Court Opinion

ID: 6578191
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:36:09.541286+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:56.995384
License: Public Domain

Dutton, J.
The plaintiff brings this suit as trustee of his wife. On the trial he offered evidence to show that they were married in England, and that at the time of their marriage it was agreed between them that whatever personal property she had should remain hers, that they both after marriage treated •it as hers, that they subsequently came to this state, and that he has at all times allowed her to have the exclusive control of it, and that with some of the avails of it she bought the horse and wagon in question. The harness was given to her by a friend in 1862. The defendant attached the property as the property of the husband for a debt due from him. The *593defendant admitted that if the husband, after marriage and after the removal of the parties to this state, showed his intention to divest himself of the title and vest it in the wife by some distinct unequivocal act, the plaintiff was entitled to recover. No question was made whether such a conveyance would be good against creditors, and we are not called upon to express any opinion upon that point. But the defendant insisted, rather inconsistently it would seem, that an agreement made at the time of marriage would not have that effect. A gift after marriage would not divest the husband of the legal title, and accordingly the husband in this case sues as trustee. But it is well settled, both in England and in this state, that an ante-nuptial agreement may vest the equitable title to personal property in the wife, while the legal title vests by the marriage in the husband. Imlay v. Huntington, 20 Conn., 146; Riley v. Riley, 25 id., 154. It is not easy to see therefore why the husband could not be proved to be a trustee of his wife as well by an ante-nuptial agreement as by a subsequent gift. The defendant however asked the court to charge the jury that by the law of England the money of the wife by the marriage vests absolutely in the husband; and he complains because the judge charged the jury that' by the common law the personal property of the wife would vest in the husband, unless some act of the parties intervened to prevent it. He insists that this qualification was erroneous, because no act of the parties could prevent the vesting of the legal title. If the defendant meant to claim only that the naked legal title would vest unqualifiedly in the husband the point was of no importance, for no such question arose in the case. The plaintiff could not and did not deny this doctrine. He had no title himself except what depended on the application of this principle. The charge of the court must be understood with reference to the real questions which were tried. When therefore the judge spoke of the intervention of some act of the parties preventing the vesting of the title in the husband, he spoke not of the mere legal title which both parties claimed and were obliged to claim was in the husband, but of the real beneficial title, which we have seen may, either *594by an ante-nuptial agreement or by a subsequent gift of the husband, be vested in the wife. In this light it is not easy to gee why the charge on this point, even if taken by itself, was not strictly correct. But the whole charge ought to be taken together, and then it will appear that if either party had reason to complain, it was not the defendant. The judge began the charge by saying that “the claim of the defendant,” that is, it may fairly be inferred, the claim that there was a necessity for some unequivocal act or declaration of the husband after marriage, “was correct.” Subsequently, with reference to the agreement claimed, he said to the jury — “You will inquire from all the evidence in the case whether there was such an agreement, and whether the plaintiff did perform some distinct unequivocal act showing an intention to divest himself of the title to the property or not. If such was the case, and he conducted himself toward this property at all times in conformity therewith, then the property would be the wife’s.” From this language the jury could not fail to understand that whether they found a previous agreement or not, they must find that there was after marriage an unequivocal act of the husband, followed up consistently by his whole course of conduct, showing an intention to give the property to the wife. We think therefore that the charge, certainly as against any objection of the defendant, was unexceptionable.
On the motion for a new trial for a verdict against evidence, it is evident that the verdict was in favor of the proper party, as the proof was that the harness at any rate belonged to the wife. As there is nothing to show clearly that all the damages that were given in the case were not for this article, perhaps it is not necessary, on this motion, to go further. But as we can not well avoid the conclusion that a part of the damages were for the horse and wagon, and as the main question which the parties intended to try, that is, whether there was enough done by the husband to constitute a gift to the wife, is presented by this motion, we think it best to consider this point. The defendant insists that it does not appear from the evidence that there was any act on the part of the husband; that all the proof is of a negative character, showing merely that the *595husband did not see fit to interfere. On this question the agreement made at the time of marriage is of material importance to explain the subsequent conduct of the parties. It can not be said that the husband did not act. Silence is sometimes more expressive than words. By seeing his wife manage the property as her own he adopted her acts. By allowing her to treat and regard the property as her own, involving her in liabilities, and changing her situation, both as it regarded the property and her relation to other persons, he estopped himself, so far as she was concerned, from claiming it afterwards himself. The total neglect of a husband to avail himself of property to which he has a clear legal right, and allowing his wife to call it and treat it as her own, is wholly inconsistent with any intention on his part to reclaim it. There have been repeated instances in this state in which this court have held that acts certainly not more unequivocal than were shown in this case, vested the equitable title to personal property in the wife. In Riley v. Riley, 25 Conn., 154, there was an ante-nuptial agreement, and, in connection with this, proof that the husband repeatedly after marriage told his wife to keep the notes and that they would be good against his estate. He also said the same to her brother. She did keep the notes. This was held sufficient to vest the equitable title in her. The only difference between that case and this is, that there the husband manifested his intention by words, and here by his conduct. In Deming v. Williams, 26 Conn., 226, the 'husband merely transferred bank stock to the name of his wife, stating that it was hers. In Jennings v. Davis, 31 Conn., 134, a husband allowed his wife to sell certain personal property the legal title to which was in him, to vest the avails in bank stock in her own name and take the dividends. After her. death, as her administrator, he sold the stock and deposited the money in the savings bank to the credit of her estate, and it was held that the money so deposited ought to be regarded as a part of her estate. Here nothing took place between the husband and wife while both were living, and when only an equitable title could vest in her, except as in this case the silent assent of the husband to the acts of the wife. There was more evi*596dence in this case than in that to show a complete disclaimer on the part of the husband of all title to the property, and an intent that the wife should have an absolute right to use and dispose of it as her own.
We do not advise a new trial.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.