Gabriel v. Mullen

19 S.W. 1099, 111 Mo. 119, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 20, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 1099 (Gabriel v. Mullen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gabriel v. Mullen, 19 S.W. 1099, 111 Mo. 119, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 128 (Mo. 1892).

Opinion

DIVISION ONE.

Bakclay, J.

This is a statutory action in the nature of replevin to recover possession of a roan mare as the property of the plaintiff, Mrs. Jennie R. Grab riel, a married woman. The defendant, a constable, asserted by his answer a special property in the animal by virtue of a levy upon an execution against John E. Gabriel, husband of the present plaintiff.

Plaintiff obtained possession of the property under an order of delivery, having given the usual bond in replevin therefor.

[122]*122The case was tried before a jury; a verdict for defendant resulted, and plaintiff appealed to the Kansas City court of appeals.

The latter transferred it to this court under the provisions of the constitution. Amendment of 1884, sec. 6.

The argument here, and the proceedings in the-trial court, indicate that the material facts are mutually conceded.

The mare was the property of Mrs. G-abriel, a gift from her father. The levy upon it by defendant, May 22, 1885, was under a judgment of the day before in favor of Dr. August Rhodes against Mr. Gabriel alone, upon a note of the latter, -given for an indebtedness for medical services in 1876 to Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel and her children. Mrs. Gabriel was not named in the note or in the judgment.

I. Upon these facts it is claimed by plaintiff that the|mare of Mrs. Gabriel was not subject to levy for the debt of her husband, even though created for necessaries for the wife and family.

The statute of 1875 declares that the personal property of the wife shall “be and'remain her separate property and under her sole control, and shall not be liable to be taken by any process of law for the debts of the husband; * * * but such property shall be subject to execution * * * for any debt or liability of her husband created for necessaries for the wife or family.” Revised Statutes, 1879, sec. 3296.

Prior to this enactment the wife’s personalty in possession became answerable upon her marriage for all her husband’s debts of every nature.

When the legislature saw fit to create a statutory separate estate in such property and vest it in her, free of liability “to be taken by any process of law for the debts of the husband,” it had the power to determine,. [123]*123as it did, the extent of the new estate, by providing that such property should remain (as it had been) “subject to execution” for the particular class of debts indicated.

This court has already held that a wife, owning a sole and separate equitable estate, might, nevertheless, charge her husband for necessaries for her support. Miller v. Brown (1871), 47 Mo. 508.

In view of his personal liability for such necessaries, the legislature no doubt considered it proper and just that her personal property as well as his should continue liable therefor. So it placed the limitation mentioned upon her separate ownership of it.

That such was the intent of this legislation we think its terms plainly show.

II. But it appears to be supposed that to permit the enforcement of such a liability by means of an ordinary execution on a judgment against the husband would violate some right of the wife to have a “day in court.”

We have already seen that the statute not merely charges her property with a liability for such necessaries, but expressly subjects it “to execution” for that kind of a debt “of her husband.” This is precisely the mode in which such property was reached for the satisfaction of general liabilities of the husband, before the passage of-the amendment of 1875. Barbee v. Wimer (1858), 27 Mo. 140.

In construing any statute it is proper and often useful to consider the state of the law existing at its enactment as casting light on the intended scope of the change made by it.

Here it seems that the former liability of the wife’s property, as to the debts of her husband for family necessaries, was designed to continue. Then what more natural and reasonable than that the existing [124]*124mode of enforcing such liability should likewise be continued as the language of the statute imports?

But is it in harmony with the constitution to so provide? Would it be “due process of law” to permit her property to be seized upon an execution against the husband for such a debt without a previous hearing and judgment to which the wife was a party?

Of course she always has the right to try the issue whether or not the execution debt was in fact created for such necessaries.

She is not concluded on that issue by a judgment against her husband to which she is no party; and, hence, there is nothing in the suggestion that she might be bound by his collusive action with the creditor in allowing the judgment to go.

Since the act of 1883 (Session Acts, 1883, p. 113), she may sue “in her own* name and without joining her husband,” and may . herself raise the issue as to such necessaries in several ways; by replevin (as in the case at bar), or by notice to the officer of her claim, and an action upon his bond, or against him alone for trespass; perhaps, in other forms.

But it is nothing new or abnormal in legal procedure that property should be made liable to a particular charge, and subjected to seizure accordingly without a prior hearing as to the facts creating such charge.

It rests in the sound discretion of the legislature to permit this within constitutional limits. Familiar illustrations of such proceedings are close at hand.

Thus, where one has received without evil motive a gift of personal property from another, who turns out to have been then insolvent, a creditor of the latter (on obtaining a judgment against him) may levy on the subject of the gift, in possession -of the donee, without any previous action against him to establish the fact of such gift.

[125]*125In such case the title passes out of the giver; hut, as to his existing creditors, however honest in fact the transaction may be, the title only passes subject to their just demands against it by force of positive law. Revised Statutes, 1889, sec. 5170; Woodson v. Pool (1854), 19 Mo. 340; Potter v. McDonald (1860), 31 Mo. 62. Similar consequences follow where a person buys personalty with a purpose to aid the seller in defrauding his creditors. Though the title may pass as between the immediate parties, the creditors, upon an execution against the seller, may take it from the buyer in satisfaction of their claims without any prior legal ceremony to adjudicate the facts mentioned.

Again, where one acquires, in good faith and for full value, personal property of the defendant in a justice’s judgment, after the execution thereon has been placed in the hands of the constable, he takes the title subject to the charge created by the execution, which may be enforced by a diligent creditor by mere levy upon the property in the possession of the purchaser. State ex rel. v. Blundin (1862), 32 Mo. 387. It was never supposed to be necessary to begin a new action against the latter to obtain another judgment asserting such lien.

The law itself impresses these limitations upon the ownership of property in the circumstances indicated in these examples.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 1099, 111 Mo. 119, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gabriel-v-mullen-mo-1892.