Court Opinion

ID: 3373064
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 18:14:48.473453+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:47:15.893605
License: Public Domain

a Memorandum. — In the vacation previous to this term, to wit: on the 22d of July, 1744, Judge Layton resigned his office of Associate Judge of the State; and the Hon. David Hazzard, of Sussex county, was on the 10th of December, appointed to succeed him.
Mr. Patterson obtained a rule to show cause why the use in this case should not be struck out, founded on an affidavit of James Shute; taken before Thomas McDowell, Esq., one of the justices of the peace for New Castle county.
Mr. Whitely objected to the affidavit, that it was improperly taken before any one other than the prothonotary; and if a justice of the peace could administer an oath for such a purpose, that it did not appear in this case that McDowell was a justice of the peace, as he did not take the affidavit in his official capacity, or certify it under his official signature.
Mr. Patterson replied, that the objection was too late. That a justice of the peace may administer an oath in any proper case and take and certify such an affidavit as this. That' the evidence of *Page 204 
the official capacity of Thomas McDowell is of record in the recorder's office; and will be noticed by the court without proof.
The Court overruled the objections to the affidavit except as to the official signature of the magistrate, which they allowed to be amended; and, in the mean time, went on with the case.
It appeared on the evidence, that on the 18th of March, 1844, a bond was given by Benjamin Gould to James W. Shute and Elizabeth, his wife, or the survivor of them, for $100. Shute and his wife separated, and she went off with an adulterer; and having clandestinely obtained possession of the bond, she sold it to Frederick Leonard, Esq., in July, 1844, and assigned it before one witness. Mr. Leonard assigned it in the same way to Bauduy Simmons, on the 8th of August, 1844; when the judgment was confessed at the suit of James Shute and wife for the use of Simmons.
On this state of facts the court made absolute the rule for striking out the use. The bond vests in the husband during his life. A married woman can have no right to personal property during coverture; (it vests in the husband. (Chitty on Cont. 176; 2 Harr. Rep.
49; Ibid 74; 3 Ibid 87.)
                                   Rule absolute — use stricken out.