Buttlar v. Buttlar

65 A. 485, 71 N.J. Eq. 671, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 57
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 20, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 65 A. 485 (Buttlar v. Buttlar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buttlar v. Buttlar, 65 A. 485, 71 N.J. Eq. 671, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 57 (N.J. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Garrison, Y. C.

At the time when Mina Buttlar and Christian Buttlar were husband and wife they entered into the agreement in question, which is dated January 31st, 1894, and which is printed in extenso in Buttlar v. Buttlar, 57 N. J. Eq. (12 Dick.) 650.

[673]*673The-defendant, in November, 1895, declined to make further payments under this contract, and the complainant filed her bill to compel him to do so. In the court of chancery the defence of the husband that it would be inequitable to enforce the agreement against him was sustained, but the decree in his favor was reversed in the court of errors and appeals. Buttlar v. Buttlar, supra.

Thereafter the defendant made pa3'ments in accordance with the terms of the agreement down to and including the 24th day of March, 1902. Upon that date a decree of divorce was entered in favor of the wife against the husband upon the ground of his adultery. He began a suit for divorce against her upon a charge of her desertion, to which suit she filed a cross-bill. The bill of the husband was dismissed, and the decree was in favor of the wife upon her cross-bill.

From the date of this decree of divorce he has refused to make payments under the terms of the contract.

On the 25th day of March, 1902, the defendant served upon the complainant a paper in which he declared that he rescinded the contract above mentioned, stating, among other things, as grounds for the rescission that the agreement was made between the parties while they were husband and wife, and in consideration of that relationship; and further, because the agreement was made in consideration of the real estate being held between the parties by entireties, which particular estate had been determined by the decree of divorce.

In 1903 the defendant in this suit began a suit in partition against the complainant in this suit with respect to the real estate above mentioned. She endeavored to have his bill dismissed, setting up, among other things, the agreement aforesaid. The court of chancery decreed the partition. Buttlar v. Buttlar, 67 N. J. Eq. (1 Robb.) 136 (Vice-Chancellor Pitney, 1904); affirmed on appeal, June 18th, 1906. The real estate was sold under the decree in partition, and the net proceeds were divided equally between the parties.

The present suit is to recover the money alleged to be due under the agreement from the 24th of March, 1902, to the date of suit.

[674]*674Notwithstanding the--fact that the parties are no longer husband and wife, it was proper to bring this suit in equity, and not at law. This is -so because equity has exclusive jurisdiction of ■contracts entered into between husband and wife. It is not the incapacity .of one spouse to sue the other at law which is controlling, but their incapacity at law to malee a contract. At law agreements between husband and wdfe are void, but in equity they will be recognized, and will be enforced if fair and fairly obtained. Wood v. Chetwood, 44 N. J. Eq. (17 Stew.) 64 (Vice-Chancellor Van Fleet, 1888); affirmed, 45 N. J. Eq. (18 Stew.) 369; Demarest v. Terhune, 62 N. J. Eq. (17 Dick.) 663 (at p. 666) (Vice-Chancellor Stevenson, 1901).

- The complainant insists that the court of errors and appeals has decided that this identical contract is valid; that although suit upon it must be brought in equity, it is not open to equitable defences, and therefore that the defendant is restricted in the present suit to those matters which wmuld be defences at law. In support of this contention he points out those parts of the opinion in the case in the court of errors and appeals (¡57 N. J. Eq. (1.2 Diclc.) 654) in which the court says: “Such suit is held to be a form of legal proceeding which is carried on in a court of equity merely because the legal right cannot be asserted in the form of a suit at law.” And again: “It would * * * be a clear denial of a remedy to hold that in such a case the injured party is obliged to waive her rights at lawr.” It will be observed, however, that in disposing of the case the learned judge waiting the opinion of the court of errors and appeals did not rest his decision upon the point that no equitable defences wrero admissible, but proceeded to analyze the equitable defences which were set up, and reached the conclusion that they wrere not sustained by the proofs;

I do not think, therefore, that it can be safely concluded that the court of errors and appeals in the reported case decided that equitable defences wrere not admissible in these suits in equity to enforce agreements entered into between married people. As I have heretofore stated, in my view it is the incapacity of married people to contract with each other in a way recognized at law wdiich vests equity with jurisdiction.

[675]*675The expressions of Chief-Justice Beasley upon this subject are so clear and. comprehensive that the matter cannot be better elucidated than by quotation. In the case of Woodruff v. Clark, 42 N. J. Law (13 Vr.) 198 (at p. 200) (Supreme Court, 1880), he said, speaking with respect to the Married Women’s act and its effect upon the right of married people to contract with each other: “The object was to leave the husband and wife, touching their capacity to bargain together, on the ancient footing of the common law. The clause is virtually a legislative declaration that, as heretofore, they may enter, inter sese, into equitable agreements, but not into legal agreements. It was obviously intended that the court of equity should, as it had always done prior to the amplification of the rights of the wife, exercise a supervision over the engagements of married persons. Nor is it deemed-that such an adjustment was an unwise or illiberal one. The subject is one that requires more delicate handling than could be given it through the instrumentality of -a jury. Contracts of this class do not always rest, in point of validity, on fixed and palpable rules of law. Sometimes they approach closely to the field of discretion. * * * So it often happens that relief is afforded only upon equitable conditions. All these precautionary measures would be wanting to a suit at law. The union arising from the matrimonial connection is so entire, the interest so mutual and the confidence so-complete that the question in the given- case, whether a transfer of property has been equitably obtained by one of the married persons from the other, or is the creature of coercion or undue influence, is often one of the most subtle and abstruse subjects that can be presented for judicial investigation—an investigation to which the methods of a court of conscience are alone adapted. Few subjects would seem to fall more appropriately under equitable cognizance.”

Many cases in our courts since this decision have cited and enforced this principle.

I therefore conclude that in these suits the proper rule is to permit any defences which are open to a defendant in equity.

In the suit at bar certain matters between these parties are res acljudicala. It is res adjudicata that this agreement was [676]*676fair, and was not obtained by any means which, a court of equity would hold to unfavorably affect it.

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Bluebook (online)
65 A. 485, 71 N.J. Eq. 671, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buttlar-v-buttlar-njch-1906.