Gordon, Rankin & Co. v. Tweedy

71 Ala. 202
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 71 Ala. 202 (Gordon, Rankin & Co. v. Tweedy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon, Rankin & Co. v. Tweedy, 71 Ala. 202 (Ala. 1881).

Opinion

SOMERYILLE, J.

It is now settled by the past decisions of this court, since the act removing, with certain exceptions, all disqualification based on the fact of being a party to a suit, or interested in the issue tried, that, in civil cases, husband and wife are competent witnesses for or against each other, to -prove any fact which did not come to their knowledge through the channel of the conjugal relation; or, in other words, any transaction which is manifestly not confidential. This rule would clearly embrace all matters which must have been intended by them to be made public, the disclosure of which would be no violation of marital confidence, or tend to engender matrimonial discord. And such seems generally now to be the settled weight of authority also in other States.-Chapman v. Holding, 60 Ala. 522; Sumner v. Cook, 51 Ala. 521; Rowland v. Plummer, 50 Ala. 182; Robison v. Robison, 44 Ala. 227; Stuhlmuller v. Ewing, 39 Miss. 447; Crook v. Henry, 25 Wis. 569; 1 Greenl. Ev. § 337; 1 Whart. Ev. §§ 428-431. The •chancellor did not err in admitting the deposition of the ap-pellee, Tweedy, or that of his wife.

When a deed or other conveyance is assailed for fraud, it is competent to sustain its validity by parol proof of any consideration other than that expressed, prpvided the two considerations be consistent, or of the same general character. It did not vary the legal effect of the deed from Tweedy to his wife to show that a portion of the consideration was the proceeds of the sale of certain stock in the Nashville & Decat/ur Railroad Company, though recited to be stock of the Nashville & Chattanooga Railroad Company. So the notes of Foster were as much a valuable consideration as the money consideration recited in the deed which was executed by him to Tweedy. The evidence as to the real consideration of these instruments was properly admitted-1 Whart. Law Ev., §§ 1046-1047; Mead v. Steger, 5 Port. 498; Hinde v. Longworth, 11 Wheat. 199; Hair v. Little, 28 Ala. 236; 1 Parsons Notes & Bills, 194; Ramsey v. Young, 69 Ala. 157.

The release by a married woman of her inchoate or contingent right of dower in lands owned by her husband, of which she is lawfully dowable, may constitute a valuable consideration for the execution of a deed by him to her. And the same is true, whether the release be made contemporaneously with the deed, or pursuant to a preceding agreement.-Hoot v. Sorrel, 11 Ala. 386; Bump on Fraud. Con. 303; Bank of U. S. v. Lee, 13 Pet. 107. Yet such a contract must be reasonable and free from fraud in order to be sustained in equity, and should be especially scrutinized, when made to a wife by a husband who is iusolvent or in failing circumstances.-2 Scribner on Dower, 7-8; Quarles v. Lacy, 4 Munf. 251; Burwell's [211]*211Ex'r. v. Lumsden, 24 Gratt. 443; S. C. 18 Amer. Rep. 648. We are of the opinion that the deed bearing date November 13, 1813, executed by the appellee, Tweedy, to his wife, is, under all the facts of this case, constructively fraudulent, and can not be sustained. The lands conveyed by this deed had been purchased from one Foster, but a few days before, upon a recited consideration of over sixty-five hundred dollars. Making due allowance for the fact that they were partly paid for in Foster’s.own paper, purchased at fifty cents on the dollar, it is a fair inference, from all the testimony, that they were worth not less than four or five thousand dollars. "We deem the consideration of the conveyance to be grossly inadequate. It is recited to be the proceeds of certain railroad stock alleged to belong to the wife which, the testimony shows, sold for the sum of four hundred and eighty-five dollars; the further sum of six hundred and forty-six dollars received as a part of the distributive share of Mrs. Tweedy in her father’s estate and used by the husband; and the release by the wife of her contingent dower interest in certain lands, the value of which is not stated. What the value of these lands was, or that of the wife’s right of dower in them, does not clearly appear from the testimony taken in the cause. The appellee, Tweedy, estimates the lands as -vyorth about five thousand dollars, and the inchoate right of dower at two thousand dollars, which latter sum, he testifies, was the amount agreed to be paid for the wife’s relinquishment.

The right of dower is, of course, merely contingent, being dependent upon the wife’s good behavior, and the further fact of her surviving her husband. And while it is a valuable interest, which was the subject of conveyance by fine at common law and by deed with us, it is more or less valuable according to the ages, state of health, and even the habits of the husband and wife.-Bullard v. Briggs, 7 Pick. 533; Code, 1876, § 2470. And, under the provisions of our statutes, the right may be barred entirely, should the statutory separate estate owned by the wife at the time of the husband’s death be equal to, or greater in value than her dower interest.-Code, 1876, §§ 2715-2716. The statute further provides, in cases where lands of a decedent are sold by order of the probate court, and the widow consents to have her dower interest sold with them, that the value of the dower right shall be “ascertained by proof, having regard to the age and health of the dowress,” but it shall in no case be estimated at more than “ one-sixth of the purchase-money.” — Code, 1876, §§ 2470-71. When the right is inchoate, as of necessity it is before the death of the husband, it can not be so valuable as after his death, because it is contingent and may be defeated by the death of the wife, or the- forfeiture of it by her misbehavior. Standard annuity [212]*212tables, founded in human experience and observation, furnish the proper rule by wrhich chancery courts are ordinarily governed in computing the probable present value of such a contingent interest.-1 Scribner on Dower, 333; 2 Ibid. 6; Jackson v. Edwards, 7 Paige, 386, 408-410; Bartlett v. Vanzandt, 4 Sandf. Ch. 396. The case of Beavers v. Smith, 11 Ala. 20, announces no principle in conflict with this rule. The question there was the proper valuation of a vested dower interest, not a contingent or inchoate one. And though held by this court in Martin v. Wharton, 38 Ala. 638, that such an inchoate right of dower was not available as a set-off under the statute, on the ground that it could not be measured with sufficient accuracy by any pecuniary standard, we apprehend that the powers and machinery of a court of equity are for the purpose here sought fully adequate to this end, at least by approximation. It is known that in modern times, characterized among other things by the rapid growth of the business of life insurance, it has become a common thing for actuaries to calculate values of this contingent nature upon the basis of standard annuity tables, and tables of mortality giving the probable duration of human life at every age. And this duty being here imposed by the requirements of this case, we know of no other possible way of determining such valuation than by the rule we have amiounced.-Jackson v. Edwards, 7 Paige, 386, 408.

The appellees in this case have failed to furnish any sufficient data in the testimony, by which we are enabled to ascertain the value of the wife’s interest in the lands in which she relinquished her dower.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Ala. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-rankin-co-v-tweedy-ala-1881.