French v. Waterman
French v. Waterman
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court:
The case is as follows: In March, 1876, the appellee, Simon Waterman, brought this suit to subject the lands in the bill mentioned to the payment of a note executed by the appellant, Laura J. French and her husband, James S. French, for the payment of the sum of $333.31 to said Waterman on the 18th of December, 1874. It appeared from the original and amended bills of the plaintiff, and the exhibits filed therewith, that on the same day the land in question was conveyed to the appellant, Laura J. French, she and her husband united in a deed conveying the same, in trust, to a trustee, to secure, first, the
Accordingly, on the 28th day of April, 1875, the said Laura J. French and her husband, and the trustees and creditors in the trust deeds of 5th of February, 1874, and 20th of April, 1874, in consideration of said sum of $5,000, paid and applied as aforesaid, united in conveying said tract of land to the said Robert S. French as trustee for the said Laura J. French and her children, upon the same trusts and with the same limitations declared and set forth in said trust deed of March 11th, 1859, executed by James McCulloch.
The appellee, Waterman, having set forth all these facts, made the appellant, Laura J. French, and her children, and husband, and the trustees and beneficiaries in each of the said deeds of trust, defendants; called upon the parties secured by said deeds to answer and say how much, if anything, was due them respectively, and asked for all necessary accounts to he taken, and asked for a decree to subject the land in question to the payment of his claim, claiming that inasmuch as dhe note for the same was executed before the conveyance of April the 28th, 1875, said land was chargeable therewith.
On the 6th of June, 1878, the cause came on to he heard upon the answer of the infant defendants by guardian ad litem, appointed by the court, a general demurrer filed by Laura J. French and her husband to the original and amended hill, and upon said bills taken for confessed as to all of the other defendants. Whereupon the court, by decree entered in the cause,
First. An account of the separate estate of Laura J. French in the tract of land conveyed to her by deed of E. E. Garnett and wife, of November 6th, 1871; of the fee simple and annual value of the same; and also of the balance of her separate estate, if any, liable for the plaintiff’s debt under the deed of April 28th, 1875, filed as an exhibit with the amended bill; and to report whether the separate estate which the said Laura J. French had under the deed from E. E. Garnett is liable for the plaintiff’s debt.
Secondly. To take an account of the plaintiff’s debt, and of all other debts constituting liens upon said separate estate, with their priorities, if any.
On the 12th day of October, 1878, the commissioner filed his report under said decree, by which it was made to appear that there was due to Rohert E. Garnett, on account of amounts paid by him on the Tazewell lands, $650 with interest and $536.88 with interest, which constituted the first lien, and the'plaintiff’s debt of $333.31, which constituted the second lien, and that all the other liens thereon had been paid; that the land was worth $4,277.50, and its annual value $150.
This report was recommitted, and again reported without change.
In June, 1879, James S. French answered. And on the 7th of November exceptions were filed by Laura J. French and her children to both reports of the commissioner:
1st. Because E. E. Garnett was allowed two debts stated above without proof that any debt was due him at all.
2d.. Because the plaintiff, Waterman, was allowed a debt of $407.36 as a charge on the separate estate of Laura J. French, when it appeared by the record that the separate estate she had when she executed the negotiable note filed with the bill, was subsequently sold for a valuable consideration; sold and con
On the same day these exceptions were filed, a decree was entered overruling them, confirming the commissioner’s report,- and appointing commissioners to sell so much of the land as was necessary to pay the debts appearing to be due by the said commissioner’s report. No action was taken under this decree, and on the 8th of June, 1881, a decree was entered in the cause setting aside and annulling the decree of November 7th, 1879, as having been improvidently entered, and appointing the sheriff of the county receiver in the cause to rent out the property until the further order of the court, either for a part of the crop or for a monied rent, and either by private contract or at public auction. The appellants then applied to this court for an appeal, which was allowed on the 18th of April, 1882, by one of the judges.
The first error assigned here is, that it was erroneous not to sustain the demurrer of the said Laura J. French and her husband to the amended bills, and to dismiss the same, as showing upon their face that the plaintiff had no right to subject either the land itself or its rents and profits to the payment of the debts due him. That conceding the debt to have been chargeable upon the rents and profits of the land, so long as it was held by Laura J. French under the deed from R. E. Garnett, conveying the same to her separate use, it was not a lien upon them so as to affect the title of a bona fide purchaser of the land.
And this is the first question to be passed upon in this court: Can the debt of the appellee, Waterman, be held to have constituted a specific lien on the land in question, by the execution of the note to Waterman, so as to bind the land held by Laura J. French as her separate property in the hands of Robert S. French, her trustee, holding it upon the trust and limitations cited above? This question must be considered with reference to the claim of Waterman alone, he being at that time the only
The obligation in question given'to Waterman is merely a contract to pay, not saying out of what it is to be paid, or by what means it is to be paid.
In the case of Owens v. Dickenson, 1 Craig and Phillips, 52, Lord Cottenham, speaking of an engagement in writing of a married woman, observed : “ Now that document alone, within the authority of cases which have been decided, would have been operative upon her separate estate, but not by way of an execution of a power. * * * It cannot be an execution of a power, because it neither refers to the power nor to the subject-matter of the power. * * * Besides, as was argued in the case of Murray v. Barlee, 3 M. & K. 209, if a married woman enters into several agreements of this sort, and all the parties come to have satisfaction out of her separate estate, they are paid pari passu, whereas, if the instruments took effect as appointments under a power, they would rank according to the priorities of their dates. It is quite clear, therefore, that there is nothing in such a transaction which has any resemblance to the execution of a power.”
The established doctrine of the English chancery is, that the general engagement of the wife shall operate upon her personal property, shall apply to the rents and profits of her real estate, and that her trustees shall be obliged to apply the personal estate, and the rents and profits when they arise, to the satisfaction of such general engagement. But this court has not used any direct process against the separate estate of the wife. And, as was remarked by Lord Thurlow in the case of Hulme v. Tenant, 1 Leading Cases in Equity, 509: “I know of no case where the general engagement of the wife has been carried to the extent of decreeing that the trustees of her real estate shall make conveyance of that real estate and by sale, mortgage or otherwise raise the money to satisfy that general engagement on the
It cannot be contended in this case that the Waterman debt is secured in such a mode as to constitute a specific lien upon the estate of Mrs. French. It is evidenced by her note, and was chargeable on her estate held under the deed from Garnett, conveying the land in question to her as and for her separate estate; but before any suit was instituted on it, and before in any way it had been made a specific lien on the estate, the land was sold to Robert S. French for a valuable consideration, to be held under the terms and conditions and limitations of the trust created by the McCulloch deed, which have been stated above. -She could occupy, possess and enjoy the estate, take the rents, issues and profits thereof, for and during her life, for her support and for the sustenance of her children ; and the power to sell the estate was given to her upon the condition that she should invest the proceeds in property to be held upon the same conditions and limitations. She was without the power to alien
The deed of settlement in this case is not assailed, but is exhibited with and made a part of the bill, and the rights of Mrs. French, and her power of disposition of the trust estate, are limited and controlled by its terms. A court will always treat a deed or instrument as being the thing it purports to be, unless the contrary is shown. And it is incumbent upon the party impeaching it to show that it is not what it purports to be. Upon the face of the bills in the cause, and the exhibits filed therewith, it appears that Mrs. French was, under the deed in question, without the power to encumber or to dispose of the trust estate, except for reinvestment under the same restrictions as are contained in the first settlement; and, under the decided cases, there was nothing which the court could subject to the satisfaction of the Waterman debt, and the demurrer should have been sustained to the original and amended bills, and the same dismissed.
As to the Garnett debt, it had not then been set up in any form by him, and although it has been reported by the com
Decree reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- French, By, &c. v. Waterman
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Married Woman—Separate Estate—General Engagements.—The note, or other general engagement of a married woman, owning separate estate, creates no specific lien on such estate. To satisfy the same, the personal property and the rents and profits of the real property of such estate, may be sold by decree of court when the wife’s interest is absolute, and there is no restraint upon its alienation. But, in no case, should the real estate be decreed to be sold to satisfy such engagement. 2. Idem—Idem—Practice in Chancery.—-A bill to subject feme coverte’s separate estate to payment of her note, or other general engagement, filed after her alienation of such estate bona fide for valuable consideration, presents no case meet for the consideration of a court of equity, and will be dismissed on demurrer. 3. Idem—Idem—Creditors by Note, &c.—Where land is settled on wife for life to use for support of self and children, remainder to her children surviving her, but to her husband, should he survive both her and them, with power to her to sell trust corpus, and reinvest proceeds subject to same trust and limitations, creditors, by her general engagements, are entitled only to her ratable portion of the remnant of those rents and profits after deducting the support of herself and children. 4. Idem—Idem—Specific Lienors.—Where in suit by such creditors it is not alleged nor apparent that such remnant exists, the bill will be dismissed, but without prejudice quoad such creditors as appear to hold specific liens on the trust property, yet who have not set them up in the suit, although reported, without sufficient proof, by the commissioner.