Edwards v. Spearman
Edwards v. Spearman
Opinion of the Court
The only point argued on the appeal respected the liability of the defendant, Mrs. Spearman, for the acts of her husband, during the coverture, in wasting the property of their wards. It is certain that her guardianship bond, signed by her, together with her husband and the sureties, as was observed by Lord Redesdale, in the case of Adair vs. Shaw, 1 Sch. and Lef., 284, with respect to an administration bond of a feme covert, was nothing. It was void at law, and a Court of Equity would charge her no farther than she would be chargeable on its own principles without it. I have- found no authority directly applicable to the subject. It is settled, that if a feme executrix, or administratrix, marry, she is liable for any devastavit the husband may afterwards commit; it is said, because it was her folly to take a husband who would so misconduct himself. So, I suppose, it would be, upon like reason, if a woman, being guardian, should marry, and thus put into the husband’s hands power to waste the ward’s estate. In the case of Beynon vs. Gollins, as reported 2 Bro. Ch. Rep., 323, it was held, that where administration had been granted to the wife during the marriage, she was not liable for the devas-tavit of the husband, afteir his death.- Lord Thurlow lays it down, that the action for devastavit would not lie at law, where the executorship was taken in the name of the wife, during the coverture, if she renounced upon her husband’s death. In the. case of Adair vs. Shaw, before referred to, however, Lord Redesdale declares the case of Beynon vs. Gollins to have been wrongly reported, and that the point represented to have been-decided in Brown did not arise in the case. In that case, administration was taken out in the name of the wife, during the coverture. The principal question in the case was, whether the representatives of the husband were liable in equity for his devastavit, no action having been brought against him in his life time, and being gone at law upon his death. Another question was, whether the wife was liable for the husband’s devastavit, and she was held to be so liable to creditors, inas
It was argued that Mrs. Spearman was appointed testamentary guardian of her children, by the will of her former husband, and that the rule applies to her which would apply to a feme executrix or administratrix marrying. This fact is mentioned by the defendant in her answer, and is made no part of the complainant’s case. It does not appear from the decree that the point was made to the Court below. It does not appear that she ever acted under the appointment of the will. I give no opinion as to what her liability would have been, if she hkd assumed and acted under the appointment of the will which she put it into his power to do by marrying. ' The appointment w,as made by the Court, without reference to the will, which, it appears by the decree, was not brought to the view of the Court. The guardianship has since been revoked, and the estate put out of the defendant’s power. For these reasons, we must regard it as an original appointment by the Court, and leave out of question the appointment of the will. The decree must, therefore, be affirmed, and the motion dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.