Holliday v. McMillan
Holliday v. McMillan
Opinion of the Court
Prior to 1868-’69 a widow was entitled to dower in the land of which her husband died, seized and possessed, and not as at common law of all the land of which he had been seized at any time during coverture. The act of 1868-’69 restored the common law right of dower. In Sutton v. Askew, 66 N. C., 172, it was held that the act of 1868-’69 did not operate to give the wife an inchoate right of dower where the marriage was before the statute, and the husband owned the land at the time of the marriage or before the statute, but that in such case the husband had the right to dispose of the land by sale free of any dower right. of the wife at any time during his life. How it would be where the marriage was before the act and the land acquired after the act, was left an open question, with a slight intimation that in such cage the dower right would attach.
In the case before us the marriage was before the constitution and the property acquired after the constitution. And the question is, whether by the marriage the husband acquired a vested right, not only in all the personal property which the wife had at the time of the marriage, but in all the property which she might acquire during coverture. The argument for the defendants is that the marriage contract was, that the husband should have all the property which the wife then had or should thereafter acquire, and that that contract could not be impaired by legislation or by 'the constitution; that he had a vested right in property which the wife might acquire after the marriage, as well as in property which she had at the time of the marriage, and that subsequent legislation could not deprive him of his vested rights.
It is too well settled to require either argument or authority, that vested rights can not be disturbed, but it is error to suppose that a mere expectancy, or a possibility of future acquisitions is a vested right.
The following proposition is well supported by Cooley’s Const. Lim., 360-1-2, and by numerous authorities which he cites: At the common law the husband immediately on the marriage succeeded to certain rights in the real and personal estate which the wife then possessed. These
That is conclusive of this case. Tiie property in dispute was acquired after the marriage, and before it was acquired the constitution provided that all after acquired property by the wife should be her separate property. His Honor charged the jury contrary to this doctrine and there was a verdict for the defendants. Becoming convinced of his mistake he set aside the verdict and ordered a new'trial, so •that there is no verdict upon which we can give judgment here. We must therefore affirm the order for a new trial.
It is insisted by the defendant that there is no use in allowing the plaintiff to recover, because if he do, the property will be immediately subject to the satisfaction of the defendant’s debts against the plaintiff — the plaintiff being the administrator of his deceased wife in whose name the suit was originally bought. That may or may_ not be so. He must however recover the property, to be administered according to law. We do not know what may be the liabilities of tlie wife’s estate, and we cannot administer it in this action. The claims of the defendants are not against the wife’s estate, but against the husband plaintiff in his individual capacity. And they are neither sets-off nor counter-claims in this action.
There is no error. The order below setting aside the verdict and granting a new trial is affirmed.
Concurring Opinion
Concurring. I concur in the decision in this case, but my reasons are so different from those of the Court as stated by my brother Reade, that! think I ought
I shall endeavor to show that they were not vested and that the decision in Sutton v. Askew, was founded on a mistaken view of what constitutes a vested right.
The facts of that case as taken from the printed report are in brief these: Askew and wife were married before January, 1867. Iu 1870 he was the owner of certain laud, when he acquired it does not appear. He proposed to bor
It was assumed by this Court without any authority so far as appears in the statement of the case by the Reporter, that the husband acquired the land before 1868. It was also assumed in the like absence of apparent authority that the plaintiff’s debt accrued before 1868. On these assumptions (which may perhaps be justified by the unprinted record on file) the Court concluded that the act of 1868,-’69, restoring to married women their dower at common law, was void as to the husband, and although he did not oppose but consented to the wife’s claim, was void as to his creditors : That the act was valid only as to marriages contracted after its passage, and that the wife’s right of dower was even during her husband’s life time, a vested estate, or at least a vested interest which the legislature could not constitutionally enlarge, abridge, or alter.
If we consider the case as a controversy between the husband and wife on the one side, and the creditors of the husband on the other, as it really was, no reason can be assigned why the principle of Hill v. Kessler, 63 N. C., 437, should not have controlled the decision. It was there held that the legislature might constitutionally exempt a debtor’s
I conceive that the right of a wife to dower during her husband’s life, can in no just sense of the words be called a vested estate or a. vested right. Bouvier in his Law Diet, under the word “ Vest,” says, “ an estate is vested in possession when there exists a right of present enjoyment,” and, “ an estate is vested in interest when there is a present fixed right of future enjoyment.” Eor these definitions he cites many acknowledged authorities, to which I will add a few, more recent:—
In Johnson v. Van Dyke, 6 McLean, 422, cited in 1 Scribner on Bower, McLeaN, J., speaking of an inchoate right to dower, says: “ Until the deatNof the husband the right
I have not seen the reasons any where stated definitely and tangibly why this right should be regarded as vested, or if not strictly and technically vested, yet partaking so far of the nature of a technical vested right as to be incapable of change by the legislature, or why it should be less within the control of that department of the government than any of the other rights and duties which arise directly and indirectly from marriage. It may be true as suggested that if it be a vested right in the sense used above, it is immaterial for what reasons it is so. But when the question is, — is it a vested right ? — is it beyond legislative action ? — it is very material to know the reasons for which it is supposed to be so. If we attempt to put in olear and definite language the reasons which are hinted or suggested in Scribner, and elsewhere, they will be seen to take one of the three following shapes : — ■
1. The rights, &c., arising from marriage are those which are embraced in the words of the ceremony of marriage. It is clear that this can not be so. No formula of marriage used b any Christian minister or officer pretends to con
2. That the law at the date of the marriage controls, and that rights accrued under and by force of that law, which although not technically vested, and left by the law uncertain and contingent, were yet so far vested as to be beyond the power of change. This merely confuses all distinctions between rights which are vested and those which are not, and would make any immediate change in any law impossible. No doubt most persons marry with the expectation that the law governing their matrimonial relations will continue indefinitely without substantial change. But the public interest will not permit expectations to arrest the progress of society.
3. These two propositions being separately too untenable to be defended, they may be combined into the third, and perhaps in union find strength. Thus combined the reasoning is expressed thus:—
Marriage is the result of contract, whatever else it may be, or may result in; in that contract is contained by necessary or rightful implication, that the respective rights and duties of the parties inter se, personal and pecuniary, direct and indirect, shall remain unchanged by any change in the law during the coverture. Or if any advocate for the doctrine of Sutton v. Askew prefers it, I^will narrow the proposition so as to include only this particular right to dower, although I can not see any reason why if it includes one incident of the marriage it should not include all; or why if it includes the direct incidents of the marriage such
A slight examination of the legislative and judicial annals of North Carolina from the earliest period at which our printed records begin, will show that this State by successive legislatures has always regarded marriage • not merely as a contract but as a social institution, and has asserted its control for the public welfare over all rights, duties, and incidents directly or indirectly resulting from it, including the whole law of succession by which I mean the devolution of property by act and operation of law upon the death of an owner, with the sole restriction that it did not claim a right to interfere with vested interests. This elaim was always upheld by the Courts wherever it was brought before them.
Our ancestors brought with them from England the common law of that country which included all such acts of parliament as from age had come to be regarded as part of it, and which were not positively inapplicable among us. This common law included all laws regulating marriage, inheritance, and the succession to property in general, and remained unaltered, so far as our printed statutes show, until 1784. Estates descended to the oldest son, they might be entailed, dower was of all lands of which the husband was seized and possessed at any time during the coverture, there was no dower of trust estates, divorces could be obtained of the legislature only, estates in joint-tenancy went to the survivor. In most of these subjects the act of 1784 changed the law, children inherited equally, estates tail were converted into fee simple, the heir apparent in tail being deprived of his expectancy, dower was limited to lands whereof the husband died seized, joint tenancy was changed into tenancy in common: All of these subjects
Among the most important óf the laws which govern the personal rights of married persons inter se are those which prescribe the causes of divorce. Until 1814 the Courts had no jurisdiction to decree a divorce; they were granted by the legislature without any rule but its own caprice. In that year the Courts were allowed to divorce for stated causes. Yet it was never supposed that this law did not act on antecedent marriages. As to dower we have seen how the act of 1784 abridged it (unless some act now
It has been seen that the decision in that case was a new departure, that if consistently applied it would have deferred for many years the general operation of many of the most important laws made at various times for nearly one hundred years, during all which time the idea on which that decision proceeds never occurred to any one; but sueh legislation whenever questioned was sustained by the Courts. I think the introduction of such a novel doctrine into the law of North Carolina would have justified a glance behind and before, at how much that was old and had stood unquestioned, it overthrew; and at how much that was untried, it introduced. I think this Court ought to hesitate long before it incorporates into the law of the State a principle so destructive of the power of the legislature, and if consistently applied, bound to result in such manifold inconvenience.
If the law existing at the date of a marriage is to be deemed a part of the contract so as to be unalterable, then
In Johnson v. Fletcher, 54 Miss., 628. (Oct. 1877), the ease was that defendant in 1872 recovered a judgment against one Dale; in 1875 an act of the. legislature exempted from execution property to a certain value; in 1876 Dale acquired a horse which in that year he sold to plaintiff; the defendant levied on the horse contending that the exemption was void as to the prior debts of Dale, It was admitted that it was so as to any property possessed by Dale at the date of the act, (1875,) hut it was contended that the act was valid as to property acquired after the act, (which is the opinion of the Court in this case) but the Court held that the creditor’s right to. subject the property of his debtor to his judgment, extended not only to the property owned by the debtor at the, date of his judgment, but to all that the debtor might acquire afterwards.
The application of the doctrine of this decision to the, present case is this: McMillan (the defendant), had a right to make his debt out of the future acquisitions of Holliday; if Holliday by the law existing at his marriage acquired
If the law be that the laws existing at the marriage can not be altered, we will have in this State Very numerous groups "of husbands and wives with different rights and duties, depending on the. dates of their marriages.' A widow married before 1784 if now living would be entitled to her dower as at common law, while she could have n© dower in a trust estate and no year’s provisions.
■ I might carry, on at any length this picture of the results of the doctrine of Sutton v. Askew, if it shall be consistently applied. Such a diversity among citizens supposed to live under one law in their most important .rights and duties, and all depending on the dates of their marriages, has never existed in any State. And what is to govern the domestic relations of those who immigrate to this State having been married abroad ? If the existing law or the domicil is a part of the contract, it must like any other contract'follow the parties and fix their personal and pecuniary rights here. Do they bring with them the laws of Germany and England, the Louisiana law of communal property, and the Illinois law of divorce for incompatibility of'temper? State v. Barnhard, in Hurd on Hab. Corp., 26. If it be said that they are governed by the law of this State, the doctrine that the law at the date of the marriage," which must mean at the domicil of the parties, is a part of the contract, must be given up. But the doctrine will not'be consistently applied as this case shows. It will stop - with the special case; widows married before 1868 (unless the decision shall be. plainly reversed, as I think it ought to be) may not be allowed their right of dower as the legislature 'declared
No authority is cited in Sutton v. Askew, except an opinion of Mr. Scribner in his work on Dower, vol. 1, ch. 1, § 7, He admits (§ 13) that a majority of the cases are opposed to his view, but cites three which he thinks directly support it. Johnson v. Van Dyke, 6 McLean, 422; (Cir. C. R.,) Royston v. Royston, 21 Georgia 161; and Moreaw v. Detchmendy, 18 Mo., 522. He says in note to § 12, that McLean, J., who sat in the first case, was inclined to think that an inchoate right of dower might be divested by the legislature, wbich leaves that case to stand upon the authority of "Wilkins, J., alone. The Georgia case is not accessible to me. In the case from. Missouri the circumstances were peculiar, and I do not think it supports' Scribner’s view. After these (§ 20) he relies upon the case in Kernan, already cited, which is not a direct, if any authority as to dower, but is directly opposed to the decision in the present case.
Against these few and uncertain authorities, he cites the following cases which, it seems to me, are clear and convincing. Jackson v. Edwards, 22 Wend., 498-519 (N. Y.,) Moore v. City of New York, 4 Sandf. 456, S. C., 4 Seld., 110; Merrill v. Shellburne, 1 N. H. 199, 214; Melozets Appeal, 17 Pa. St., 449; Weaver v. Gregg, 6 Ohio, 548; Noel v. Ewing, 9 Ind., 37; Strong v. Clem, 12 Ind., 37; Lucas v. Sawyer, 17 Iowa, 517. To which may be added Ware v. Owens, 42 Ala., 212.
It is thus seen that this .Court stands almost .if not quite alone, in its denial of the legislative power over inchoate rights of dower. It is because I thought that an inchoate
Per Curiam. Judgment affirmed.
Reference
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- WILLIAM B. HOLLIDAY, Adm'r v. ANDREW McMILLAN and another
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