Heyer v. Burger

1 Hoff. Ch. 1, 1839 N.Y. LEXIS 252
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedJuly 1, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1 Hoff. Ch. 1 (Heyer v. Burger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heyer v. Burger, 1 Hoff. Ch. 1, 1839 N.Y. LEXIS 252 (N.Y. 1839).

Opinion

The Assistant Vice-Chancellor:

The bill is filed by the husband for the purpose of having the articles of separation declared void in themselves; that if originally valid, they have been abrogated and were not in force at the date of the will; hence to establish that the will was inoperative ; impeaching it also on the ground of incapacity; and calling upon the executors to deliver and pay over the personal property, or avails of personal property, in their hands.

The bill calls for an answer under oath.

The first branch of the cause relates to the articles of separation. The second to the validity of the will.

I. As to the validity of these articles, it has been urged by counsel that no separate estate in the wife is created by this instrument, and none could therefore be devised or bequeathed, referring to various cases stated by Mr. Clancy. But in those and other similar cases, the question has arisen between the husband or the husband’s creditors, and the wife or her trustees ; and it has been whether she shall have the whole fund, or he or they shall participate in it; for this court will in no case take it wholly from her. (Roberts v. Spicer, 5 Mad. Rep. 491. Richard v. Amos, 1 Turn. & Russ. 222.) Here the husband relinquishes all his rights, and no creditors intervene.

Next in relation to this instrument, it is said that it was never consummated ; never delivered to the trustee, nor acted upon by him. As to this point, the answer of the defendants appears to me conclusive. It is strictly responsive to a direct charge that the articles were never delivered to the trustee, but remained in possession of Mrs. Heyer until after her death; and it avers that the instru[6]*6ment was delivered to the trustee, and that he subsequently permitted Mrs. Heyer to take it to show to counsel. Garritson, the trustee, is a defendant, and swears to the answer. I can have no doubt on this point.

Another question has suggested itself, whether the trust is a valid one 7 The trust is here to apply to the use of Mrs. Heyer, and to pay and deliver over to her the income of real and personal estate. It has been much questioned whether a trust to pay to-the party is within the provision authorizing a trust to apply income to the use of the beneficiary. The latest authority upon this point is that of Gott v. Cooke, before Chancellor Walworth, who held such a trust valid. Besides the only income here in question, arises from personal property. It has never been decided that the statute regulates trusts of personalty in this particular. Chief Justice Savage, in a very elaborate opinion, holds the contrary; and I apprehend that if the trust is good as to personal estate, it would not be vitiated even if united with a trust void as to real.

Another and much more important question arises as to the validity of the articles, upon the principles of the court resulting from its views of public policy.

On many occasions Lord Eldon has expressed his strong opposition to this court sustaining or enforcing contracts for a separation. (St. John v. St. John, 11 Vesey, 532.)

But it seems to me that there is enough in this case to bring it within the verge of unquestioned decisions. There was sufficient ground for a bill for a separation. There is a covenant with Garritson, the trustee, that the wife should live separate, that he would not compel cohabitation or molest her, or claim any money, goods or property which she possessed or might acquire, followed by an absolute conveyance to the trustee' of all her property. (See the cases 2 Story’s Comm. 652—4. Roper on Husband and Wife, vol. ii. p. 291 et. seq. Rogers v. Rogers, 4 Paige, 516. Westmeath v. Salisbury, 5 Bligh’s Rep. 339.)

That the power given to the wife to malee a will is good, is also clear. Indeed such a power is incidental to a sepa[7]*7rate estate, without being expressly conferred. (Rich v. Cockell, 9 Vesey, 369.)

Sometimes such an instrument has been termed a testamentary disposition, in the nature of a will; at others a proper will. (Ross v. Ewer, 3 Atk. 160, note.) At any rate, it has long been law, that such a disposition of personal estate, with the assent of the husband, was valid ; and the reason given for requiring his assent is, that as the wife’s chattels belong to the husband, his interest precludes an alienation by her. (Toller's Law of Executors, 10, and cases cited.)

Although the Revised Statutes preclude a married woman from making a will of personal as well as real estate, while the statutory restriction was previously limited to real estate, yet I see no ground in this for a supposed change in the rule, that a bequest may be permitted under an authority from the husband. And perhaps the distinction is, that as to real estate no post-nuptial agreement can authorize her will, because her heirs are concerned; while as to personal estate, a post-nuptial agreement is as available as one made before marriage. (See Marston v. Norton, 5 N. Hampshire Rep. 255. 477.) But whether the agreement is before or after marriage, or whether there is any agreement, is immaterial, where the property is given by another with a power to dispose of it by will.

The next topic of consideration is as to the alleged reconciliation of the parties and of its effect upon the articles.

By the testimony of Metcalf, it is rendered certain that Mrs. Heyer considered the articles in full force about the beginning of July, 1832. She exhibited them to him to consult about her right to sue Bvertson.

The testimony as to a reconciliation refers to acts in the course of that month. Heyer went to sea on the 3d or 4th of August.

James Smith saw the parties together at his house in Cherry-street, in July. She was there about six or seven days, and he saw her about every other day. They appeared to be on amicable terms. She expressed a wish that the articles had not been drawn and were destroyed; [8]*8They did not cohabit together to his knowledge. On a cross-examination, he says he was at home at the time of that visit about three days.

Mrs. Smith fixes the visit of Mrs. Heyer at her house to have lasted three or four days ; and Heyer was at the house every day. They were on good terms. They were often alone, but did not cohabit.

Margaret Heyer speaks of the same visit, and that they appeared on good terms. She says Heyer shortly after went to sea. William Coger makes a similar statement.

Agnes Hammond swears that Mrs. Heyer told her she never intended that the articles should be put in force; that she could not live without him. She fixes an interview in which such expressions were used, as being in the cholera season of 1832, and about a month before she heard of Mrs. Heyer’s death.

I pass over the inconsistent statements made by her upon the cross-examination, because, as to the fact of a declaration of Mrs. Heyer that the articles should not be acted upon, she is corroborated by Sarah Weed, who states that Mrs. Heyer said no one should use the articles; she had destroyed them, or intended to destroy them, or words to that effect.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Hoff. Ch. 1, 1839 N.Y. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heyer-v-burger-nychanct-1839.