15 Ala. 117 | Ala. | 1848
This was an action of detinue, by the plaintiff in error, as executor of Henry Trippe, against the defendant, as administrator of Mary A. Trippe, to recover certain slaves, which the plaintiff insisted were the property of his testator.
The question of title mainly depends upon the construction of the documentary evidence offered upon the trial, and which is set out in a bill of exceptions, namely — 1. An ante-nuptial agreement, entered into between the plaintiff’s testator and the intestate of the defendant, before the solemnization of the rights of matrimony between them. 2. A subsequent deed by the wife, executed contemporaneously with the will of the husband, disposing of her interest in the property.
It is insisted by the plaintiff in error, that the antenuptial agreement only bound the property which Mrs. Trippe, then Miss Harris, had in her possession, and did not embrace the property which descended upon her from her aunt, Mrs. Dawson, and her sister, Mrs. Creagh, which was acquired subsequent to the execution thereof. This construction is not warranted by the terms of the agreement, which very explicitly provides, that her intended husband shall take no right or title to any part of the property of which she is, or may be possessed, or entitled to in anywise or manner whatsoever. And in another part of the same instrument, she conveys to the trustee, Rowe Harris, “ all the right, title, claim, and interest of her, the said Mary A. Harris, in and to the effects and property to which she now is, or may hereafter become entitled from the estate of Henry Harris, deceased, and all property of every description to which she is, or may be entitled by inheritance or otherwise whatever.” It would be difficult to use language more explicit, and more appropriate to exclude the husband’s representative from any participa
Under the state of the case made by the facts set forth in the record, it becomes unimportant for us to inquire, whether the anticipated acquisition of property by Mrs. Trippe, at the time she entered into the antenuptial agreement, “ by inheritance, or otherwise whatsoever,” would embrace the property which was subsequently acquired as her share from the estates of Mrs. Dawson and Sarah Creagh. The rule of law in respect to such agreements, undoubtedly is, that nothing is embraced which is not within the view and contemplation of the parties at the time of entering into the contract. Atherly on Mar. Set. 25; 1 Ves. 507; 2 Ib. 304; Williams v. Williams, 1 Bro. Ch. Rep. Amer. ed.) 139, marginal, p. 152. Perhaps the terms, or ‘otherwise whatsoever/ could not be properly construed to embrace property unexpectedly obtained, otherwise than by inheritance, nor to the earnings of the wife during coverture, which, as against the husband’s creditors would be fraudulent. Keith v. Woombell, 8 Pick. Rep. 211. Nor need we enter into the discussion as to whether the anticipated interest of the wife by inheritance, was a contingent interest, capable of being assigned, or a mere possibility, which may not be transferred. The record clearly shows, that the husband received and held this property, not as husband, but in strict subordination to the right of the wife, which right he continued to recognize up to his death, and which his representative has recognized since his decease. So that the husband having asserted no
In respect to the agreement, it may be sufficient to observe, that it is the duty of the court to carry it into effect if its provisions be lawful, according to .the .intention of the parties, and that the intention of the parties in this case, to exclude the husband from any right to the slaves beyond the usufi'uct for the joint lives of himself and wife, is too apparent from the face of the instrument to need comment. We know of no rule of law, and no case has been cited denying to the parties before marriage, the right to make such contract. Hill on Trustees, 408.
We must presume that the trustee of Mrs. Creagh had a right to receive her share of the estate of Mrs. Dawson, as there is nothing appearing upon the record to raise a contrary conclusion, and the representative of Mrs. Creagh delivered the property to Henry Trippe, in virtue of a power of attorney, received from such trustee. This property the husband regarded and held as his wife’s, under the marriage contract, and there is no evidence that he held it as a bailee, for the trustee, or that either of them so considered it. So that, in our judgment, the plaintiff, as executor of Henry Trippe, can found no right to recover upon the idea of a bailment, against the repeated declarations of his testator to the contrary.
By the terms of the antenuptial agreement, Mrs. Trippe had the power of disposing of the property by will, or deed, signed in the presence of two or more witnesses. The bill of exceptions contains a deed of gift from her to Martha and Warren F. Trippe, of all the property which then belonged to her, or was her’s in her separate right, at and before the marriage with the said Henry. The deed declares, “that said property is hereby fully and freely incorporated with his (the said Henry’s) estate, and all manner of contracts, settlements, or legal hindrances to the attainment of that end, are
It is insisted on the part of the plaintiff, that the effect of this deed is, to vest the property in the estate of the husband —in other words, to incorporate it in his estate, so as that after the debts of his estate are paid, the balance will remain for distribution among his distributees; while the defendants contend, that it is void and inoperative, because — 1. Made without the knowledge of the trustee in the marriage settlement. 2. There was no consideration — not a good one, the donees being strangers, nor yet a valuable one, the estate of the husband being insolvent. 3. There w;as no delivery of the deed, or the property conveyed, &c. 4. For uncertainty, both as to the grantees and the property sought to be conveyed.
As to the first objection, it is only necessary to say, that the deed of settlement, which confers the power of appointment, does not provide for the concurrence of the trustee in the execution of the power. And in the absence of such power reserved in the deed, the wife being vested with a separate estate, might, notwithstanding the intervention of a trustee, dispose of it without his consent. It is proper, where a fund subject to a power is vested in a trustee, that notice of the appointment should be served upon him, but this is only required to fix the liability of the trustee, in cases where he has paid out the fund to a subsequent appointee after such notice of the prior appointment. 1 Sug. on Powers, 257; Cothway v. Sydenham, 2 Bro. Ch. Rep. 391, Am. ed. 312. The case before us involves no such controversy.
As it respects the consideration for the deed of the wife to the husband’s children, we regret that the case is too barren of circumstances to enable us to pronounce a satisfactory judgment upon it. It was certainly competent for the wife to have given her separate estate to the children of her husband, and the delivery of the deed, as has been frequently decided by this court, is effectual to vest the property. This
At the arrangement was entered into, perhaps it was impossible to arrive at any certain or satisfactory estimate of what would remain after the payment of the husband’s debts. Much would depend upon the fluctuation in the value of the
We do not, however, agree with the counsel for the plaintiff in error, that the property specified in the deed is so incorporated, or merged in the estate of Henry Trippe, as to belong to and form assets in the hands of his executor. The property is conveyed to the children, not the husband. They take it, not as distributees of the father, but by virtue of the deed, as a gift from Mrs. Trippe. If she had intended the property to vest in her husband, so as to have enabled him to dispose of
The charges of the court are substantially in accordance with the law as we have above ascertained it, and the judgment is consequently affirmed.