Court Opinion

ID: 6583468
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:40:24.712847+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:22.556467
License: Public Domain

Torrance, J.
The principal questions in this case arise upon the following written agreement:—
“ Marriage being contemplated between John Peck of New Milford in Litchfield County and State of Connecticut and Sarah Cranston of Brooklyn in the State of New York, and after marriage said parties intend to reside in the State of Connecticut, and said Peck having passed the meridian of his days, (the parties make the laws of the State of Connecticut to govern this agreement) and by the laws of said. State the parties can make a binding contract regarding their property, and what portion each shall have in the estate of the other on his or her decease, which shall be in bar and room of the portion he or she would have in such- estate if such agreement had not been made. Now if said marriage occurs this covenant and agreement made by and between the parties is as follows: Each of said parties covenant and agree to perform their obligations and duties, with and towards the other, as the relation of husband and wife demands during the continuance of said marriage relation.
“ Said John Peck covenants and agrees, if said Sarah Cranston survives him, to pay her the sum of two thousand dollars six months after his decease with interest after it is payable, said amount tó be paid by his administrator or executor, from his estate; which sum is to be in room and in lieu of dower and all other rights and interest and claims said Sarah would have had in the estate of said John Peck if this agreement had not been made.
“ Said Peck also covenants and agrees, if he survives the said Sarah, not to claim or receive any part or interest in her estate, but he will give up all interest he would otherwise have therein, and that he will release and convey all such claim or interest to her devisees or heirs at law, on their request.
“ And the said Sarah Cranston, if said marriage takes place, covenants and agrees, if she survives the said Peck, to receive said sum of two thousand dollars as herein agreed with interest after payable; in lieu and as full payment for her dower right and of all other claim and interest she otherwise would *132have had in his estate, and that she will not claim or receive any other part or share of the estate of said John Peek after his decease, but she will release and convey all other claim, right or interest she may or might have therein, if this agreement had not been made, on the request of the devisees or heirs at law of said John Peck.
“ But this agreement is not to, and shall not prevent said John Peck from giving her during his lifetime or by his last will and testament such property and sums as he may choose, nor shall it prevent her from claiming and receiving all such property and sums so given besides said sum of two thousand dollars.
“ In witness whereof the parties have hereunto, and to a duplicate hereof, set their hands the day of November 30th, 1887.”
After the execution of this agreement, the parties thereto intermarried, and resided in New Milford in this State, where John Peck died testate leaving the aforesaid Sarah, his widow, surviving him.
Pending the settlement of his estate in the Court of Probate, the widow applied for an allowance under the provisions of § 604 of the General Statutes of this State. His executors and residuary legatee opposed the allowance on the ground that the widow, by virtue of the provisions of said written agreement, was barred and estopped from claiming or receiving the same.
The Court of Probate held otherwise, and decreed to her an allowance. The case then came by appeal to the Superior Court, where several reasons of appeal were filed, but all of them were subsequently withdrawn, save the first which reads as follows: “ That on November 30th, 1887, and previous to her marriage with said John Peck, deceased, the appellee made and executed a written contract with said deceased, a copy of which is hereto annexed marked ‘ Exhibit A,’ by virtue of which contract so entered into by said parties, said widow is barred and estopped from claiming or receiving any allowance for her support from said estate by *133said court, or otherwise than as provided in said marriage agreement.”
To this reason of appeal the following demurrer was filed: “ The appellee, Sarah Peck, widow of said John Peck, demurs to the first reason of appeal, because there is nothing in said ante-nuptial agreement marked ‘ Exhibit A ’ which bars, estops or prevents the Court of Probate which granted said allowance to her from so doing, or which bars, estops or prevents her from receiving the same as a matter of law or equity.”
The Superior Court overruled said demurrer and ordered the widow to answer over, which she neglected and refused to do ; thereupon the court reversed the decrees of the Court of Probate from which said appeal had been taken; and from that judgment the widow took the present appeal to this court.
The principal question in the case relates to the effect of the ante-nuptial contract upon the right of the widow to claim or receive an allowance.
The power of the Court of Probate, and of the Superior Court sitting as a Court of Probate on the appeal, to entertain and decide this question, seems to have been taken for granted by all concerned; for no question as to the existence of such power in either court is made upon the record; and we entertain no doubt that such a power in cases like the present exists in both courts. Hall v. Pierson, 63 Conn., 332.
The questions discussed in the argument before this court were these two, namely: Whether the widow could by any agreement of this kind, however specific in its terms, bar and estop herself from claiming an allowance; and if so, whether the agreement here in question includes such right within its scope.
Before discussing these questions it may be well to note in passing, that by the terms of the ante-nuptial agreement, it is not the promise of the money, but the money itself, that the widow agrees to receive in lieu of whatever rights she gives up and relinquishes; it is not the covenant, but the *134cash paid in pursuance of it, that she is to he satisfied with; and it does not appear on the record whether the money has or has not been paid to her, nor whether the estate is or is not able and willing to pay, nor even whether the time agreed upon for payment had or had not elapsed, when the reason of appeal demurred to was filed. But all parties concerned in the case have, throughout, treated it as one, where, assuming the money to have been paid or secured to the widow, the question is whether she is then estopped from claiming the allowance; that is, can she have both the money under the agreement, and the allowance. This appears to have been the real question tried and decided in both of the lower courts, and certainly it was the real question argued before this court.
It seemed to be conceded on the argument that the widow was barred as to all her other rights as widow, save as to the allowance, and this concession would hardly have been made unless the money had either been paid to her, or was certain to be paid, as agreed. In view of all this we will assume,, for the purposes of the discussion, that the money has been paid, or that it assuredly will be paid, and will consider the questions presented in the light of that assumption.
The first question is whether the widow could, by any agreement whatever, bar and estop herself from claiming am allowance under our statute. On her behalf the broad claim, is made, that any agreement of this kind which she might make is void on grounds of public policy; that it is the-policy of the law to preserve as far as possible the integrity and continuity of the family, and to protect it even against the thoughtlessness of men and women; and that contracts running contrary to such policy are void. We cannot assent to this broad claim. On principle there appears to be-no good reason why such an agreement, if fairly made and entered into, by a woman of full age, for adequate consideration received, should not be binding upon her. Such an agreement, when fully carried out, has been held binding’ upon her in reference to her right of dower. Andrews v. Andrews, 8 Conn., 79; Selleck v. Selleck, ibid., 85, 86, in, *135note. And in the case at bar it is conceded that she may thus bind herself as to all her other rights in her deceased husband’s estate, save the one in question; but if she can thus bind herself as to her principal rights, it is difficult to see why she may not also do so as to this minor and incidental right to an allowance. The following authorities sustain the conclusion that a fair ante-nuptial agreement to relinquish, or not to exercise the right to, an allowance, whether fixed or discretionary in amount, is neither voidable nor void, but, when carried out, will be enforced against the widow in some proper tribunal. Paine v. Hollister, 139 Mass., 144; Weaver v. Weaver, 109 Ill., 225; Peck v. Peck, 12 R. I., 485; Tiernan v. Binns, 92 Penn. St., 248; Heald's Petition, 22 N. H., 265. That the agreement here in question is a fair one, made by persons of full age, and upon adequate consideration, does not appear to be questioned by anybody; and on the assumption that its provisions have been or assuredly will be carried out on the part of the estate, we see no good reason why the}r should not be held to be binding upon the part of the widow.
The next question then is whether the contract includes the right to the aUowance, as well as all her other rights as widow; and to determine that we must look at its terms. The contract does not appear to be the work of a skillful and careful lawyer; some of its provisions appear to be superfluous ; the preamble is not as clear as it might be, and doubts may be raised as to the meaning of some of the terms used; nevertheless, looking at the agreement as a whole, the main thing intended to be accomplished by the parties appears with tolerable clearness, and that we think was, that the estate of the one dying first should remain to his or her heirs, devisees, or legatees, freed and discharged from every burden to the survivor, save and except those imposed by the agreement.
That the agreement covers, and was intended to cover, every other right, interest, claim or demand, of the survivor, save this matter of the allowance, is conceded; but it is claimed that they did not intend to include that, because *136they have, it is said, carefully chosen words which exclude it. This claim is based upon these words in the covenants of the respective parties, namely: John Peck says the two thousand dollars shall be in lieu of “ dower and all other rights and interest and claims said Sarah would have had in the estate of said John Peck if this agreement had not been made.” Sarah agrees to receive the money “ in lieu and as full payment for her dower right and of all other claim and interest she otherwise would have had in his estate.” The argument is that the widow gives up only rights, claims, and interests in his estate; that the right to an allowance is not a right, interest, or claim, in his estate; and consequently is not included within the agreement. Now it may be true, speaking technically, and with the strictest accuracy, that the right to an allowance is not a right, nor a claim, not an interest in the estate, nor a property right at all; but it certainly is a right which the law confers upon the widow in proper cases, and which it recognizes and enforces in her behalf on her application ; and it is one which may diminish the estate, and as we have seen, one which the widow may agree not to exercise, which agreement under certain conditions will be enforced against her. The discretion vested in the courts of probate, both as to the granting of the allowance and as to its amount, is a legal discretion and not an arbitrary one. Leavenworth v. Marshall, 19 Conn., 408, 418. The distinction, then, between this right to an allowance out of the estate, which may diminish it by some hundreds of dollars, and a right in the estate which diminishes it by a like amount, would be, to the mind of everybody but a trained lawyer, a distinction without a difference ; and it may well be doubted whether the parties to this agreement, or the person who drew it up, supposed there was any such distinction. If, then, the case turned wholly upon the meaning of these quoted words, it seems a somewhat strained construction to say they do not include a right, the exercise of which may impose quite a burden upon the estate; a burden, too, the extent of which must be largely a matter of conjecture.
*137But the case does not turn upon these words; for the widow agrees specifically “ that she will not claim or receive any other part or share of the estate of said John Peck after his decease ” ; and these words we think cover the right in question. The allowance granted to the widow by the Court of Probate in this case certainly comes out of the estate as a “ part ” or “ share ” of it, within the ordinary meaning of these words; and it comes to her upon her own suit and application. Looking at the agreement as a whole we think she covenanted not to ask for, nor to receive an allowance, and that under the circumstances this covenant is binding upon her.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.