Taylor v. Taylor
Taylor v. Taylor
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On. April 29, 1878, Wm. Taylor, the plaintiff, was compelled to pay a judgment for which he had become liable as stayor for defendant in error, W. C. Taylor, and on November 17, 1879, said Wm. Taylor recovered judgment by motion against said W. C. Taylor, for the sum of $28.55, that being the amount of the judgment, interest and costs, so paid by him as stayor. Upon which judgment, execution was is-.sned and levied upon about thirty barrels of corn, as
The corn in question was produced in the year 1879, upon the land which the said Martha J. owned the title in fee simple, by inheritance from her father, lately deceased. Said W. C. and Martha J. Taylor were married about* the year 1858 or 1859.
The case went by appeal to the circuit court, where a jury having been waived it was tried by the judge, who rendered judgment in favor of the defendants in error, and the plaintiff in error, Wm. Taylor, who was substituted as defendant below instead of the officer, has appealed to this court.
The only question for determination is, was the corn in question subject to levy and sale for Ihe satisfaction of this debt of the husband?
By the act of 1849 — 50, ch. 36, sec. 1, “the interest of a husband in the real estate of his wife, acquired by her either before or after marriage, by gift, devise, descent, or in any other mode, sh dl not be sold, or disposed of by virtue of any judgment, decree, or execution against him. * * * Nor shall the husband sell his wife’s real estate during her life without her joining in the conveyance in the manner prescribed by law, in which married women shall convey land: Code, sec. 2481.
By the act of March 26, 1879, ch. 141, sec. 1, it was enacted, “That hereafter the rents and profits
The precise date of the descent last upon the wife to this land, is not definitely shown by the record, but it is said to be inherited from her late father, and it is conceded. to have been since the passage of the act of 1849-50, above cited.
The debt upon which the judgment was rendered and execution issued, was- created before the passage of the act of 1879, and the corn levied upon was raised upon the land after its passage.
It is insisted for the plaintiff in error, that the husband, W. C. Taylor, had such a vested right to the future rents and issues of the land, and consequently to the crop in question, although not in existence at the time of the passage of this act, as renders it inoperative and void as these rents and profits, as well ás all subsequent issues and profits of the land, during the continuance of the coverture, and hence, the provisions of the act in question are in effect only an extension of the exemption laws in favor of the husband, and which, under all our de
Upon the soundness or unsoundness of this proposition depends the determination of the case. It is scarcely necessary to state, that by the common law, marriage conferred upon the husband the right to the wife’s land during the coverture, and he could sell it or it could be taken in execution for his debts during that period, but the fee remained in the wife, and at the husband’s death all right to the land so acquired from the husband terminated.
This right, most clearly, was taken away by the act of 1849-50, and never attached to the land in question in this case, as the land descended to the wife after the passage of that act, even if it were conceded that the case would be different had it descended to her, and the husband and marital rights attached before the passage of this act.
In Prater and Wife v. Hoover, 1 Cold., 554, it was held -that a deed of the husband, made in 1842, to the wife’s reversionary interest in land, where the life estate fell in in 1854, was inoperative to convey any interest in the land. Although the decision in that case was placed mainly upon the ground that there could be no tenancy by the curtesy of a remainder interest in land, unless the particular estate fall in during the coverture. Yet, Judge Oarufhcrs, delivering the opinion of the court, said: “If the wife had died before the termination of the life estate, the husband’s curtesy would have entirely failed.
So it will be seen that in this case, although the devise of the remainder interest in the land to the wife took effect in 1827, and the husband had undertaken to convey it by deed in 1842, and the act in question was passed in 1849, yet the court held that upon the falling in of the life estate in 1854, the husband had no power then to sell it; nor could the right then acquired relate to the execution of the deed so as to affect the right of the wife. It was also said in this case, that “the spirit and intention of the act of 1849 is, that wives shall not be deprived of the enjoyment of their real esfafce by any act of their husband, or by his creditors even, without their solemn and free concurrence in the single mode prescribed by law.”
And in Corley v. Corley, 8 Baxt., 8, it was said by Chief Justice Nicholson, that “ under the act of 1849, as construed in Prater v. Hoover, wives cannot be deprived of the enjoyment of their real estate by any act of their husbands without their free concur
It will be noticed that in none of the cases cited, in which the act of 1849 has been construed, is there any question made as to the power of the Legislature to pass it, on account of any vested marital right of the husband in the lands of the wife. But in Lucas v. Richerick, it was said “that while the act in question changed the common law by forbidding the sale of the husband's interest during the life of the wife, for his debts, and also disables him from selling such interest unless she joins in the conveyance, that this was the only effect of the statute, and that it did not create a technical separate estate in the wife, and that the rights of the husband as to the rents and profits are not affected by the statute, and remain as before its passage”: 1 Lea, 728.
There can be no question but that this descision caused the passage by the Legislature of the act of 1879 above cited.
This case of Lucas v. Richerick, was a proceeding to subject rents to the wife's land which had already accrued, and. were then due and in arrears, to the satisfaction of the debt of the husband. But the question of any vested right in the husband, to the
We have thus reviewed at some length the principal cases .in which the act of 1849 has been construed, as furnishing a light in which the act of 1879 is also to be construed. What then was the nature and- extent of the interest which the husband, W. C. Taylor, had in 1878 to the rents or issues that might accrue from the land of his wife in 1879? He certainly had the same interest in rents that might or may accrue in any or all the year's of their joint lives, as he had in that which might accrue in 1879. That which mainly gives value to real estate is the rents, profits or issues that accrue from it, and to say that he has no right to dispose of the lands themselves, but rba-y dispose of the rents and profits during the term of their joint lives, it seems to me, would be virtually to nullify the statute.
We are unable to see how a present vested right •can exist to a thing which is not itself in- existence. Admitting that by the law as it stood before the passage of the act of 1879 the husband had the right to. receive the rents of the wife’s land as they accrued, that right so far as related to future products was a mere possibility or expectancy which might or might not even accrue. If the wife had died after the passage of the act, and before the production, of the crop of 1879, having had no issue, where would have been the right of the husband to the •crop? It can not be pretended that he would have
The Referees, in a very able and elaborate report,
The exceptions to the report will therefore be sustained, the report set aside and the judgment of the court below affirmed.
This also disposes of the case of Leland Jordan, executor, against C. B. Harrison and others, involving the same question, and renders it unnecessary to determine the other questions raised by the record in that case. The exceptions to the report of the Referees in that 'case will be sustained, the report set aside and the judgment of the circuit court affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Wm. Taylor v. W. C. Taylor and Wife
- Status
- Published