Court Opinion

ID: 6139388
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-05 14:31:03.263994+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:54:34.012350
License: Public Domain

The Surrogate.
The intestate was married to John B. Bennett, Nov. 13, 1825. At the time of her marriage, she was interested in the residuary estate of her grandfather, Daniel Nash, who had died shortly before, leaving a will. Certain property was reserved by the executors to pay an annuity bequeathed to the testator’s widow, and after her decease in September 1827, distribution being made, eight shares of stock in the Union Bank, in the city of New York, were set apart and allotted to the intestate, Sarah Bennett, as her share of that portion of the residuary estate of her grandfather. The stock was transferred to her name in May, 1836, and her husband drew the dividends on it from that time until November, 1848, although she died in February, 1837. John B. Bennett died in September, 1852, never having administered on the estate of his wife, and a question now arises between his administrator and her administrator, whether the stock belongs to his estate or to her estate. On the facts as detailed, our law would give the property to the administrator of the husband, but all the parties being domi*88died in Connecticut, it is urged that the laws of that State control the case. That being the place where the contract of marriage was made and where it was dissolved by death, as well as the place of domicil, there appears to be no objection to the proposition. By the Connecticut Statute of Distributions, and the decisions under it, the case of a married woman, dying intestate, stands on the same footing as that of other in-testates, her kindred succeeding to her personalty, and the husband having no interest, the provision of the statute 29, Car. 11, c. 3, that the Statute of Distributions shall not prejudice the title of the husband, not having been enacted in Connecticut. The right of Mrs. Bennett to a share of the estate of her grandfather, accrued before coverture, but the legal title to the assets was in the executor until distribution was made. Though the meritorious cause of the transfer existed before her marriage, yet the transfer was in fact made after; and though previous to the transfer, she had a general interest in the testator’s residuary' estate, she had no title to these particular shares of stock, until they were actually transferred to her, in satisfaction of her interest in the residue.
The husband, during his life-time, performed no act constituting a reduction of the stock into possession. His receipt of the dividends only reduced the dividends into possession, and not the stock. The only question, therefore, that I see requiring determination, is, whether it was necessary to reduce the stock into possession in order to make it the property of the husband. Though there have been conflicting decisions on this subject at Common Law, the English rule seems now to be well established, that dioses in action, and stocks of the wife, whether acquired before or after coverture, survive to the wife unless reduced into possession by the husband in his life-time. (Lawrence vs. Beverleigh, 2 Keb., 841; Garforth vs. Bradley, 2 Vesey Senr., 676 ; Richards vs. Richards, 2 B. & Adol., 452; Philliskirk vs. Pluckwell, 2 M. & S., 395; Nash vs. Nash, 2 Madd., 133 ; Gaters vs. Madeley, 6 Mees & W., 423; Sherrington vs. Yate-*89Mees & W. 855; Hart vs. Stephens, 6 Q. B. 937; Scarpellini vs. Atcheson, 7 Q. B., 864. Scawen vs. Blunt, 7 Vesey, 294.) But the case before me is to be decided according to the law of the State of Connecticut, and the decisions of her tribunals must be received as authority to show what the law there is. In Griswold vs. Penniman, 2 Conn. 564, it was decided that a share of personal estate accruing to a married woman by the intestacy of her father, during coverture, belonged to the husband, though he died before her, and before distribution. In Cornwell vs. Hoyt, 7 Conn. R., 420, it was said that “ a note to a wife is payable to the husband, and can be sued by him or his representatives.” In Beach vs. Norton, 8 Conn. R., 71, it was held that the husband, after his wife’s death, might recover in his own name, a promissory note made to her during coverture. In Whittlesey vs. McMahon, 10 Conn., 137, the wife inherited lands after marriage, sold them, and took notes in her own name, which were disposed of by her husband after her decease. The Court held, that the notes were his property, “ from the time they were given; he might have sued upon and recovered them in his own name, either during the life of the wife, or after her decease.” In Morgan vs. The Thames Bank, 14 Conn., 99, the wife, during coverture, received a transfer of stock in her name to satisfy a legacy accruing after marriage. It was decided that the title, on the transfer, vested the stock immediately in the husband, the Court saying, “ no rule is better established, than that personal property, accruing to the wife during coverture, including ohoses in action, vests immediately in her husband, on the principle that husband and wife are one in law, and her existence, in legal consideration, is merged in his.” Baldwin vs. Carter, 17 Conn., 208, shows that the husband does not take as administrator or as “ heir,” but in virtue of his marital right. In The Fourth Ecclesiastical Society in Middletown vs. Mather, 15 Conn., 587, the wife having lands loefore marriage, sold them during coverture, and took a promissory note in her own name; and it was held that the note, when made, became the property *90of the husband, although he had not taken it into possession before the wife’s decease. The Court observed “ it is quite unnecessary for us now to examine the state of the Common Law, regarding the right of the husband to choses in action, accruing to the wife during coverture, and whether the husband may sue alone, or must, or may join his wife as plaintiif in an- action to recover them, because our Courts, by a uniform course of decisions, founded, as they believe, upon the principles of Common Law, have holden that such a chose m action vests absolutely in the husband, and such is the settled law of this State.” (See 1 Swift's Dig., 93 ; Reeves Domestic Relations, 60; Fitch vs. Ayer, 2 Conn., 143; Winton vs. Barnum, 19 Conn., 171.)
This then is the law of Connecticut, and it is useless to refer to decisions in the English Courts or elsewhere, in conflict with it. Nothing remains but to apply the law as we find it, to the case in hand. It seems to have been admitted, in Griswold vs. Penniman, that as to property belonging to the wife before marriage, being choses in action, if the husband does not reduce them into possession during coverture, “ they survive to the wife, if she outlives him, or to her administrator, if she does not.” The only question remaining open, therefore, is, whether the eight shares of Union Bank Stock, in controversy, accrued to the wife during coverture. If they did, they immediately became the property of the husband; if they did not, they remained her property, and passed on her decease to her administrator, the husband not having reducd them into actual possession before his death. I think the date of the transfer of the stock settles this point. Mrs. Bennett’s interest in her grandfather’s estate accrued before coverture, and if that had remained open and unsettled till after her decease, it would have passed to her administrator. But that undivided share or interest was terminated after her marriage, by a partition, division, or distribution. It was extinguished and satisfied by her portion being allotted to her in severalty. Having ceased to exist, that undivided interest is not now the subject *91of controversy. She took, in satisfaction, or in lieu of her undivided interest in the whole estate, an absolute right in the entirety of a portion. Again, although previous to the transfer she had an interest in her grandfather’s estate, yet the actual legal title and possession were in the executors, and consequently her legal title to the particular stock in question accrued by the transfer, and at the instant of the transfer, although the consideration accrued previous to coverture. In this respect the case is analogous to that presented in the Ecclesiastical Society vs. Mather, where the wife having lands before coverture, sold them after marriage, and took a note in her own name. The property there was actually her own when she married, and yet the note was held to be her husband’s, because the new form in which she had placed her property was such as by the rule of law vested it immediately in him. It seems to me that it cannot make any difference whether the meritorious cause or consideration leading to the transfer of the personal property to the wife, attached before or after coverture, the principle of law which regulates these transactions being applicable to the transfer, or if a note, to the malting of the note, and not to the meritorious cause of the transfer, or to the consideration of the note.
It was suggested on the argument, that it might be worthy of consideration, whether the transfer of stock is not governed by the local law, so as to oust the lex domicilii. That is true in one sense, but the doctrine relates to the forms of transfer directed by the local law, and not to the rights of parties, or to the legal effect of a transfer when correctly made. (Story's Conflict Laws, § 383; 2 Kent. Com., 430; 3 Burge Com., 750-2.) The decree must direct payment to Mr. Bennett’s administrator for distribution among his next of kin, according to the laws of Connecticut, and treating the stock in dispute as his property.