Court Opinion

ID: 8008167
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:55:19.982966+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:57.876539
License: Public Domain

On Rehearing.

Sherwood, J.
This cause has been re-argued. Two points are urged why a different result should have been reached in the original opinion. They are, first, that *324Christian Mueller, the right of action for the possession of the land being in him alone, was estopped by his conduct from maintaining ejectment, and, second, that his. wife was not a proper party plaintiff. These points will be considered in the order presented.
I. Mrs. Mueller was seized of the land in fee in the ordinary way, no separate estate being created by the deed conferring title upon her. To her title, therefore,, section3395 of the statute applies: “The rents, issues, and products of the real estate of any married woman, and all money and obligations arising from the sale of such real estate and the interest of her husband in her right in any real estate which belonged to her before marriage, or which she may have acquired by gift, grant,, devise, or inheritance during coverture, shall, during coverture, be exempt from attachment, or levy of execution for the sole debts of her husband; and no conveyance made during coverture by such husband of such rents, issues, and products, or of any interest in such real estate shall be valid, unless the same be by deed executed by the wife jointly with her husband and acknowledged by her in the manner now provided by law in the case of conveyance by husband and wife of the real estate of the wife.” This statutory language would appear to be too plain to admit of and support but one meaning: that by its express terms the husband during coverture is cut off, deprived, disabled, and foreclosed from the exercise of his common law rights in his wife’s land; and this. I propose to verify.
What were the rights of the husband at common law in the land of the wife? These: he was jointly seized with her of that land; had, jure uxor is, the exclusive right to the possession of that land, its rents and profits ; could make a tenant to the principe; could lease or mortgage the land by his own deed alone, or, by his deed, without joining his wife with him, convey his marital interest in the land, which conveyance would be good during their joint Eves, and his free*325hold estate might have been seized and sold on execution. 2 Kent Com. 130, 131; 1 Bishop on Mar. Worn., sec. 529 ; Clancy on Rights, 162. If the statute I have quoted does not change the marital status of husband and wife in respect to the wife’s land as it existed at •common law, it would be impossible to conceive of any force of language or collocation of words which could accomplish that purpose. It seems too clear for argument that if heed be given to the plain letter of the statute, that no other rational conclusion can be reached but that it is a disabling statute which, by force of its own inherent potency, changes the common law relations between husband and wife, so far as concerns land held by her in severalty, and lays the iron hand of its re.strictive rigor not only on his creditors, but likewise on him, preventing them from selling under execution his interest in such land for his sole debt, and him from conveying during coverture, the “rents, issues, and products, •or of any interest in such real estate,” unless by deed executed and acknowledged conjointly with his wife. That this is the effect of the statute has been frequently so ruled by this court. Clark v. Bank, 47 Mo. 17; Hall v. Stephens, 65 Mo. 670; Warnall v. Kem, 51 Mo. 150; Silvey v. Summer, 61 Mo. 255; McBeth v. Trabue, 69 Mo. 642; Clark v. Rynex, 53 Mo. 380; Bartlett v. O’ Donoghue, 72 Mo. 563; Hord v. Taubman, 79 Mo. 101. In the case last cited it was said: “ In a conveyance made under the provisions of the statute, of the fee of the wife, the title can only be transferred as an indivisible integer, or not at all.”
In McBeth v. Trabue, supra, it was ruled that where the wife was seized in fee of the land and conveyed it in 1873, the prior sole conveyance by the husband of a portion of the land for the purpose of dedicating it as a public road, would be utterly inoperative against such subsequent deed notwithstanding the county court and the public as well as the husband, wife, and children had accepted and used the road as a public road, and that the *326grantee under the deed of 1873 could maintain trespass, against those who interfered with their rights in that portion of the land which the husband of their grantor had attempted to convey by his deed of dedication. In Bartlett v. O’ Donoghue, supra, the plaintiff brought, ejectment and after showing title in the wife, in order to show title in himself offered, without objection, an unacknowledged deed from the husband and wife to himself. After adverting to the provisions of the statute already quoted, and ruling that as to the wife no title passed by the deed, if was said: “Nor can it be held to convey the marital right of possession of the husband, inasmuch as the statute provides that no conveyance of such interest shall be valid unless the same be by deed executed by the wife jointly with the husband and acknowledged by her in the manner provided for the conveyance by husband and wife of the real estate of the wife. 2 Wag. Stat. 935, sec. 14. The plaintiff, therefore, has failed to show any right of possession whatever, and the judgment cannot be permitted to' stand.”
This review of other cases brings me to that of Kanaga v. R. R., 76 Mo. 207, upon which defendants, with all confidence, rely. In that case it was ruled that the', husband and wife’s consenting that a railroad company should enter upon the land of the wife, and construct its road, would prevent the husband and wife from subsequently maintaining ejectment against such company,, and that the estoppel of the husband, by his conduct in the premises, would prevent either husband or wife, or both of them, from recovering possession of the land during the existence of the marriage relation. The cases of Bartlett v. O’ Donoghue, and of McBeth v. Trabue, supra, were pressed upon our attention both in argument, and in brief in Kanaga’s ease, but passed unnoticed, or, if considered by this court at all, were evidently considered as having no bearing on the question then at issue. So that the rulings of this court on this subject, when *327placed in juxtaposition, maybe summarized thus: That the marital right of possession of a husband in his wife’s real estate, held by her in severalty, under the provisions of the statute respecting married women, cannot pass by his sole deed, and such deed is utterly worthless as a basis for a recovery of the possession of the premises by the grantee of the husband in an action of ejectment, but that while this is so, if the husband, instead of making a void and valueless deed executed by himself alone, should give a railroad company parol permission to construct its road over his wife’s land, and the road be accordingly constructed, this would, during coverture, prevent any recovery of the land thus dedicated, and his right to the possession of the dedicated strip as well as that of his wife be cut off during that period. I freely confess my inability to perceive the force of the reasoning which reaches such an anomalous result; which denies to the sole deed of the husband, though executed and hedged about with all the solemnities known to the law, any' more operation than a sheet of blank paper, and yet bestows upon his “word of mouth f his oral permission, such title-conveying force !
I am unable to see why his act in pais can cut a wider swath than his solemnly executed deed. Speaking on this point an eminent author says: “The importance of fixing as far as may be, by proper limits, the doctrine of estoppel in pais, in its application to titles of real estate, seems to require some additional illustrations to what has already been said. And, in the first place, an estoppel in pais, where it applies, is as effectual as a deed, Tout no more so. So that, if the party doing the act could not have made a deed of the land in question, his act cannot create an estate by estoppel in the same.” 3 Washburn on Real Prop. 77. The principle thus enunciated seems so obviously correct, so self-evident, that it should command the immediate' assent of every legal mind. If its correctness be conceded, then Kanaga’ s case was improperly decided, in that it empowers the *328husband to do more by his act in pais than he could by his deed, and by his deed he could do nothing. In Tennessee, where a married woman’s act, similar in all respects to the one at bar, fell under discussion, the Supreme Court, after adverting to the common law doctrine respecting the husband’s marital interest in his wife’s land, his ability to convey that interest by his sole deed, which would bestow upon the purchaser his freehold estate, having a duration commensurate with the joint lives of husband and wife, possibly during the life of the husband, and rendering the wife powerless either at law or in equity to regain, during coverture, the possession of the land, remarked respecting the act referred to : “By that act the common law is materially changed. It not only protects the husband’s interest in the lands of the wife from seizure and sale by his creditors, during her life, but it likewise disables the husband to sell or dispose of such interest, by bis own act, during the wife’s lifetime, without her joining in the conveyance. By the necessary construction of this act, the wife cannot be deprived either of the title, or possession of her lands, except by her own voluntary act.” Coleman v. Satterfield, 2 Head 259. To the same effect is Jenney v. Gray, 5 Ohio St. 45.
If, as already stated, the statute under .consideration is a disabling statute, one whereby a husband is shorn of his common law marital interest in his wife’s land, so far as any disposition of it is concerned, it must needs follow that his situation toward his wife’s land is precisely the same as hers towards his land, the statute enabling her to convey her interest in his land by complying with certain conditions; and the statute disabling him from conveying his interest in her lands unless upon compliance with similar conditions. In a word, under the act in question, the husband as well as the wife, labors under the disabilities of coverture, and can do no more than could the wife in similar circumstances. Speaking on this subject of a married woman’s disability *329in this regard, a distinguished writer says : “A married woman could not do by acts in pais what she could not do by deed. She could not by her own act enlarge her legal capacity to convey an estate. To say that one might by acts in the country, by admission, by concealment, or by silence, in effect do what could not be done by deed, would be practically to dispense with all the limitations the law had imposed.” Bigelow on Estop. 510. Applying to the case at bar the foregoing reasoning and authorities, I think it abundantly clear that to continue to give' to the statute in question the construction already placed upon it by this court, would be to overthrow, set at naught, and nullify its provisions. I am, therefore, constrained to say that in my opinion Kanaga’s case, in so far as it conflicts with the views herein expressed, should be no longer adhered to.
Another reason occurs why there can be no estoppel in pais in this case, and that is, that the deed which conveyed the land in controversy to Mrs. Mueller in fee, was on record, and notice to all the world of just where the title was. The doctrine of estoppel cannot be successfully invoked where everything is equally well known to both parties, or where, though ignorant of the true state of the title at the time of the occurrence of the act which is claimed as an estoppel, the party making such claim had the means of ascertaining the truth of the matter, by reference to the records. 3 Washburn on Real Prop. 74; Hill v. Epley, 7 Casey 331; Brant v. Virginia, &c. Co., 3 Otto 326.
II. I come now to consider whether the wife was a proper party plaintiff, and if not a proper party, the effect of such misjoinder on the judgment recovered in the lower court. Section 3515, Eevised Statutes, designates seven causes of demurrer, the last being: £ £ That a party plaintiff, or defendant, is not a necessary party to a complete determination of the action.” And sec*330tion 3519, lb., provides that if no objection be taken to the petition, either by demurrer or answer, the defendant shall be deemed to have waived the same, except only that the petition does not state facts, etc., and that the court has no jurisdiction, etc. As the defendants raised no such objection in the lower court, in the manner the statute has pointed out, they certainly cannot raise it here, for the first time, granting that the objection was in all respects a tenable one, if opportunely made. Edmondson v. Phillips, 73 Mo. 57; Kellogg v. Malin, 62 Mo. 429.
At common law it was necessary for the husband to join his wife with him in an action to recover the real estate of the wife. 1 Chitty’s Plead. 84; Weller v. Baker, 2 Wilson 414; Thacher v. Phinney, 7 Allen 146; 1 Bulst. 21. And, certainly, under our code, which permits that all parties in interest may be made plaintiffs (sec. 3464), and which requires that actions be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest (sec. 3462), it would seem that the joinder of the wife with the husband in an action for the possession of her realty, would be unobjectionable, as she is the meritorious cause; and if the common law rule has not been abrogated by our code it would seem that she must be joined. It has, however, been otherwise decided in this state, the husband being regarded as the only necessary party plaintiff in actions for the recovery of her lands. Gray v. Dryden, 79 Mo. 106; Cooper v. Ord, 60 Mo. 420, and cases cited. But waiving all that, say that in the present case she was improperly joined with her husband, such joinder is not a fatal error, and may be corrected in this court by striking out her name as party plaintiff, and leaving the judgment to stand in the name of the husband alone. This point has been so ruled in at least two cases by this court, and has thus passed into precedent. Cruchon v. Brown, 57 Mo. 38; Weil v. Simmons, 66 Mo. 617. And our statute expressly authorizes it, *331by permitting the trial court after final judgment in furtherance of justice, and on such terms as may be just, to amend, in affirmance of the judgment, any record, pleading, process, entries, returns, or other proceedings in the cause, by adding or striking out the name of a party, or a mistake in any other respect, etc., and providing that such judgment shall not be reversed or annulled therefor; (section 3570). And section 3582, after prohibiting a judgment from being “stayed, reversed, or impaired, or in any way affected,” in consequence of a great number of enumerated mistakes, proceeds to enter a similar prohibition against such reversal because of “any informality in entering a judgment, or making up the record thereof,” or “for any other default or negligence of any clerk or officer of the court or of the parties, or of their attorneys by which neither party shall have been prejudiced.” These ample provisions are followed by those of section 2583, whereby it is.provided that “the omissions, imperfections, defects, and variances in the preceding section enumerated, and all others of a like nature, not being against the right and justice of the matter of the suit, and not altering the issue between the parties on the trial, shall be supplied and amended by the court where the judgment shall be given, or by the court into which such judgment shall be removed by writ of error, or by appeal.” Assuredly, if the legislature has the power to confer authority on the courts to make such ah amendment as is above suggested, then doubtless such authority has been conferred. If such language does not confer it, then the statute is meaningless.
This matter is discussed at large in 8 Central Law Journal, 340, where the authorities and our statutory provisions are commented on quite fully. In New York, from which state we have derived our code, it is a matter of common occurrence to make such amendments as have been mentioned, and no one of the great array of learned lawyers who abound in that state has ever ques*332tioned tlie power of the courts, either trial or appellate, under sucha statute. Ackley v. Tarbox, 31 N. Y. 564; Angell v. Cook, 2 N. Y. Sup. Court, 175; 2 Wait’s Prac. 506, et seq. ; 7 Ib. 186.
For these reasons the judgment should, as at first
ordered, stand affirmed.
Norton and Black, JJ., concur.
Henry, O. J., and Ray, J., Dissenting. We adhere to the original opinion filed in this cause, but dissent from this.