of her husband, nor by jointure, except at her election. The widow’s claims for her share, under our statute, is an analogy to the claim of the widow of a freeman under the custom of London. The statutes of distribution were borrowed from that custom, and hence the decisions under it may well illustrate what should be the course of decision under'our statute. The case of Edmundson v. Cox, 7 Viner’s Abri. 202, is an important one, showing the analogy and the grounds upon which courts have- proceeded. The bill was by the widow of a freeman of London for her customary share. The husband had made his will and devised to the wife certain real and personal estate. There was, sealed up in the will, the bond of the testator, executed before the date of the will, conditioned to pay the defendant a given sum of money, or transfer to him a given amount of bank stock. The obligee was the nephew of the testator, and the bond voluntary and without
In Holmes v. Holmes, 3 Paige, 363, the Vice Chancellor held, that a conveyance of personal estate to take effect after the decease of the husband, and made with the intent to defeat the widow of her distributory share, under the statute, was a fraud upon her. Though this decree was reversed by the Chancellor, yet I think the opinion of the Vice Chancellor the better reason. The Chancellor evidently pro
The Chancellor supposes that the wife and the children, both stand upon the same ground, and that neither have any guck }n qie ]jfe tjme 0f qie ancestor, as to be the subject of fraud. But there is a manifest difference. The ancestor-, may, by will, exclude entirely the children from all participation in his estate; not so the wife. The children are not heirs so long as the ancestor lives, and have no inchoate rights as such. The husband and the wife each acquire their marital rights, in one sense, as purchasers, and upon valuable consideration. In the language of Sir Joseph Jekyll “ the marriage, and its attending rights and disabilities, is a consideration moving from each of the contracting parties to the other.” In Douglass & wife v. Ward, 1 Cases in Chan., it was expressly adjudged that marriage was a good consideration to make the feme a purchaser.
But in the case now before us, there was no delivery of personal estate. The contract provides for the distribution of such as should remain and be on hand at the time of the death of the ancestor, and the lease, or demise, (as it is called,) to him, secures him in the possession and use of it during his life. Both contracts being made at the same time are to be regarded as one, and it is expressly provided that the deceased should retain the possession, as well as the use, of the property, and he in no way abridged himself of its control. None was to be distibuted, under the trust conveyance, but such as should be on hand at the time of the death of the ancestor. A gift is not consummated, nor the ownership of the chattel changed, until a delivery. 2 Johns. 52. 7 Johns. 26. 18 Johns. 148.
In a case in 3 Anstr. 882, reported also in a note to 5'iVesey, Jun. 266, the father covenanted upon the marriage of a daughter to leave her, by will, an equal share of his personal estate with her brother and sister. To elude this covenant, the father, in his life time, conveyed stocks to his son, reserving to himself the dividend during his natural life. It was held, in the house of Lords, that as the ancestor reserved in his own hands the stocks, by taking the dividends during his life, he was, at the time of his death, the owner of the stocks for all beneficial purposes. The court did not per
The position taken by counsel, that the widow is barred of any claim, by reason of her having left her husband before his death, cannot be sustained. It is undoubtedly true that previous to the separation, there had been some family discord ; the deceased had a family of children, grown up, by a former wife, and a part of them living in the same family ; and the oratrix had children by a former marriage, and was a second wife. Under such circumstances, it is not an uncommon thing for jealousies to spring up and endj^in strife, but it is of no importance to inquire into the merits of the controversy, or who might have been most to blame. The evidence tends to show that the separation was in the end by the mutual consent of husband and wife. Indeed, the consent of the husband seems to be involved in the fact that the small amount of property carried away by the wife, was delivered to her, by the husband, for the specific purpose of carrying away, and was taken with his approbation.
But, be this as it may, there is nothing in the evidence that can bar the widow’s rights of dower, or her right to a distributory share. Though the wife might have been indiscreet, and have left the husband without a justifiable cause, still this would not work a forfeiture of her rights.
The conclusion, then, to which we come, is, that the oratrix had, in the life time of her husband, such rights as should be recognized, protected and enforced ; that the attempt to elude these rights, in the manner disclosed in this case, was mala fide, and a fraud upon the law and upon the marital rights of the oratrix, and that, as a consequence, the husband, so far as respects the widow, must be regarded, at the time of his death, as being the owner and having the seizin of the property in question. This result, we think, is in accordance with well settled principles, and such as sound policy and justice dictate.
The decree of the chancellor, then, is affirmed with costs in this court, with this modification, viz : that the time for