McKnight ex rel. Gideon v. McKnight
McKnight ex rel. Gideon v. McKnight
Opinion of the Court
The complainant states that she is a daughter and one of the heirs at law of Anthony Preston, deceased, who died intestate, seized, of considerable real estate, leaving a widow and five other children besides the complainant.
That without such ante-nuptial agreement the title of her husband as tenant by the courtesy, has not accrued, by reason of there having been no entry by her or him upon any part of the premises, but that the whole of said estate has remained awaiting partition and subject to dower. The pray of the claimant was, that a decree be passed for the purpose of carrying into effect the ante-nuptial agreement, and that her husband be decreed to have no estate or interest in the premises, and that the creditors be enjoined from further proceedings, &c.
The defendants answering, admitted the facts as stated in the bill That the husband of the complainant had issue by her born alive, and was entitled as tenant by the courtesy inchoate (his wife being still alive) to a life interest in one undivided fifth part, subject to the widow’s dower in the whole. That if any ante-nuptial contract was made it never was reduced to writing, and is therefore null and void, so far as the defendants are concerned. That in point of law, the possession of the joint coparceners, and the reception of the rents and profits of the guardian, is equivalent to a reception thereof by the infant coparceners, and that the complainant, as one of the coparceners, has had an actual legal seizin of said estate. That the pendency of the partition proceedings can not effect their right to enforce their judgments.
Sam’l Chitten, counsel for the defendants, says the grounds alleged in the bill for equitable interposition on be
It is conceded that no settlement has ever been made. An agreement to settle is all that is relied upon for the complainant. Whether such agreement, if it ever had existence at all, was in writing or by parol, the allegations of the bill furnish no information; but as no written agreement is produced, and its non-production is wholly unaccounted for, we are warranted in assuming that if any agreement was in point made it was by parol. It is not proved that any agreement at all was written or parol was made. The only evidence touching this question is found in the deposition of Mrs. McKnight, the mother of the husband, and Mrs. Preston, the mother of the complainant. The affidavit of Mr. Gideon to the allegations of the bill is not evidence (certainly not upon a final hearing.) The testimony of the two mothers apart from all bias, is altogether too loose and indefinite to establish the fact of the existence of any agreement at all, and if deemed by the Court sufficient to establish the existence of an agreement, is yet so loose that it is impossible for the Court to give effect to it by decree.
But we insist that an ante-nuptial parol marriage agreement, even if a post-nuptial settlement, in pursuance of its terms, and reciting the fact of such agreement, be executed, and that too before the lien of the creditor attaches by judgment or execution, is yet void as to the creditor of the husband, whose debt has existence before the execution of the settlement. See 1st Story’s Equity, 366 & 367; and Reade vs. Livingston, 3 Johnson, Ch. R., 480, and authorities cited. If we are right in this position, then the bill of the complainant must be dismissed. As a femme covert she can only be entertained when suing separate from her husband, to enforce or protect an existing separate right or interest. As
On October 26, 1853, the Court by its decree dismissed the bill with costs, and dissolved the injunction.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Ann E. McKnight, by her next friend Jacob Gideon v. James M. McKnight and James M. Small, John F. Dyer, Esau and John F. Pickerell, William and James H. McVeigle
- Status
- Published