Dietrich v. Hutchinson

50 A. 810, 73 Vt. 134, 1901 Vt. LEXIS 143
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedApril 5, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 50 A. 810 (Dietrich v. Hutchinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dietrich v. Hutchinson, 50 A. 810, 73 Vt. 134, 1901 Vt. LEXIS 143 (Vt. 1901).

Opinion

Rowell, J.

On September 28, 1896, the petitioner sold and conveyed to the defendant Lydia Hutchinson, a house and lot in Lyndon for a thousand dollars, two hundred dollars of which were paid down, and at the same time and as a part of the transaction, the mortgage in question was given thereon to secure the balance, evidenced by four promissory notes of that date for two hundred dollars each, signed by Mrs. Hutchinson and her husband, Charles Hutchinson, one of the defendants, and payable to the petitioner or order in one, two, three and four years from date respectively, with interest annually. Only Mrs. Hutchinson’s name appears in the body of the mortgage as that of the grantor, the name of her husband not appearing therein at all as grantor nor otherwise, not being suggested even in the testatum; but he signed and acknowledged the [137]*137mortgage the same as his wife did. The instrument has only-one seal; but as the defendant Deavitt, who alone defends, does not claim in argument that it is not to be taken as the seal of both signers, it is so taken.

On April 14, 1899, Mrs. Hutchinson leased the place for a year, and her husband directed the lessee to pay the rent to the petitioner to apply on the mortgage, and thereupon they moved away, leaving no one to look after the place for them, and the petitioner could not ascertain their whereabouts.

On April 4, 1900, the defendant Deavitt, knowing of the mortgage and what it was given for, took a quitclaim deed of the place from the Hutchinsons, the consideration of which was a debt of $65.00 that Hutchinson owed him for money advanced and legal services rendered. Deavitt now claims that the mortgage is void, because not joined in by Hutchinson as the statute requires, and seeks to hold the property discharged therefrom.

The statute provides that a husband and wife may, by their joint deed, convey the real estate of the wife as. she might do by her separate deed if unmarried — V. S. 2209; and that a married woman shall not convey nor mortgage her real estate except by deed duly executed by herself and husband. V. S. 264.6. This last section, though passed long after the other, does not alter the other, for as originally passed it had after the words, “herself and husband,” the words, “as now provided by law” — Acts 1884, No. 140, s. 1; and not putting those words into the revision does not alter the construction of the section, and so the question depends upon the construction of sec. 2209.

There is more or less conflict in the cases as to what is a sufficient joining of a husband in his wife’s deed of her real estate, to answer the requirements of the statutes in such case made and provided. But we think the weight of authority is, that when the husband has a freehold interest in his wife’s real [138]*138estate by virtue of the marital relation, he must in order to make her conveyance thereof good, so join therein as to pass his title, and that to do that, he must be named in the body of the deed as a grantor, and use apt and sufficient words to convey, and that his merely executing a deed jointly with his wife in which she alone is named as grantor is not enough. 9 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 2nd Ed. 111. This agrees with the holding in Agricultural Bank v. Rice, 4 How. 225, and Batcheler v. Brereton, 112 U. S. 396, that in order to convey by grant, the party possessing the right must be the grantor, and use apt and proper words to convey to the grantee, and that merely signing, sealing, and acknowledging an instrument in which another is grantor is not sufficient. Chancellor Kent says that the weight of authority would seem to favor the existence of a general rule of law that the husband must be a party to the conveyance or release of his wife, and that such a rule is founded on sound principles arising from the relations of husband and wife — 2 Kent Com. 10th Ed. *153; and on page *155, “on view of our American law on this subject,” he concludes the general rule to be that the husband must show his concurrence in the wife’s conveyance by becoming “a party to the deed,” and that the cases in which her deed without such concurrence is valid, are to be considered as exceptions to the general rule. An extended consideration of the cases is unnecessary. They are pretty fully reviewed in a note to Payne v. Parker, 25 Am. Dec. 226; in one to King v. Rhew, 23 Am. St. Rep. 82; and in 9 Am. & Eng. Ency. Daw, 2nd Ed. 110-113. Much of the conflict among them is apparent rather than real, and grows out of the difference in statutes and in the marital rights of the husband in his wife’s lands. Thus, in Maine, the statute requires “the joinder of her husband”, but not, it is said, as a grantor, for he has nothing to grant, but merely as an assenter, for he has only the power to give or to withhold assent; and [139]*139therefore it is sufficient there if he signs and seals the deed without otherwise becoming a party to it. Bray v. Clapp, 80 Me. 277; 6 Am. St. Rep. 197. The court says in that case that why a husband, under the common-law sway, joined in the wife’s deed, was, that they were both seised of her real estate, he of a freehold and she of a fee; that they were regarded as one person, the legal existence of the wife being consolidated into that of the husband; and that therefore they were required in matters affecting her, to join in pleading and conveyance; but that those rules, under their statutory system, are obsolete. But under our statutory system they are not obsolete as to real estate of the wife that is not her separate property, for in that, the husband still has a freehold — Hackett v. Moxley, 68 Vt. 210; and in respect of conveying her interest in it, the wife’s common-law disability has not been removed, but continued by statute.

In Massachusetts, where, since the statute of 1857, only the husband’s “assent in writing” is required, he need not join in the deed as grantor, but his signing and sealing it is sufficient — Chapman v. Miller, 128 Mass. 267; or witnessing it— Child v. Sampson, 117 Mass. 62; or signing as grantor the mortgage notes of his wife — Cormerais v. Wesselhoeft, 114 Mass. 550. But before the passage of that statute, it would seem to have been otherwise there; for in Jewett v. Davis, 10 Allen, 68, it was held that by well-settled principles of the common law, as long held and practiced upon in that commonwealth and subsequently confirmed by statute, a married woman who owns the fee of land not held to- her sole and separate use, could convey the same only by deed executed by herself and husband, and when both were parties to the effective and operative part thereof.

In Connecticut the statute requires the deeds of married women to be “executed by them jointly with their husbands,” [140]*140and they hold that he who signs executes, and that the husband’s name need not be inserted in the body of the deed. Pease v. Bridge, 49 Conn. 58.

In order for the premises in question to be the separate property of Mrs. Hutchinson, the deed thereof to her must contain explicit words shutting out her husband from his marital rights in it — Curtis v. Simpson, 72 Vt. 235; and as it does not appear that it contains such words, it must be taken that he has a freehold therein, and so the mortgage is void.

Nor can it be validated in equity without statutory power therefor.

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Bluebook (online)
50 A. 810, 73 Vt. 134, 1901 Vt. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dietrich-v-hutchinson-vt-1901.