Baker v. Heirs of Chastang

18 Ala. 417
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 18 Ala. 417 (Baker v. Heirs of Chastang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Heirs of Chastang, 18 Ala. 417 (Ala. 1850).

Opinion

CHILTON, J.

This case has been elaborately argued, and we have examined with care the numerous authorities, to which we are refered by the respective counsel.

As some of the. points raised have been ably discussed in the decisions, to which reference is made, we shall content ourselves with merely stating, as succinctly as we can, our conclusion upon them, without entering at large into their discussion, but there are other points of more difficulty, and which will require.a more elaborate investigation. 1. It is well settled that the plaintiff in ejectment may declare for the whole, or the entire interest, and recover a less interest. — McArthur v. Porter, 6 Pet. 205; Adams on Ejec. 211, and cases cited in notes; 12 Wend. 170; 13 ib. 578; 8 Dana, 196.

2. Neither, in. our opinion, does the death of a portion of the lessors of the plaintiff, since the commencement of the suit, de[422]*422stroy the right of action of-the survivors, or abate the suit. — Adams on Ejec. 320; Jackson ex dem. Austin v. Kimber et al., 1 Wend. 27; Friar et al. v. Jackson ex dem. Van Allen, 8 Johns. 495; Doe ex dem. Marston v. Butler, 3 Wend. 153; Robertson v. Morgan, 2 Bibb, 148; Duncan & Wife v. Forsythe, 3 Dana, 230. It does not appear by the record, but that those who survived were entitled, as the sole heirs at law, to the interest of the deceased parties. “ The general rule to be observed in such cases is, that wherever the death of any party happens pending the writ, and yet the plea is in the same condition, as if such party were living, then such death makes no alteration ; for, where the death of the party makes no change in the proceedings, it would be unreasonable that the surviving parties should make any alteration in the writ, for, if such writ and process were changed, it would set rights but in the same condition they were in at the death of the parties, and it would be absurd that what made no alteration should change the writ and the process, and on this will all the diversities turn.” — 1 Bac. Abr. Tit. Abatement, f It is said, that after verdict, the bare possibility of title consistent with the judgment is sufficient. — Bac. Abr. (Bouv. ed.) vol. 3, p. 292, Eject, f.

3. The Circuit Court held that, as a married woman had not the power to devise her real estate, the will of Mrs. Gannard in this case did not have the effect of passing the title, so as to prevent her heirs from succeeding to the inheritance. This has been the point mainly controverted in the cause.

The question presented is one of novel impression in this court, and we have looked into the authorities with care, to ascertain what construction should be placed upon our statute of wills, (Clay’s Dig. 596, § 1,) which is general in its terms, making no mention of married women, either as enabling them to devise, or as denying to them the power. Our statute is similar to the 32 Hen. VIII, c. 1, which enacted that “all and every person and persons, having, &c., shall have power to give, dispose, will and devise, &c.” — Thus it was left, under the English statute, to the courts to determine who were embraced in this general language, and it was held, that while married women were embraced by the letter of the statute, still they did not come within its spirit and meaning; that the equity of the law corrected these general expressions, and restrained them to [423]*423comprehend only such persons, as by law could dispose of their real estate by other modes of conveyance, previous to the passage of the act. — See Powell on Dev. 126, citing Dyer, 345, and 1 Ves. Sr., 500. To remove all difficulty on this head, the Parliament, two years thereafter, passed the explanatory statute of 34 Henry VIII, c. 5, § 14, declaring the wills of femes covert, persons within the age of 21 years, idots, and persons of non-sane memory, made of lands, &c., to be invalid. — 1 Jar. Wills, 28.

The construction which was placed by the English Courts upon the first statute of wills, seems generally to have been followed by the American Courts, in the several States whose statutes are similarly worded, and the better opinion seems to be that a married woman cannot make a valid will of lands, even with the consent of her husband, and without any statute prohibition to that effect. — Marston v. Norton, 5 N. Hamp. Rep. 205; West v. West, 10 S. & Rawle, 445; Osgood v. Breed, 12 Mass. Rep. 225 ; 4 Kent’s Com. 505; note a. (6 ed.); in the matter of Yates’ Will, 2 Dana, 215; S. Touchstone, 402; Kelly’s Devisees v. Kelly, 5 B. Monr. 370 ; 1 Wms. on Exr’s, 42, note 1, (Amer. ed.;) West v. West et al., 10 S. & Rawle, 445, and cases cited.

The contrary doctrine of Judge Reeves, in his work on the Domestic Relations, page 157, cannot be supported. The argument which deduces the power to make a valid devise from the right which a married woman possessed of conveying her estate by the consent of her husband, we do not think can be sustained. By the common law, no one could devise his lands, it then required a statute to confer the power; the statute of 22 Henry VIII, confered it as we have said, in general terms— nothing is said as to married women, but the statute was construed not to extend to them. She could then by the common law have passed her title by fine. — McQueen on Hus. & Wife, 144-5-6. This form of transmitting title was succeeded by a conveyance by the wife, with the assent of the husband, the deed, however, being of no validity as against her until it was ascertained (according to the forms which the law required at the time the will now under consideration was executed,) upon her private examination, that she executed it freely and voluntarily, and thus she was guarded by the proper officers of the law against the undue exercise of the husband’s áuthórity.

[424]*424. By the marriage, the ownership of the land of the wife was vested in the husband during their joint lines; he had a freehold interest, they both being seized together in her right by entire-ties, during'the coverture. He could sell the land at pleasure, without the co-operation of -the wife. So he could charge the land of the wife during their joint lives, the charge ceasing and the sale being ineffectual at the termination of the coverture* The fee resided in the wife, and could only be divested by the joint act of both her and her husband, by reason of the disability of her coverture, (McQueen, 1 Hus. & W., 27,) and upon her private examination. - She then really had not the power to dispose of the land, but she and her husband, and not both of them, but by the act of the court or officer, in effecting the examination. We feel fully satisfied that the power to devise, as derived from the statute, did not pertain to the wife. Neither, in the case before us, is- it pretended that the wife united with, or consented to the former husband’s conveyance of her land, unless indeed we infer a recognition of it from the deed which she executed to Registe Bernody for another tract, -in which it is recited, that the lot sold is “bounded on one side by another lot belonging to the said Bernody.” The counsel say that the lot refered-to, as the boundary line,-is the-one in controversy in this suit ;■ but the record, to which alone we can look, does not • sustain this position, and the party excepting should have made the matter ;plain, if the fact had so existed. But we will not say ■ that we are-prepared to hold'that had she expressly recognised in this' mariner :his title, it would have amounted, to a divestiture of her interest. .

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18 Ala. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-heirs-of-chastang-ala-1850.