In re Riva

90 A. 669, 83 N.J. Eq. 200, 13 Buchanan 200, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 77
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 6, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 90 A. 669 (In re Riva) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Riva, 90 A. 669, 83 N.J. Eq. 200, 13 Buchanan 200, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 77 (N.J. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Hovvbli,, Y. O.

This is a proceeding instituted by a married woman praying that she may have leave to convey, mortgage or lease her real property under the authority of chapter 28, laws of 1889. Gomp. Stat. p. S2S0. She was married to her present husband on April 26th, 1893, and immediately thereafter made her home with her husband at Mill town, in Middlesex county. They lived there together until 1908, when they moved to New Brunswick, and there lived in a house belonging to the petitioner. The petitioner1 left her husband on May 17th, 1912, and went to Spring Lake, where she resided until some time in 1913; she' then went to New York City, where she now lives. The two children of the marriage, both girls, have remained with her. .

The respondent is a physician; he was practicing his profession in New Brunswick at the time the petitioner left him, and had his office in the basement of the house in which they lived.' Since she left him he has returned to Milltown and is now practicing there; and the petitioner soon after the separation sold the house in New Brunswick in which they had lived. In 1911, the petitioner became entitled to a substantial share in a large fortune under the wills of her father and mother, so that it was not necessary for her to rely upon her husband for the support of herself and the children.

[202]*202She now applies to the court for an order that she may sell, convey, mortgage or lease any interest, estate or right that she majr have in certain of her New Jersey real property particularly described in the petition in the same manner and with like effect as if she were sole and unmarried; she alleges that the property came to her from her mother, and not from her husband; that she was living in a state of separation from him, and that he “neglects and refuses to maintain and support your petitioner.” On the filing of the petition an order was made requiring the husband to appear and show cause why its prayer should not be granted. On an adjourned day the husband appeared and proofs were adduced orally before the court, the only witnesses being the petitioner and the respondent. The defence or objection to the relief sought, which was interposed by the respondent, was that he did not neglect and refuse to maintain and support the petitioner. It was admitted that the property in question came to the petitioner from her mother, and that she and the respondent were living in a state of separation, leaving open only the question of his neglect and refusal to maintain and support her.

The statute in question was before Vice-Chancellor Stevenson in a similar application (In re Staheli, 78 N. J. Eq. 74), in which he advised a decree on the ground that the husband neglected and refused to support the wife while they were separated from each other, holding that it made no difference whose fault brought about the separation, and that a decree should be made in view of the husband’s refusal and neglect to support the wife. The situation here is somewhat different. While the wife separated herself from her husband (for whose fault it makes no difference), and while the husband is not actually furnishing support and maintenance to the wife, yet he alleges that he is willing to support her to the best of his ability, provided she will return to his home and live with him. These facts raise the question whether it is contemplated by the statute that a married woman may abandon her home and claim relief under this statute upon the ground of non-support in a case where the husband is willing to support her.

It is provided by the Married Woman’s act of 1874 (Gomf. Slat. 32-37 § IJ) that nothing contained in the act should en[203]*203able a married woman to convey or encumber her lands without her husband joining as heretofore, except in those instances for which express provision was made in that act, and that no conveyance, deed, contract or act of such married woman, or any judgment or decree against her should in any respect impair or affect the right of the husband in her land as tenant by the curtesy after her death. The act under which this proceeding is taken was passed in 1878, and was amended to its present form in 1889. The parties to this controversy Avere married in 1893, after both of these acts had gone into operation.

Has the husband a tenancy by curtesy initiate, and if such right exists may a married woman sell her land free from the right of the husband, or must it be subject to his right? This is another of the questions in the case. While it is not raised by the petition or by the defence at the hearing, it does appear upon consideration of the merits of the case, and if there is a substantial doubt about Avliat interest the Avife has the right to convey under this statute of 1889, or if the court should be of opinion that the husband has a right in the premises, it should hesitate before making a decree which might have the effect of casting doubt upon the title. Not only would this affect the marketability of the title in the near and in the distant future, but it Avould likeAvise seriously affect the present market value of the land for purposes of sale or exchange.

The act of 1889 appears to have been passed for the benefit of a married Avoman udio, first, owns real property in this state, and second, is living in a state of separation from her husband, and third, Avhose husband neglects and refuses to maintain and support her. It gives her authority to apply by petition to this court seeking a decree that during the separation, neglect and refusal to support her she may sell, convey, mortgage or lease any interest, estate or right that she may have in such real property. The act then provides for notice of application to the husband, and finally empoivers the court, upon satisfactory proof that the wife is living separate and apart from her husband, and that he neglects and refuses to support and maintain her, to authorize her to sell, convey, mortgage and lease any interest, estate or right that she may have in such real property, except [204]*204such as came to her by gift through or from her husband in the same manner and with the like effect as if she were sole and unmarried. The act then provides that any sale, conveyance, mortgage or lease by her of any interest, estate or right which she may have in such real property made in pursuance of such decree shall pass any and all such interest, estate or right as she might have in such real property except such as came to her from her husband in the same manner and with the like effect as if she were sole and unmarried.

The act permits the court, but docs not require it, to make an order under certain circumstances that she may sell, convey, mortgage and lease any interest, estate or right that she may have in such real property, using words which are entirely con-, sonant with the idea of conveying an interest less than a fee, or an interest which would consist of a fee subject to an encumbrance.

The question then arises whether the act of 1889 repeals to any extent whatever the provisions of the section of the Married Woman’s act of 1871 above quoted. It certainly does not do so in terms. Tf it can be held to operate as a repealer it must be by implication only. The two acts deal with the same legal situation and are therefore in pari materia, and' unless there is either an express or implied repealer they must stand together as component parts of our system of jurisprudence. Walker v. Freeholders, 32 N. J. Law 348; affirmed, 83 N. J. Law 695; Freeholders v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 A. 669, 83 N.J. Eq. 200, 13 Buchanan 200, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-riva-njch-1914.