Personal property was levied upon as property of James' H. Conklyn, under executions against him and his wife, and Susan C. Conklyn, claiming it; and atrial was had by a jury in the Circuit Court of Jefferson county, under Code, c. 107, ss. 1, 5, 6, to settle the right thereto between Mrs.
The real merits of the case are involved in the motion of Mrs. Conldyn to set aside the verdict, because contrary to the evidence, which was overruled.
James 13. Conklyn, becoming involved, on March 28, 1885, surrendered all his land and personalty, except seventy five dollars household goods, the estate conveyed being very considerable in amount, to his creditors by a deed of trust, under which, on April 20, 1885, the trustee sold the .personal property, and in August, 1885, sold the farm, on which Conklyn resided, eighty one acres. Daniel Ileffle-bower, who is the brother of Mrs. Conklyn, purchased said farm for his wife, and it was paid for out of her separate estate. Daniel Ileffiebower bought at the trustee’s sale the wheat growing upon said eighty one acres for his sister, Mrs. Conklyn, also a roan mare, at the price of three hundred and fifty one dollars and sixty four cents, for the purpose of furnishing his sister with means to farm; and, acting for his wife, Ilefflebower leased the farm to his sister Mrs.'Conklyn, after he purchased it. Hefflebower sold the wheat and mare and colt to Mrs. Conklyn on credit at the same price he paid, and afterwards she cut the said wheat, and out of it partly paid for it and the mare and colt.
Mrs. Haney Conklyn, mother of James H. Conldyn, in December, 1884, leased for no definite time another tract of laud, which he on becoming insolvent turned over to his wife to be farmed, and which was farmed by her in connection with and in the same manner as the eighty one-acre farm.
Mrs. Susan C. Conklyn, while living with her husband, to some extent with his assistance and the assistance of her son, about eighteen years of age, and of a hired man, in 1885 put out a corn crop on both said tracts of land, using with the trustee’s consent, until 29th April, the horses and farming implements of JamesH. Conklyn conveyed in said deed of trust.
The husband was absent much of the time, selling machinery on commission for a firm, and for many months physically and mentally incapacitated by disease for work or business to any extent, and for a time in a hospital. "When at home and not incapacitated, he gave some help on the farm, and to some extent assisted the wife and son in superintending and managing it. He acted generally as his wife’s agent in selling and buying, but the son and Mrs. Conklyn’s brother frequently took part.
From the proceeds of the farm so operated, and on credit given to her by it, the operating expenses, household expenses, and such articles as stock and other things as were needed were provided from time to time. Ata sale of J ohn Denner in March, 1886, a black mare was bought by Ilefile-bower for his sister, for one hundred and thirty seven dollars, on which was credited forty one dollars, the price of a colt of hers which had been sold at said sale, and its price taken up in the bill; and for ninety six dollars, the balance James H. Conklyn gave his note as his wife’s .agent, indorsed by Ilefilebower, and paid by him when due. In March, 1887, at a sale of Col. Gibson’s, Hefilebower purchased for his sister a bay horse, for which her husband as her agent gave his note, indorsed by Ilefilebower, which was paid when due by young Conklyn, the son above mentioned, with Heffiebower’s check for one hundred dollars to young Conklyn, lent by Ilefilebower to his sister on the sou’s request, by his mother’s direction; and the balance was paid by the son with money furnished by the mother.
On loans and the sale of said property by Hefilebower to his sister payments were made from time to time out of
The property levied on’was derived as follows : Tliebor-rcl colt was the foal of the mare bought at Benner’s side. .Two colts were descendants of the roan mare sold at the trustee’s sale and the bay horse bought at Gibson’s sale. A wagon was bought by James II. Conklyn, as agent for his wife, on credit, and paid for out of money supplied by the wife out of a payment by Daniel Ilefilebower, as executor of his father, upon a legacy of three hundred dollars to Mrs. Conklyn under the will of her father, probated in 1867, which money was paid her in 1890. The hogAwere the increase of those given to Mrs. Conklyn by her brother in 1885. A horserake was bought on the credit of the farm and paid' for out of its proceeds. Crops levied on were raised on the farms in 1890, in the manner aforesaid. The verdict relieved the hogs and wagon from the executions.
At the date of the sale by the trustee, Mrs. Conklyn had no separate estate save the three hundred dollars legacy under her father’s will.
The theory, upon which it is claimed that all the property found by the jury to be property of JamesjII. Conklyn andli-ableTor his debts was his, is that at the start, the date of the sale of his property under the deed of trust, Mrs. Conklyn had no separate estate whatever; that she purchased the personal property purchased at the sale by her brother' of him wholly on credit; that the property and its increase can not be regarded as the wife’s, because it started with no separate basis; was not acquired with a separate estate; that something can not come from nothing, so to speak, and a separate estate can not arise from mere credit’to the wife not based on separate estate; that the personal property was'paid for out of the issues of the farms, which were pro-•dueed by farming operations by the labor of the husband and his infant son, which of right belong to the creditors ; and so far as that labor may be said not to have produced sucli proceeds, or even if they had not contributed thereto, as the farm was operated by the wife, its proceeds are to be regarded as the wife’s earnings, belonging by law to the
We can say on the facts certified as facts, that, when Daniel Hefflebower purchased property sold at the trustee’s sale paying to the creditor’s use, he became bona fide owner of it and sold it to his sister, Mrs. Conklyn. But it was sold on credit, and it is said separate estate can not arise from the wife’s credit, but, if a purchase, it must be made with her separate estate.
There are decisions in Pennsylvania that a purchase by a married woman purely on credit, she having no separate estate, is but an acquisition by a married woman, and at the instant of the purchase it becomes the husband’s property, even though it be paid for out of its own proceeds ; but the current of authority and reason do not sustain this position. By the sale the title passes to the wife, not the husbaud, for he is not a party to it. ' Under common-law it would vest in him; but our statute broadly and unconditionally says that a married woman may take from any one save her husband, and hold to her sole use, any property, as if she were single. Under a purchase by a single woman she would be vested with legal title. The statute gives the wife capacity to take and hold as if single. Whence does the husband acquire title? The common-law on this point has been swept away. Where is the law that gives the man the title? We find one to give the woman title in Code, c. 66, § 3.
Mr. Bishop, with that strength of reasoning and analysis which characterizes all his law works, probes this matter to the bottom, and maintains the view that it is her Separate estate. lie says:
“If a third person makes a gift to the wife of property, real or personal, it, at the common-law, is an acquisition of which she is deemed the meritorious cause, and the thing given vests in the husband or wife or both, according to the same rales as anything else coming to her during the cov-erture. How, suppose the third person, when he makes the gift, takes a promise of the wife to pay, binding in morals, not in law; plainly, in legal reason, this can make no difference. If, afterwards, another third person, not the
The court of appeals of Yew York in Knapp v. Smith, 27 N. Y. 277, holds, that under the statute the married woman may acquire property, real or personal, by buying-on credit, and no interest therein would pass to the husband, whether she antecedently had any separate estate or not; that if the vendor would take the risk of payment the transfer would be perfect; that she could hold the property, manage it by the agency of her husband or any other, and hold the profits and increase to her separate use. It so held where the wife of an insolvent bought cattle which had been his from his assignee, giving her note for the price, and purchased the farm for the conveyance of which her husband had a contract, and she mortgaged it for the price, and subsequently employed the husband as her agent to manage the farm, the case being free from fraud. Simi-ilar doctrine has been held in Shields v. Keys, 24 Iowa, 298.
The married woman who bought on credit the debts of her husband secured by his deed of trust on his goods was said, in the opinion in Williams v. Lord, 75 Va. 403, to take a good title as separate estate, though she might pay for them out of the proceeds of the sale.
Robinson v. Neill, 34 W. Va. 128 (11 S. E. Rep. 999) was a purchase on credit by a feme without separate estate, except a few articles which did not go into the land, and it was held that the land and its issues, and property purchas
But it is said that the husband is entitled to the wife’s earnings, Bailey v. Gardner, 31 W. Va. 94 (5 S. E. Rep 636); Campbell v. Bowles, 30 Gratt. 652; and therefore, as she carried on business, the results are her earnings, and the crops and property paid for by them are liable because the wife contributed in their production. If so, then why does the statute empower her to hold separate estate ? Simply that the estate should lie idle and unproductive ? If she could get some oye else to manage her separate estate, I assume the profits would be hers. Or would they still be earnings, and belong to her husband ? Assuming that in such case such profits would be hers, is the result changed by the fact that she has capacity and industry to manage the estate so as to yield profits? I think not. Though profits arising from the use of her separate estate be in any measure the result of her skill and labor, they are still hers. Without asserting her right to engage generally in business, I think the true view is that, while the connnoy-law does give the husband right to the wife’s services and earnings, yet that is modified by the act giving her power to hold separate estate and its issues and profits, to the extent that, when her skill and labor in the use of separate estate do produce •profits, they are hors, not -earnings belonging to the husband. See Wells, Mar. Wom. 178; Glover v. Alcott, 11 Mich. 482; Atwood v. Dolan, 34 W. Va. 583 (12 S. E. Rep. 688) opinion ; Henderson v. Warmack, 27 Miss. 835.
Penn v. Whitehead, 17 Gratt. 503, before the statute, recognized her right to engage in business, and gave her its results. So, it can not be because of any use of the wife’s time, skill, and industry in the use of this property returning a profit that they are liable to the husband’s creditors.
This construction would be only inferential, as there is no positive prohibition. This section has no application to wives living with their husbands owning separate estates, but relates only to those unfortunate wives separated from their husbands. Without this statute the common law would rob the poor wife abandoned by her husband of all property coming from her toil, and of her hard earnings necessary for her very existence, and give them to the drunken husband himself, whenever he should claim them; and her employer could not even pay her wages free from his claim, and his creditors might claim property acquired by her in business, and she could not carry on business necessary for her support, because she could not contract, as her contracts would be void.
To remedy such evil, this statute was passed. It was not intended to trench on the right already existing of a married woman to use her separate estate and enjoy its profits. Under this section her property and earnings are the woman’s, and by implication she has power to contract. Peck v. Marling, 22 W. Va. 708. I speak of this section as it was before chapter 109, Acts 1891.
But it is contended that, as the husband rendered some assistence in the conduct of farming, that renders the crops and the other property paid for out of them liable to his debts. Elaborate discussions of this subject are to be found in the text-books and reports, and in our own Court it has received full consideration in Miller v. Peck, 18 W. Va. 99, and Atwood v. Dolan, 34 W. Va. 563 (12 S. E. Rep. 688). The husband can not be compelled to labor for his creditors. There are cases where the creditors can subject an accumu
A husband in the enjoyment of marital right lives and is maintained on wife’s land, -which she manages for her use, and lie voluntarily bestows labor upon it. This was held not to give him or her creditors right to crops. Rush v. Vought, 55 Fa. St. 437. See opinion in Hamilton v. Booth, 55 Miss. 60.
In Feller v. Alden, 28 Wis. 301, it is held that a wife may cultivate her land by means of the labor of her husband and their minor children without divesting herself of its products, so as to subject them to execution against the husband. and it is not proof of an arrangement to defraud creditors.
In Kentucky the court held that products of a wife’s farm, through the labor and skill of the husband, follow the title to the land, and are hers, though not if his services exceeded in value the cost of support of himself and family; the obligation of that support being held paramount to that of paying his debts ; and until he made provision for that obligation the products of her farm could ;iot be made liable to his debts, and not then unless it was shown that the part not needed for the support of himself and family was the result of his labor. Com. v. Fletcher, 6 Bush 171, 172.
Mr. Bishop, in 2 Law Mar. "Worn. § 301, takes issue with the Kentucky court in saying that the surplus after support might be reached, saying it could not be unless there was an agreement to pay him the excess.
Courts will not allow husband and wife to use this right to cloak fraud against creditors, but will ferret out the fraud with very suspicious and acute eye, so far as human testimony will enable them to do so, failing sometimes, it is true, for want of evidence, but generally succeeding in doing justice in cases of real fraud; but they will not, by an unbending, iron rule, hold in every case that mere participation by the husband in the production of profits out of the wife’s lands or other property will make them liable to creditors, and impose starvation on the whole family. No slavery could he more oppressive and hard than such slavery of unfortunate debtors to creditors.
Courts .of equity, in proper cases, where substantial property traceable to the skill and labor of the husband is found to exist, will make a just apportionment between the wife and her husband’s creditors. Penn v. Whitchead, 17 Gratt. 503, 513; Glidden v. Taylor, 16 Ohio St. 509.
The fact that the husband acted sometimes as the wife’s agent in the conduct of their small business, along with her brother and son, can not alter the case ; for the cases of Miller v. Peek, supra, and Atwood v. Dolan, supra, sustain the position that a married woman with, separate estate may barter and trade with reference thereto by her husband as agent, and will be entitled to the increase thereof. The mere marital relation does not disqualify the husband from • acting as his wife’s agent with reference to her separate estate. Prentiss v. Paisley, 25 Fla. 927 (7 South. Rep. 56); Keller v. Mayer, 55 Ga. 406. The mere fact that he is agent will not render her property or its profits liable to creditors. Wait, Fraud. Conv. § 803;_ Voorhees v. Bonesteel, 16 Wall. 16; Aldridge v. Muirhead, 101 U. S. 397.
On the facts proven, we could not find fraudulent intent. Under the facts, not evidence, as certified, the source from which the property came, and how paid for, appear, and none came from the husband. Clearly it came from the wife’s estate. Any idea that it came from the husband is repelled.
It is further contended that because the son, Edgar A. Conklyn, labored earnestly in the family distress, and as under the law his services belonged to the father, this makes the products of land and property liable for his debts.
The father has a right to the son’s services and earnings in consideration of his support and care in tender years of helplessness; but he may emancipate the son, and thus the son becomes entitled to his own services and earnings, and may dispose of them as he pleases. Creditors can not compel their debtor to work himself or to compel his children to work for them, nor sell under process their future service, though property created by their past labor may be subjected. Even a parent involved in hopeless insolvency can thus emancipate his child, and remove his services and
In Wilson v. McMillan, just cited, the right of an insolvent father to emancipate his child, who remained at home, and was hired by the father, was upheld. Were these doctrines not to prevail, the child would for years be engulfed in his father’s ruin.and bankruptcy, unable to get support, uuable to obtain an education for the struggle of life, his whole future blasted.
In this case the son did remain at home; but reason holds that, if the law allow such emancipation at all, it would not require as a condition of its exercise that the ties of home be broken, and the child driven from the parental roof. In this case, if we can not say the father emancipated the child, we may say certainly that he consented that he might give his labor to his mother.
In the case of Wilson v. McMillan, supra, the court says that the debtor may givehis-owu labor away : he may consent that his child may give his labor away. A court should look with special liberality upon the consent of a father to his son laboring for his own mother, striving' for a living, when that labor gave to himself and his mother the bread of life, when the father, broken by insolvency and disease, in estate, body, and mind, was unable to give them maintenance.
In Atwood v. Dolan, 34 W. Va. 563 (12 S. E. Rep. 688) the fact that seven sons labored on the farm in producing crops was not - considered enough to destroy the wife’s right.
Rush v. Vought, 55 Pa. St. 437, holds that where sons, with their father’s coiisent, labor on wife’s land, this will not render crops liable to his creditors.
These principles lead to the conclusion that the jtroducts of the eighty one acres are not liable to the husband’s debts; nor are articles purchased with them.
But we do not regard the lease of this farm (Mrs. Haney Conldyn’s farm) as the leasehold property of James H. Conk-lyn. It was farmed until April, 1885, by another son of hers, and about Christmas, 1884, there was an indefinite arrangement between James II. Conklyn that he was to farm it, for what term we do not know; but before doing anything he told his mother that, owing to his insolvency, he could not do so, and wished to give it up, and she replied “she did not wish to make any more changes, and he should keep the land, and make the best arrangements he could with it, and accordingly he turned it over to his wife,” by whom it was held and fanned just as the other farm, she paying landlord’s share of crops. We think he acted as his mother’s agent in leasing to the wife, making it the wife’s lease. He had' no substantial estate in it, one worth anything to creditors; for as regarded his leasehold, the work of making crops and the burden of paying rent were yet unperformed. On the facts certified as facts, we hold that the law does not hold that property liable to said executions.
Defendants’ instructions 1 and 2 are based upon principles of law above stated, and need not be discussed. It is only necessary to say, for the purpose of future proceedings in the case, that as given they seem to put the law correctly.
Defendants’ instruction 3, that if J ames II. and Susan Conklyn were married prior to April 1,1869, without marriage contract, and she acquired by the will of her father, prior to that date, three hundred dollars, and she or her husband with it purchased any of the property levied upon, or any property of which that levied upon is the increase or product, then such property was the husbands, is erroneous. On, April 1, 1869, section 3, e. 66, as part of our Code, took effect. It is not retroactive, but declares that any married woman “may take” and hold property as separate property. If the husband, on April 1, 1869, had such a vested right in his wife’s legacy as was property, the statute would not affect it — First, because we would not construe it to retroaet upon vested property rights; and, secondly, it would be unconstitutional so applied. But the husband’s right under the law prior to that date gave him his wife’s dioses in action only conditionally; that is, upon reduction to possession. Till that act the property therein was not vested in him, but in her; as, if he died, she surviving, she retained it, which could not be if it had perfectly vested in him. Therefore, the husband not having reduced the chose to possession when the Code took effect, we can say the wife took the chose; the new law operated upon it before the act of reduction to possession took place. Moreover, I do not see how creditors could, in the manner proposed in this proceeding, avail themselves of his right, he having done no act to reduce the chose to possession, nor have the creditors resorted to any process available to do so; but I have not fully considered this, it not being necessary to do so. The blew York courts hold the doctrine that it is a vested right in the husband, which can not be divested by legislation. Westervelt v. Gregg, 12 N. Y. 202 (62 Amer. Dec. 160, and note, p. 167).
Another error in the court below was the admission in evidence of a letter from James H. Conklyn to his brother Charles. Charles was surety for James BL, in these debts. James H., as a witness, stated that he had conversations with Charles in which he asked him to still run the notes, and, if he would do so, his wife would pay them out of crops raised by her, and that be acted as agent for his wife and never otherwise. The defendants then introduced the letter in which James H. Conklyn promised unequivocally to pay the debts out of the wheat crop, not hinting anything as to agency.
It is very evident that the defendants desired to get the full benefit of the absolute statement of James II. Conklyn as a declaration by him. that he owned the wheat crop and would pay the debt out of it, and did not want to use it simply to impeach the veracity of a witness, else the letter would have been offered for that purpose only. Lt was -admitted in evidence generally, and it can be readily seen how much, calculated it was to influence the.jury to the prejudice of the plaintiffs in the issue. Used for and limited to impeachment purposes it was admissible; but not otherwise, for it is simply unsworn statement, hearsay, not at all binding on the wife. Glocer v. Allcolt, 11 Mich. 470, in just such a contest as this, holds that the declaration of the husband is not admissible against the wife. 2 Whart. Ev. § 1215; 1 Greenl. Ev. § 100. It is inadmissible under the general law of evidence, without regard to the relation of husband and wife, or the nature of the suit.
The.judgment is reversed, verdict set aside, and new trial awarded.
Revumsed. Remanded.