In Re Brown

60 F.2d 269, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1326
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedJuly 13, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 60 F.2d 269 (In Re Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Brown, 60 F.2d 269, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1326 (W.D. Ky. 1932).

Opinion

DAWSON, District Judge.

This matter is before me on petition of Homer W. Batson, trustee for the bankrupt, to review the action of the referee in entering the order of April 25, 1931, holding that the only interest which passed to the trustee in the home occupied by the bankrupt and his wife was the contingent right of survivor-ship of the bankrupt in this property, and on the petition of James B. Brown, the bankrupt, to review the same order. The contention of the bankrupt is that no interest in this property passed to the trustee.

*271 The property involved is a tract of approximately six acres bordering Cherokee Park, on which there is a handsome residence, which at the time of the institution of tho bankruptcy proceeding was, and now is, occupied by the bankrupt and his wife as a home. This property was conveyed to- the bankrupt and his wife by two deeds, one dated September 23,1924, and the other January 7, 1925. The part of each deed material to this controversy reads as follows:

“This deed between Marie H. Seelbaeh and Louis Seelbaeh, her husband, parties of the first part, and James B. Brown and Elizabeth B. Brown, his wife, parties of the second part, witnesseth:

“That for a valuable consideration paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, the parties of the lirst part do hereby convey with covenant of general warranty unto the parties of the second part, during their joint lives as tenants in common, with remainder in fee simple to the survivor of them, tho following described real estate,” etc.

A correct solution of the questions here presented requires an examination of the common-law rule in Kentucky as to the respective rights of husband and wife in real estate deeded or devised to them jointly, and of the Statutes of Kentucky modifying tho common-law rule.

At common law a conveyance or devise of real estate jointly to husband and wife made them tenants by the entirety. That is to say, their interest in the title was one and indivisible, the foe in the entire estate thus held passing to the survivor. During their joint lives their holding was regarded as one and indivisible, and tho estate thus held during their joint lives was under the full control and domination of the husband. He was entitled to tho rents, uses, and profits thereof. During their joint lives he could sell it and deliver possession thereof to the purchaser, to the exclusion of the wife’s possession, and the deed thus executed by him during their joint lives operated to convey the entire title in the property to the purchaser in event the husband outlived the wife. This interest of the husband at common law could be subjected to sale by his creditors. Cochran v. Kerney, 9 Bush, 199.

This continued to be the law of Kentucky until the passage by the Legislature of chapter 368 of the Acts of 1816, which, among other things, provided as follows: “That the lands of no married woman within this Commonwealth, which she may have owned at the time of her marriage, or which may come or be given, devised or descend to her during the marriage, shall be subject to the debts of the husband, or be levied on, attached or sold, or executed, for any of his debts, created or arising either before or after the marriage.”

As construed by tho Court of Appeals in the cases of Moore v. Moore, 14 B. Mon. 259, and Cochran v. Kerney, 9 Bush, 199, this law had the effect of leaving the husband still free to enjoy the use, profits, and rents of real property jointly owned by him and his wife during- coverture, with the right during their joint lives to convoy same subject to the conveyance being defeated in event his wife should outlive him, hut to close the door to creditors of the husband levying on and selling this interest in such property so as to deprive the wife of the enjoyment and occupancy of the land during their joint lives and while it remained undetermined whether she or her husband would ultimately become the sole owner of the fee. The case of Cochran v. Korney, supra, however, held that a court of equity could subject this interest of the husband in real estate jointly held by him and his wife to the payment of the husband’s debts, provided it was so done as to neither affect the wife’s right of survivorship nor her right of enjoyment of occupancy during their joint lives.

The law of Kentucky remained in this condition until 1852, when by section 1 of article 2 oE chapter 47 of the Revised Statutes (Stanton, vol. 2, p. 8), it was provided: “Marriage shall give to the husband, during the life of the wife, no estate or interest in her real estate, chattels real, or slaves owned at the time or acquired by her after marriage, except the use thereof, with power to rent the real estate for not more than three years at a time, and hire the slaves in like manner for not moro than one year, and receive the rent and hire.”

Subsections 1 and 2 of this section specifically provided that neither such real estate nor the husband’s contingent right of curtosy or life estate therein, nor his right tq the use, rent, or hire thereof, conld be sold or otherwise subjected to the debts of the husband during their joint lives. This statute, in slightly modified form, was carried into the General Statutes as a part of section 1, article 2, of chapter 52 of that compilation. This law had the effect of not only closing the gap left in the act of 1846, by which the husband’s common-law interest in real property jointly held by him and his wife could bo *272 equitably subjected to the payment of his debts in the manner pointed out in the ease of Cochran v. Kerney, supra, but it also swept away the common-law right of the husband during their joint lives to sell and convey real estate jointly held by him and his wife subject to the defeat of such conveyance if the wife outlived the husband.

There was still left, however, the common-law rule of survivorship in such cases, even though the instrument under which they jointly held contained no express provision of such right of survivorship. This common-law right, however, was abolished in 1852 by section .14 of article 4 of chapter 47 of the Revised Statutes, which provided: “Where any real estate or slave is conveyed or deviled to husband and wife, unless a right by survivorship is expressly provided for, there shall be no mutual right to the entirety by survivorship between them; but they shall take as tenahts in common and the respective moieties be subject to curtesy or dower with all other incidents to such a tenancy.”

This law has continued in force and is found in substantially the same form, in so far as real estate is concerned, in section 2143, Kentucky Statutes, Carroll’s 1930 Edition.

Upon the enactment of this statute the only common-law rights of the husband during coverture in real estate held jointly by him and his wife were his right to enjoy the use and control thereof and the right to rent it for a period of not exceeding three years at a time. To this extent .the person of the wife was still deemed at common law to be merged in that of her husband during the existence of the'marriage relation.

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Bluebook (online)
60 F.2d 269, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-brown-kywd-1932.