Colyar v. Wheeler

110 Tenn. 58
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 110 Tenn. 58 (Colyar v. Wheeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colyar v. Wheeler, 110 Tenn. 58 (Tenn. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McAlister

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The validity of defendants’ title to the real estate in controversy depends upon the character of the following postnuptial settlement, namely:

“We, A. S. Colyar, Jr., and his wife, Sallie S. Scoby, both of the county of Wilson and State of Tennessee, in consideration of a marriage between them, celebrated on the 29th April, 1891, and in consideration of ante-nuptial agreement entered into verbally and by correspondence, do now make and enter into this mutual contract, to wit:
[60]*60“We appoint Daniel J. Burton, trustee for the said Sallie S. Colyar, and hereby convey to him in trust for the purposes of this deed, all of the following described property, none of which has been reduced to the possession of the said A. S. Colyar, Jr., to wit:
“The said. Sallie S. Colyar’s [interest] in what is-known as the home place in Wilson county, Tennessee, on which her mother lives, and on which she now resides, together with all the stock on the farm that belongs to the said Sallie S. Colyar; also any other personal property which she now has or may have in the future. The purpose and intent oí this deed is that said property is invested in said trustee that he may hold the legal title for the sole and separate use,, with the absolute right of disposition as she may choose upon consultation and getting advice from said trustee.
“[Signed] Sallie S. Colyar,
“A. S. Colyar, Jr;”’

It appears from the record that at the date of her marriage with A. S. Colyar, Jr., Mrs. Colyar was the owner of two shares, or two-sixths, in remainder of a valuable tract of land in Wilson county, Tenn., containing about 175 acres, comprising her mother’s homestead and dower interest in the lands of her deceased husband. The mother of Mrs. Colyar died since the latter’s marriage with A. S. Colyar, Jr.

It further appears that on the 11th of October, 1897, Mrs. Colyar and her husband, A. S. Colyar, Jr., executed to A. M. Colyar, now deceased, a mortgage, con[61]*61veying her interest in such realty in Wilson county to secure a debt in favor of A. D. Marks for-dollars, and also an indebtedness due O. S. Briggs, amounting to $65.

It also appears that on the 20th of October, 1897, Mrs. Oolyar and her husband executed a second mortgage on her interests in said land to A. D. Marks, trustee, to secure two notes in favor of Hamilton Parks for $250 each. .A. D. Marks joined in the trust deed, waiving his prior lien secured in the trust deed of October 11, 1897.

It is also shown that default was made in paying the notes for $500.due Hamilton Parks, and thereupon the trustee, Marks, in conformity with the terms of the trust deed, advertised said property, and sold it at public ven-due to the defendants T. O. Wheeler and N. G. Robertson. The trustee, Marks, executed to said purchasers a deed, which is duly recorded in the register’s office of Wilson county.

Complainant’s position is that the mortgages and the deeds to Wheeler and Robertson were void, for the reason that the legal title to the property was in D. J. Burton, her trustee, under the postnuptial settlement, and could not be conveyed without her consent, and that said trustee had at no time been consulted in respect of said trust deeds or other conveyances.

It is stated in the opinion of the court of chancery appeals that this postnuptial settlement was entered into the day after complainant’s marriage, at the in[62]*62stance of the.father of the husband, Ool. A. S. Colyar,„ who told his daughter-in-law that his son would squander all her property unless the same was properly protected. It is obvious that the only duty imposed on the trustee is to hold and preserve the property for the sole and separate use of this married woman during cov-erture, and ordinarily this duty creates an active trust.

Says Mr. Perry, in his work on Trusts, 310: “If an estate he given to trustees upon a trust for a married woman ‘for her sole and separate use/ and ‘her receipts alone to be sufficient discharge/ or if the trust be .to ‘permit and suffer a feme covert to receive the rents to her separate use/ the legal estate will vest in the trustees, and the statute will not execute it in the cestui que trust. * * * Any words that show an intent to create an estate or a trust for the sole and separate use of a married woman will have the same effect.”

In Jourolmon v. Massengill, 86 Tenn., 100, 5 S. W., 719, it was said, viz.: “That the trust would be voted by common consent, if the object of this trust was the protection of the estate of a married woman, or other person not sui juris. So it has been said that a trust in fee, created to protect the estate for a given time, and to preserve contingent remainders, is a special or active trust, not within the statute of uses, nor executed in the beneficiaries under the law as settled in this State.” Henderson v. Hill, 9 Lea, 32.

In the case of P. J. O’Brien v. Mrs. Margaret O’Keefe (MSS. opinion, Nashville, Dec. Term, 1901), in consid[63]*63ering this subject it was said, viz.: “The court is of opinion that in tbe case of a married woman, when the conveyance is made to a trustee for her benefit, a necessary implication arises that it was the intention of the grantor to create a separate estate, and that the trustee should hold the estate for the benefit of the married woman; and this constitutes in itself an active trust, so as to prevent the operation of the statute.”

Again, in the same case it was said, viz.: “It is true the interposition of a trustee is not absolutely necessary under our authorities to create a separate estate in a married woman, but it is a proper method of doing so, and, when a trustee is thus interposed and provided by the conveyance, it is an indication that it was the intention of the grantor in that way and by that means to preserve the estate, and that in the case of a conveyance for the benefit of a married woman this imposes an active duty upon the trustee, and makes an active trust outside of the statute.”

Conceding, then, that an active trust was created by the conveyance of the title to Mrs. Colyar’s property to a trustee for her sole and separate use, how is this language affected by the provision granting to Mrs. Colyar “the absolute right of disposition as she may choose upon consultation and getting advice from said trustee?” The court of chancery appeals was of opinion that this last clause, giving to Mrs. Colyar the absolute right of disposition, destroyed the trust, and that the words “upon consultation and getting advice from [64]*64the trustee” were merely directory. The argument is that the trustee is not required to join in a conveyance by the wife, and hence, after consultation and advice with the trustee, she may convey independent of the trustee’s concurrence or signature.

It is argued that when Mrs. Oolyar exercises the right of disposition the trust is ended. The trusted has no power except to counsel and advise.

In the case of Deadrick v. Armour,

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Bluebook (online)
110 Tenn. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colyar-v-wheeler-tenn-1902.