Jenne v. Marble

37 Mich. 319, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 258
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 37 Mich. 319 (Jenne v. Marble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenne v. Marble, 37 Mich. 319, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 258 (Mich. 1877).

Opinion

Campbell, J.

This is an action at law by the assignee of a husband against his wife on personal covenants for the payment of rent on a lease from the husband to the wife, and for the value of certain farm live stock claimed to have been sold to her.

The lease, dated July 10, 1874, leased two farms — one on shares, and one, which included a legal homestead and some additional land, for $260 a year and taxes. The lease, which was in the ordinary form used for farming leases, contained personal covenants, and clauses of eviction on default.

The court below held that the transaction was not such as to create a valid right of action for the husband against the wife, as not warranted by the statutes.

Under our statutes, a wife has no power to contract except in regard to her separate property. The present contract if valid, is made so because the leasehold interest for which she bargained could be so regarded, and also the personal property which it is claimed she purchased.

The case before us is without any clear precedent, and must depend upon whether it is covered by principles which have been determined.

It has been held that a contract for the purchase of property may be lawfully made by a married woman, the procurement of property which she is to own being equivalent to the creation of a separate interest. Tillman v. Shackleton, 15 Mich., 447; Campbell v. White, 22 Mich., 178; Powers v. Russell, 26 Mich., 179; Rankin v. West, 25 Mich., 196.

The constitution and statutes are clear against her right to make a mere personal obligation unconnected with property, and not charging it; so that she cannot become personally bound jointly with her husband, nor as a surety, by mere personal promise. De Vries v. Conklin, 22 Mich., [322]*322255; West v. Laraway, 28 Mich., 464; Emery v. Lord, 26 Mich., 431.

She may receive a gift of land directly from her husband as the statutes now stand, Burdeno v. Amperse, 14 Mich., 94; but she could not do so until the statute of 1855 gave her enlarged powers of contracting. Ransom v. Ransom, 30 Mich., 328. She may also make gifts and transfers to her husband. Penniman v. Perce, 9 Mich., 509; Durfee v. McClurg, 6 Mich., 223.

But the law has not disregarded the fact that marital influence places married persons in different relations from others, and prevents their dealings from being governed by the same rules which usually require others to abide by bargains not tainted with distinct evidences of fraud and misconduct. Where a husband gets the advantage, it requires no great positive evidence to establish the invalidity of his bargain. Witbeck v. Witbeck, 25 Mich., 439; Wales v. Newbould, 9 Mich., 45; Stiles v. Stiles, 14 Mich., 72.

It is not the purpose of the law to create any rule which will tend to destroy the value and confidence of the marital relation. Snyder v. People, 26 Mich., 106. The statutes have made it impossible for married persons to deal on the same footing with others, by preventing either from testifying against the other without mutual consent, or from divulging their mutual conversations not made in public. It is impossible, therefore, for either to explain any transaction and its circumstances, as it might be done among strangers.

Inasmuch as the wife’s power of contracting is special and not general, we can only get light on it from the doctrines which have been enforced. At common law there were mutual disabilities — husbands not being able to act. any more than their wives, in mutual contracts. The man as well as the woman was under disability. The same rule applied in equity, except in regard to separate estates, and to some extent as to those. It is important to understand the peculiar elements of the agreement here sued upon, in order to know the bearings of the rules which have been considered in other cases.

[323]*323Iii the first place the agreement is one intended to be enforced by an ordinary action at common law and not in equity, and such an action is brought here.

In the next place it is executory entirely on the part of the wife, involving no present transfer or charge of her property, or any of it.

In the third place it requires her to pay rent, incapable of being apportioned, upon the farm on which the family at the time resided, and where she was entitled to live and be supported; and includes within that farm a legal homestead over which her husband or his creditors could under no] circumstances exercise dominion which would interfere with her right of possession, and it confers a right of eviction for any default in payment of rent.

In the fourth place it either contemplates a separation which no court of law would enforce, or else it compels her to pay rent for property jointly occupied with her husband as a home, in which he was legally bound to maintain her.

And lastly, as regards the personal property, it consisted ■of animals used on the homestead, most of which were ■exempt from execution and incapable of being disposed of by the husband without the wife’s consent, and liable if so interfered with to be replevied by her, and none of which had been so distinguished as to take them out of the exemption.

The act of 1855 before referred to, does not, as already suggested, abrogate all of the common law or of the statutes restraining married women from contracting, and it ■does not profess to change the powers of husband and wife to deal with each other, except so far as such a change is implied. So far as it fairly extends it does so operate, in some important particulars as held by this court heretofore.

But we have not held, thus far, that husband and wife may contract with each other generally, nor has it been heretofore decided that they could now make contracts enforceable at law, which could not have been enforced in ■equity formerly concerning a wife’s separate estate.

[324]*324In equity a wife’s transfer of her separate property or its income to her husband might be valid, and would, if not objectionable, be sanctioned by a court of equity; and it was-usually sanctioned if made for a valuable consideration, or if proper under the circumstances. This doctrine somewhat reluctantly recognized by Lord Thurlow in Pybus v. Smith, 1 Ves., Jr., 189, is the ruling English doctrine, and was followed in Methodist Ep. Church v. Jaques, 3 J. C. R., 77. In the Court of Errors, 17 J. R., 548, the doctrines laid down indicated that the power to deal with separate property under settlement was presumptively absolute, while the chancellor, whose opinion has been more approved in the United States, regarded the settlement as furnishing the measure of authority, and not the limitation. Upon the general doctrine see cases collected in notes to Pybus v. Smith, 1 Hov. Supplement 67; 3 Kent’s Com., 163, et seq. and notes; 1 Leading Oases in Equity, 394, and notes, English and American, to Hulme v. Tenant. These distinctions are-not important under our statutes which give all the power-that would have been possible under any settlement.

All of the cases, however, rest upon the doctrine that the act of the wife is the execution of a power of appointment, and not an ordinary personal contract.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Mich. 319, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenne-v-marble-mich-1877.