Court Opinion

ID: 3243148
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:16:05.301713+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:59:07.702920
License: Public Domain

Original petition for writ of mandamus to require the respondent to vacate an order or decree, entered by him May 10, 1923, wherein the respondent denied the motion of relators to have the decree of April 20, 1923, enforced notwithstanding Mrs. Rose Johns Cannon's effort to appeal from that decree without giving security for costs; this in asserted virtue of the act approved September 22, 1915 (Gen. Acts 1915, p. 715), amendatory of Code, § 2879, which exempts married women from obligation to give security for costs on appeals falling within the purview of the provisions of the amendatory act. An effective appeal by a married woman operates, under the act, to stay or to suspend further proceedings in the premises, pending determination of the appeal. The controlling inquiry in this petition is whether Mrs. Cannon, a married woman, is entitled to the benefit of the provisions of the amendatory act of 1915, on an appeal from the decree of April 20, 1923? If so, her appeal was effected without giving security for costs of the appeal, and further action under the decree of April 20, 1923, was inhibited by the act. On the other hand, if the subject-matter of her appeal was not within the purview of the amendatory act of 1915, then her attempt to appeal was abortive, and the motion to proceed to enforce or administer the decree of April 20, 1923, was erroneously denied.
The subject of that decree's consideration and decision was the written agreement or trust instrument executed July 4, 1908, by L. W. Johns and his wife, Rose Johns (now Cannon), wherein the Birmingham Trust  Savings Company was constituted trustee of the corporate stock which L. W. Johns made the corpus of the trust estate, created with design to assure his wife an income in circumstances and upon contingencies defined in the trust instrument. The trust estate and the income produced thereby, in the hands of the trustee, were subject to the court's administration and direction. Through the decree of April 20, 1923, interpreting the trust instrument, the court determined matters to effects opposed to the view, interest, and contention asserted for Mrs. Rose Johns Cannon, and the result was to deprive her of what she conceived to be her just desert under the terms of the instrument establishing the trust.
The act of 1915 — amendatory of Code, § 2879 — reads:
"2879. When Married Women May Appeal Without Giving Bond orSurety for Costs. — From any judgment, order or decree of any court of record subjecting to sale or condemnation any property of or for the payment of money or the doing or performing any act by any married woman she is entitled to an appeal to the Supreme Court or Court of Appeals to revise such judgment, order or decree without giving security for the costs of appeal, on making affidavit that she is unable to give such security; and such appeal shall operate as a suspension and stay of all proceedings under such judgment, order or decree until such appeal shall be determined by the Supreme Court or Court of Appeals."
The statute thus amended (section 2879) only applied to the separate estates of married women. The change wrought by the amendatory act is no broader than its language fairly imports. Ex parte Tower Mfg. Co., 103 Ala. 415, 420, 15 So. 836. The act does not purport to confer a general exemption upon married women as a class. The design is to confer its benefit or advantage upon married women in the circumstances, and only those, therein defined. The basis of the statute's operation is a judgment or decree subjecting property or money of a married woman or requiring a married woman to do or perform some act. There must be a sale or condemnation of property or money of the married woman; these conditions, alternatively expressed, contemplating a judicial appropriation or subjection through sale or condemnation of property or money to the discharge of an obligation, resting upon a married woman, adjudicated against a married woman. We find in the decree nothing to invoke these provisions of the amendatory act. No property or money of Mrs. Cannon was ordered sold, nor was any property or money, belonging to her, within the intent of the provisions of the act, condemned. No obligation resting on her was sought to be enforced by the mentioned decree.
Within the contemplation of the last alternative provision of the act, did the decree in question exact of her "the doing or performance of any act"? We find in the decree no such exaction. A different construction of the trust instrument might have laid premises within the prescriptions of the amendatory act. However, that construction did not prevail in the decree of April 20, 1923.
The effort of Mrs. Cannon to appeal (without giving security for costs) being abortive, the motion invoking the court to proceed on the course defined in the decree should have *Page 640 
been sustained. The overruling of the motion was, for that reason, ill-advised. It should be annulled; and an appeal effected by Mrs. Cannon, if she so desires, without regard to the amendatory act. The writ of mandamus prayed is awarded; but it will not issue unless, as is not now anticipated, its issue is required.
Writ awarded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.