Dobbin v. Hubbard

17 Ark. 189
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 Ark. 189 (Dobbin v. Hubbard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dobbin v. Hubbard, 17 Ark. 189 (Ark. 1856).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice ENGlisii

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was a bill filed by John M. Hubbard, in the Phillips Circuit Court, against Wilson D. Dobbin and -wife, Levisa, to enforce the payment of a debt out of the separate property of the latter. The case made by the bill is as follows:

That on the 12th of December, 1850, the defendant, Levisa, of Phillips county, Arkansas, and Napoleon B. Pillow, of Memphis, Tennessee, being about to intermarry, executed a marriage contract, with the view that the property owned by them respectively, might not be encumbered or charged, in consequence of the marriage, with any of the consequences incident thereto, either by the common law, or the laws of Arkansas; by which contract, it was agreed between them, after expressing the intention aforesaid, that notwithstanding the marriage, Pillow should hold and retain all his real and personal property, free from any claim of alimony or dower therein, on the part of the said De-visa, with power to sell and dispose of the same without her consent, &c. That the said Levisa should have free and absolute right, power and authority, to grant, bargain, sell, alien, enfeoff and deliver, any and all kinds of property which she then owned, or might thereafter acquire by gift, grant, purchase, devise or descent, whether the same be lands, goods, chattels, credits, bonds, bills, notes, or negroes, without the consent or assent of tbe said Pillow, and without bis joining lier in the sale, conveyance or delivery thereof, or in the execution of the title or deed therefor; it being the express understanding, between the parties to the contract, that none of the property, which either of them then owned, or might thereafter acquire, should be taken or held Subject to the payment of the debts of the other, whether contracted prior or subsequent to their marriage. That said Levisa should have the full right and liberty, after the marriage, to contract debts, and execute in her own name, evidences or notes for the payment thereof, without the consent or assent of the said Pillow: and by last will to devise to such persons as she might choose, any or all of her estate, real, personal or mixed, including slaves, &c., without advice, consent or approval of Pillow: and, in a word, to do all and every act or acts, in reference to her said property, while married, that she might or could lawfully do, if sole and unmarried. That during the marriage, Pillow was to have and exercise the sole dominion over all property which might be owned by said Levisa, so far as to receive the rents, profits, and annual products of the same, to the end, that it might be applied to the mutual support and enjoyment of the parties, &c., with this restriction, that the debts which the said Levisa then owed, were first to be paid out of the said income and profits.

That this marriage contract was duly proven and recorded in Phillips county; and, after its execution, the said Levisa and the said Pillow intermarried.

That on the 24th day of May, 1851, and during her coverture with Pillow, the said Levisa executed and delivered to the complainant, Hubbard, her separate obligation for $701. 53, bearing that date, due and payable on the day it was executed. That it was her intention, in the execution of said writing obligatory, to bind her separate property thereby, and that she did so bind the same.

That afterwards, on the-day of ■-, 1852, Pillow departed this life, and on the 24th day of January, 1853, the said Levisa intermarried with the defendant, Wilson D. Dobbin. That prior to their marriage, she and Dobbin also entered into a marriage contract, by which it was agreed between them as follows:

That notwithstanding their contemplated marriage, the joint property of the two should be used and controlled by them mutually during their coverture; and that, in prospect of death, the said Levisa reserved to herself the right, power and privilege of disposing of any or all of her property, which she may then own, by will or devise, to such person or persons as she may choose, without the advice or consent of the said Wilson D.: and in case of dissolution of their marriage, otherwise than by death, the property of each shall be returned to the one who may have brought the same with marriage. It is further agreed, that the annual proceeds of the mutual property of the parties should be applied, first, during their cohabitation, to their mutual support, and the residue, during that time, to such objects and uses as the said Wilson D. might desire or wish. This contract was also proven and recorded in Phillips county.

The bill further alleges, that at the time of the marriage of the said Levisa and Pillow, and at the time of the execution of the marriage contract between them, and since that time, and now, the said Levisa was and is possessed of a large amount of property, as of her own, and to her sole and separate use: and among which property were, and are certain slaves, five in number, which are described.

That the said obligation has not been paid by the said Levisa, or any one for her. , "

The marriage contracts and the obligation are exhibited.

The bill prays that the separate property of the said Levisa, including that above described, might be decreed to have been bound by the execution of said writing obligatory. That defendants be required to discover all of the separate property owned by the said Levisa at the time said obligation was executed, or at any time since. That complainant have judgment for his debt and interest; and that he have execution for the same against the separate property of the said Devisa, above described, or that a commissioner might be appointed to sell so much of said separate property as might be necessary for the payment of the debt and interest, at such time and place as the court might deem right and proper; and for general relief.

The defendants filed separate answers to the bill. So much of the answer of Mrs. Dobbin as is deemed material to be stated, is as follows:

She admits the execution of the marriage contract between her and Pillow: their intermarriage, and that while she was his wife, she executed and delivered to complainant the obligation exhibited with the bill, as alleged by the complainant. That Pillow died some time prior to the 21th January, 1853, but at what precise time, she was uninformed or advised. That she intermarried with "Wilson D. Dobbin on the day and year last named, and was still living with him as his wife. That at the time of her marriage with Pillow, and at the time when they entered into said marriage contract, and since then, and until her said marriage with Dobbin, she was possessed of a large amount of property, as of her own, and to her sole and separate use, and among which were the slaves described in the bill. She submits, that by her marriage with Dobbin, the slaves described in the bill, and all her other personal property passed to, and vested in him, subject only to the restrictions and reservations in her favor, contained in the marriage contract between them. She states that it is not true, as alleged in the bill, that it was her intention, at the time she executed the said writiug obligatory to complainant, to bind her separate property.

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Related

Sidway v. Nichol
34 S.W. 529 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1896)
Phillips v. Graves
20 Ohio St. (N.S.) 371 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1870)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Ark. 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobbin-v-hubbard-ark-1856.