Court Opinion

ID: 6574230
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:32:45.752531+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:01.470122
License: Public Domain

Hosmer, Ch. J.
I will first put out of the case certain questions made, arising on facts apparent on the motion, but subserving no purpose, except to encumber the record. It is said, that Ambrose Watrous and Elsie his wife, and likewise a part of the heirs of Rhoda Chalker, are desirous, that the relief granted by the court of probate should be established. The wishes or assent of these persons possess no weight bearing on the case before us. The heirs, who are favourably disposed to the administrator’s claim, may, if they please, convey their parts of the estate in question to him ; and in respect of Ambrose and Elsie, they are strangers to the matter under discussion. Their donation of the land to Rhoda, the daughter-in-law of the former, invests them with no right over the donee or the estate given, either at law or in chancery.
I readily admit, that the statute of frauds and perjuries presents no embarrassment in the case. The contract, if such it may be called, has been executed on one part, and is not within the law. Cady & al. v. Cadwell, 5 Day 67. Downey v. Hotchkiss, 2 Day 225.
There are two questions in the case. First, had the court of probate any jurisdiction over the controverted enquiry concerning Rhoda’s equitable obligation ? If not, the allowance to the administrator of the sum paid on the note to Richard W. Hart, was void. And secondly, do the facts shew any obligation on the deceased feme covert, which a court of chancery in this state will recognize and enforce ?
On the first enquiry I entertain no doubt. If the court of *227probate was competent, without hearing the parties to be affected, to decide the point of equitable obligation against the deceased, and to allow the administrator the sum paid by him, upon the ground of a supposed equitable right, it not only has the extreme of chancery jurisdiction, but more than the extreme. The dilemma in which the court was placed, of granting or refusing the administrator’s claim, resulted from his voluntary and unauthorized act. As administrator, he had no authority to make payment of the promissory note of another person than the deceased. It was no debt or claim on the estate ; and a court of chancery, on suitable process, with the parties in interest before it, was the only tribunal that had cognizance of the matter in question, or that could impart a remedy adapted to the nature of the case. The jurisdiction of a court of probate is limited ; and it would be vain to search after usage, principle or analogy, to warrant its interposition for the adjudication and settlement of the supposed equitable claim against the heirs of the deceased.
In respect of the second enquiry, but few observations are necessary.
I shall not enter into the chancery law of "Westminster-Hall, or in the surrounding states, because the occasion does not demand it. I will barely remark, that over the separate estate of a feme covert, through the medium of a trustee, or of her husband in that character, if no trustee is appointed, she is held competent to deal with it as if she were a feme sole. Jaques v. Methodist Episcopal Church, 17 Johns. Rep. 548. It has, likewise, been adjudged, that she may contract with her husband for a transfer of property from him to her, if it be done bona fide and for valuable consideration. Lady Arundell v. Phipps, 10 Ves. 139. 145. Livingston v. Livingston, 2 Johns. Chan. Rep. 537. No case, however, has been cited, nor am I aware that any exists, enforcing against a feme covert an agreement made with her husband, without either value or benefit to herself ; and this I take to be the present case. Prompted by feeling, and under no legal or equitable obligation, the feme requests her husband to give his promissory note, and to make payment of it out of the avails of her land. This is the whole case ; and nothing parallel to it, so far as my information extends, is to be found in the determination of any court.
I now pass from a subject, which it is no part of my purpose to discuss, and enquire what is the chancery law of Connects cut, applicable to the case before us.
*228Butler v. Buckingham, 5 Day 492. decided by this court, by unanjmous opinion of nine judges, is in point against the relief granted by the court of probate. A feme covert, with the consent and approbation of her husband, agreed to sell a lot of land, for a valuable consideration ; and the consideration paid, with the like consent, was appropriated to her separate use. The intended purchasers entered on the land, erected a house and store, and were in the lawful possession for twenty years. Under these imposing circumstances, the court held the agreement of the feme covert void, and that chancery could give no relief The case is long, and I shall not attempt an abbreviation of its contents. The principle established was this; that an agreement by a married woman, with the assent ot her husband, for the sale of real estate, and on valuable consideration, is void in law, and that courts of equity will never enforce such a contract against her. Our statute declares, expressly, that the estate of a feme covert shall not be alienable, unless by deed, executed by her, and acknowledged ; and that without her assent, evinced in this manner, all sales or alienations of her land shall be, ipso facto, void. Stat. 304. tit. 56, sect. 14. The learned and able judge, who delivered the opinion of the court, in the case last cited, said, most forcibly: “ All sales void, and all contracts for sales good ! No, this cannot be. If the sale of the estate, unless with the circumstances above mentioned, be void, every contract to sell at a future day, must be equally void.” This reasoning, in my opinion, is invincible. This case has remained unquestioned to the present time ; and in my opinion, the principle on which it was determined, is unquestionable. It goes the length of deciding the one before us, and even beyond it. If a contract by a married woman, for valuable consideration, appropriated to her use, is by law invalid, and not to be enforced in chancery, a fortiori is an agreeement, without consideration, and without benefit.
The determination of the judge at the circuit was, undoubtedly, correct; and no new trial is advised to be granted.
The other Judges were of the same opinion, except Brain-ard, J., who was absent.
New trial not to be granted.