Clark v. Wootton

63 Md. 113, 1885 Md. LEXIS 68
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 27, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 63 Md. 113 (Clark v. Wootton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Wootton, 63 Md. 113, 1885 Md. LEXIS 68 (Md. 1885).

Opinion

Bryan, J.,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the Court.

Charles E. Kemp and wife, obtained a' judgment against the Baltimore City Passenger Bailway Company for bodily injuries to the wife. This judgment was attached by a creditor of the husband, and it was decided by the Court of Common Pleas that it was not attachable. The attaching creditor has appealed to this Court.

As the suit by Mr. and Mrs. Kemp, against the Bail-way Company, was brought before the passage of the Act of 1882, ch. 265, the rights of the parties to this controversy are not affected by that Act. By the common law it was necessary that husband and wife should join in every action brought to recover damages for personal injuries to the wife. In case the husband died before the damages were recovered, they survived to the wife; but if the wife died before the damages were recovered, the suit abated. If the husband died after the recovery pf the judgment, the whele interest survived to the wife; and if the wife died, the whole interest survived to the husband. They did not hold the judgment by a divisible title; one-half to the one, and one-half to the other; but owing to the unity of the matrimonial relation, they held it as if they were one and the same person. The bus-[115]*115"band, however, had the right to receive payment of it, to release it, or to dispose of it as he might see fit. But if he died without having exercised these rights, the judgment became absolutely the property of the wife, and was not subject to the claims of his creditors.

Independently of his wife, the husband had no cause •of action whatever for personal injuries to her; and in ■this respect his rights were different from those which he had in a certain class of dioses in action of his wife, on which he might sue without joining her in the action. In this last' description of cases, the judgment itself in the husband’s own name was regarded as a reduction into possession, and worked an extinguishment of his wife’s rights. But although a judgment, in the joint names of husband and wife, did not proprio vigore vest exclusively in the husband, so as to leave no interest in the wife, it was nevertheless subject to the payment of the husband’s debts. In State vs. Krebs, 6 H. & J., 31, it was decided that a bond, which had been given to the wife for the proceeds of the sale of her real estate by commissioners, was attachable by her husband’s creditors, and this liability was deduced by the Court, as a consequence following necessarily from the right of the husband to sue on ■the bond in his own name. The opinion in the case further says: “ The money, being at the disposal of the husband, is in truth and in law his, and is liable for his •debts, and can never be enjoyed by the wife but on the single contingency of her surviving her husband, before an appropriation is made of it by him.” This case has been followed and approved in Peacock vs. Pembroke and Clarke, 4 Md., 280; Taggart vs. Boldin and Thayer, 10 Md., 104, and many other cases. The money due on the judgment which was attached in this case, was by the common law as' much at the disposal of the husband as any property which he possessed, and, therefore, according to the test just mentioned, would be liable to the ■claims of his creditors.

[116]*116We must now, however, inquire whether any change-in the rights of the respective parties to this controversy has been effected by the constitutional and legislative enactments which have been made. The Act of 1814,. chapter 51, re-enacted with a slight modification the Act-of 1853, chapter 245. This latter Act is codified as the first section of Art. 45 of the Code of Public General Laws. The original Act of 1853 wns merely intended to exempt-the property therein embraced from liability for the husband’s debts, and did not have the effect of altering or impairing the marital rights of’ the husband. Schindel vs. Schindel, 12 Md., 108; Same vs. Same, 12 Md., 313. But the second section of Art. 45 of the Code has expressly provided that the married woman should hold such property for her separate use, with power of devising the same as. fully as if she were a feme sole. It embraces, according to the enumeration of the Act of 1814, the property, real and personal, belonging to a woman at the time of her marriage; and all property, which she may acquire or receive after her marriage by “ purchase,, gift, grant, devise, bequest, descent, or in a course of distribution.” The right of property in this judgment was-not obtained in either of these modes. There is a mode of acquiring personal property distinct from those enumerated in these Acts. Blackstone, in treating of the-title to personal property, classifies the methods of acquiring it under twelve distinct heads; and among these, he mentions the title by judgment. And herein, as one species of property acquired by this mode, he specifies-damages awarded to a party as a compensation for some injury sustained by him. He remarks that the injured party has unquestionably a vague and indeterminate right to some damages as soon as the injury is committed,, and the verdict and judgment do not so properly vest a. new title in him, as fix and ascertain the old one; yet, as the legal proceedings are the only visible means of this-[117]*117•acquisition of property, he maintains that the classification is correct. 2 Blackstone’s Commentaries, 488. All the property acquired in the modes mentioned in the first section of Article 45 of the Code and the amendment to it, is by the second section expressly made the separate property of the married woman; but it has never yet been ¡supposed that the husband was excluded, from an interest in the damages recovered in an action for personal injuries to the wife; unless the Act of 1882 changes the law as to occurrences which have taken place since its passage. It has always been held that both husband and wife should join in the action, and that damages should be claimed in behalf of both; because both had an interest in the judgment. Newcomer and Wife vs. Kean, 57 Md., 121. And this very suit, in which these damages were recovered •against the Railway Company, is as good an illustration as can be found of the practice in this particular. We conclude that the first and second sections of Article 45 •of the Code and the amendments to them do not affect any rights existing under this judgment. To avoid all ground for misapprehension, we think it proper to say that although we have referred to the Act of 1882, chapter 265, no question in this case arises under that Act, and we do not intend to give any opinion as to its construction.

It is now necessary to inquire whether the forty-third •section of the third Article of the Constitution has any bearing on the questions involved in this case. It is in these words: The property of the wife shall he protected from the debts of the husband.” The previous Constitutions of 1851 and 1864 had contained directions to the Legislature to pass laws necessary to secure this protection ; and these requirements had. been partially fulfilled. But our present Constitution does not commit this matter to the action of the General Assembly. It •adopts the language of the Act of 1853 so far as it declared the protection in question, and incorporates it into [118]*118the fundamental law of the land. There was after this constitutional enactment no longer any necessity for the functions of the General Assembly.

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Bluebook (online)
63 Md. 113, 1885 Md. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-wootton-md-1885.