Porter v. Porter
Porter v. Porter
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
At common law a divorce a vinculo matrimonii, could only be granted for causes existing before the marriage. By the Virginia statute, the circuit courts have jurisdiction of suits for annulling or affirming mar
In this case the decree of divorce simply dissolves the bonds of matrimony and nothing more. It makes no provision concerning the estate, or the maintenance of the parties or either of them. Their respective rights of propei’ty are undisturbed, except only so far as they may be affected by the dissolution of the marriage. It is more accurate to say that the rights of property of the husband and wife are to be found, where the dissolution of the marriage leaves them, than to say that they remain, where the law of the marriage placed them.
This is true as to the wife’s personal property. For it is well settled, that upon the dissolution of the marriage by a decree of divorce which does not otherwise direct, the wife’s choses in action, which had not been previously reduced to possession by the husband, or specifically assigned by him, revert immediately to her. But her choses in action, and her personal chattels, which had been reduced to possession by the husband prior to the divorce, had become absolutely vested in him as his property, and could not be di
If the husband retains an interest in the wife’s real estate after th,e divorce, it must be either as tenant by the marital right or tenant by the curtesy.
Although the tenancy by the curtesy is ordinarily, to appearance, a mere prolongation of the tenancy by the marital right, enabling the husband to hold for his own life what otherwise would terminate with the life of the wife, yet the tenancy by the marital right attaches to some estates to which the tenancy by the curtesy cannot attach, though there should be issue of' the marriage, as, for example, estates for life—even estates pur autre vie. And to other estates it cannot attach, in which there may be curtesy, as, for example, estates held for the separate use of the wife. In such estates, under some circumstances, there may be curtesy; but it is of their very essence not to be subject to the marital right.
It is the general doctrine, that marriage alone, without the birth of issue, casts upon the husband an estate in all the wife’s real property in possession, whether of inheritance or of freehold for life, during the joint lives of husband and wife. The death of the husband, or of the wife, ends this estate. (1 Bishop on the Law of Mar. Women, § 529.) It is a freehold
If the foregoing principles are sound, which are well supported by high authority, it is clear that the
After the birth of issue, the husband is entitled to an estate for his own life, and in -his own right, as tenant by the curtesy initiate. Co. Litt. 351 a, 30 a, 124 b; Schermerhorn v. Miller, 2 Cowen R. 439. He then becomes sole tenant to the lord, and is alone entitled to do homage for the land, and to receive homage from the tenant of it, which, until issue born, must be done by husband and wife. 2 Bl. Com. 126: Litt., § 90; Co. Litt. 67 a, 30 a. Then he may forfeit bis estate for life by committing a felony, which, until issue born, he could not do, because the wife was the tenant. 2 Bl. Com. 126; Roper Hus. & Wife 47. And, after issue born, the husband’s estate will not be defeated by the attainder of the wife; for the tenancy continues, he being sole tenant. 1 Hale P. C. 359; Co. Litt. 351 a, 40 a; Bro. Abr. Forf. 78. Does it follow that it will not be defeated by a divorce, which dissolves the marriage? That is the important question in this case, because there is issue of the marriage, whereby the plaintiff in error became tenant by the curtesy of his wife’s lands, of which she now holds possession, and from which to eject her he brought this suit. We have seen that he could not hold it as tenant by the marital right. But having by the birth
To constitute a tenancy by the curtesy, there are four requisites, the last of which is the death of the wife. The tenancy of the husband by the curtesy is initiate upon the birth of issue. It is consummate on the death of the wife. The attainder of the wife cannot prevent its consummation. Notwithstanding her attainder, at her death, the husband living, it will be consummate. Therefore the attainder of the wife cannot defeat it. But the divorce which breaks the bands of matrimony perpetually dissolves the marital relation between them, so that the man ceases forever to be the husband and the woman to be the wife, must necessarily defeat its consummation. It can never be consummate by tbe death of the wife. . As is said by Mr. Bishop: “Hpon the birth of living issue, capable of taking her estate of inheritance by heirship, he (the husband) becomes tenant by the curtesy initiate of it; but the death of the wife is necessary to make such tenancy consummate, and there can be no death of the wife if the woman ceases to be a wife before her death.” 2 Bishop on Mar. & Divorce, § 712. The attainder of the wife could not overturn the foundation upon which
The question as to the relative merit or demerit of the parties can have no bearing upon the decision of this cause. It might have had a very important influence in the decision of questions relating to the estate and maintenance of the parties in the divorce case, if the court had undertaken in that cause, as authorized by the statute, to decree concerning them. But in a possessory action to eject the defendant from the possession of her freehold of inheritance, with which she was invested before the marriage, the case must turn upon questions involving the rights of property and possession. The plaintiff must recover upon the strength of his title or right of possession. It is only a question of property, and the plaintiff cannot avert the legal effect of a divorce upon his marital rights of property by showing that the divorce was decreed in his favor for the fault of his wife. Unless there was some rule of law for settling the rights of parties, according to their relative merit or demerit in the divorce suit, it is not perceived how that could have any legitimate influence upon the decision of this cause. The court is not aware of any such rule of law. Hor can it be perceived how such a rule could be framed or prescribed that would comport with justice, and be promotive of the public virtue.
The policy of the law is not to oppress the frail and erring, or to drive them to hopelessness and despair. It is rather to reclaim the weak and erring, and to in
Upon the whole, the court is of opinion, that upon the dissolution of the marriage all the husband’s claims to the wife’s lands which depended on the marriage were extinguished, and she was entitled to be restored to them; and that there is no error in the decree of the circuit court, and that it be affirmed.
Judgment aeeirmed.
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