32 Barb. 250 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1860
Lead Opinion
At common law a deed of lands from the wife to her husband is void, and passes no title. (2 Kent’s Com. 129. Martin v. Martin, 1 Greenl. R. 394. 3 E. 63.) The only question presented for our adjudication in this case is whether the act of April 11, 1849, removes the disability of coverture under which the wife labors at common law, so far as to authorize her to convey her lands directly to her husband. This statute declares that any married female may take by inheritance, or by gift, grant, or devise or bequest, from any person other than her husband, and hold to her sole and separate use, and convey and devise real and personal property, and any interest or estate therein, and the rents, issues and profits thereof, in the same manner and with like effect as if she were unmarried. (Laws 1849, p. 528, sec. 3.) This statute in general terms declares that she may convey and devise real and personal property in the same manner and with the like effect as if she were unmarried. The defendant’s counsel claims and insists that this statute authorizes her to convey her real estate directly to her husband. I do not think it does. It is a familiar principle that statutes are to be construed in reference to the principles of the common law, for it is not to be presumed that the legislature intended to make any innovation upon the common law, further than the case absolutely requires. (1 Kent’s Com. 463, 3d ed.) This has been the language of the courts in every age. It is said, also, that four things are to be considered in the interpretation of all statutes: 1st. What was the common law before the act ? 2d. What was the mischief against which the common law did not provide? 3d. What remedy has the legislature provided to cure the defect ? and 4th. What was the true reason of that remedy ? The common law, before the passage of this act, held a married woman disqualified to take and hold real and personal property to her sole and separate use independent of her husband. The personal property which she received by inheritance, gift or bequest, became absolutely her husband’s,
Balcom, J. concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting.) The only question presented in this case is whether a married woman can convey her real estate directly to her husband. The wife of the defendant “ not being indebted to any person, without being influenced by the said defendant, but in good faith and without fraud, freely and voluntarily, as her,own act and deed, with intent to and for the purpose of giving the said land to the defendant, and of vesting the title to the same in him, in view and in the prospect of immediate death to her known, and being of sound mind and understanding, did sign, seal, acknowledge, execute and deliver, in due form of law, to the defendant, her husband, a quitclaim deed, conveying to the defendant, in his actual possession then being, the said land &c., and on the next day thereafter departed this life, leaving the
Upon the foregoing agreed state of facts the plaintiff claims that the deed is utterly void and of no effect, while the defendant insists that the deed from his wife is a good deed of gift mortis causa, both at law and equity.” The deed was executed the 15th of "August, 1849; and as to part of the land, the wife became the owner by inheritance from her mother, after the passage of the act of 1848, and the balance having been inherited from her father several years previous.
“ By marriage, the husband and wife are one person in law, (1 Inst. 112;) that is, the very being or legal existence of the woman is suspended during the marriage, or at least is incorporated and consolidated into that of her husband, under whose wing, protection and cover, she performs every thing, and is therefore called in our law French, a ‘ femme covert.’ ” (Jacob’s Law Dict. Baron and Feme.) Such was the strict rule of the common law, and upon that principle of union of persons in husband and wife have depended almost all the legal rights, duties and disabilities which either of them acquire by or during the marriage.
For this reason, a man cannot grant any thing to his wife, or enter into a covenant with her; for the grant would be to suppose her to possess a distinct and separate existence. (Story’s Equity, § 1367.) Under the Roman law, marriage was said to be conjunctio maris et fcemince; consortium omijs vitce divini et humani juris communicatio—that joining*together of the male and female, the fellowship of a whole life and the union of both the divine and human law. Y et, under the Roman civil law, more liberal rules prevailed in relation to a married woman’s rights of property; and fob lowing these rules, courts of equity, at an early day, began the introduction of a more liberal system to meet the wants and necessities of a higher and perhaps a better civilization, and which were not provided for under the stern and unbendr ing rules of the English common law. “ Courts of equity,
It would seem as if nothing more was necessary. But while it is admittéd that she has almost unlimited power of disposing of her estate, it is said that the husband cannot be the donee or grantee, because he and the wife are but one person in the law, and a conveyance to him would therefore be but a conveyance to herself, which it is manifestly impossible for her to make. And yet at all times, or for many years, in this state, and long prior to the acts of 1848 and 1849, a wife could unite with her husband in a deed of her real estate to a third party, and that third party reconvey to the husband, thus vesting complete title in him; and such a conveyance, in cases free from fraud or undue influence, would be upheld. A wife could give her property to her husband, as was held in Jaques v. The Methodist Church, (17 John. 548.) And it was held in other cases, that when there "frere settlements, and the power of appointment was given to the wife by deed, she might make her husband the appointee, in cases likewise free from fraud. It would seem, therefore, that it was worse than useless to hold that the wife may not do directly that which it is clear she may do indi
The definition given in Prince v. Hazleton by the chancellor, in his opinion, (20 John. 514,) was this: “ A donatio
Mason, Balcom and Campbell, Justices.]
It has been considered one of the beauties of the common law, one of the advantages of its rules over codes enacted by legislatures, that those rules could be modulated, as it were, by judicial legislation, and made to conform to the changing customs and the more general legislation of the country. When the legislature has distinctly spoken through its laws, it is the duty of courts to conform. In several distinct acts in different years, the legislature has provided for the rights of married women as to their separate estates. They declare that she may give her property to whom she pleases, the same as if she were an unmarried woman. There is no good reason why she may not give it to her husband, as well as to a stranger; and there is no reason why she may not as well convey directly to him as to unite with him in a conveyance to a third party, with the agreement that the third party is to reconvey to the husband.
I am of the opinion that the deed, in this case, from the wife to the husband, vested the legal estate in him, and that there should be judgment for the defendant in this case.
Judgment for the plaintiff.