Jones v. Degge

5 S.E. 799, 84 Va. 685, 1888 Va. LEXIS 129
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 5, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 5 S.E. 799 (Jones v. Degge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Degge, 5 S.E. 799, 84 Va. 685, 1888 Va. LEXIS 129 (Va. 1888).

Opinion

Lewis, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit in equity to subject the separate estate of a married woman to the payment of a certain negotiable note for $500, executed jointly by herself and husband, on the 14th of February, 1885. The note was given for a debt due by the liusband to the plaintiff for the purchase of a one-half interest in a weekly newspaper, known as the “ Sunday Gazette,” published in the city of Norfolk. The separate estate consisted of several houses and lots, situate in Norfolk, which shortly before her marriage, in 1884, were conveyed to a trustee for the sole and separate use of the wife, with power of disposition by her direction to the trustee.

The bill alleges that the husband is insolvent, and has no estate of any description, real or personal. And -the prayer of the bill is, that the rents and profits of the separate estate, or so much thereof as may be necessary, be subjected to the payment of the note above mentioned, which is past due and wholly unpaid. Both husband and wife are made defendants to the bill, with a prayer that they be summoned to answer the same.

The defendants answered jointly, and subsequently an amended bill was filed, making the trustee in the deed of settlement a defendant, who also answered. The husband and wife defended in their answer on the ground of failure of consideration and fraud. They averred that the contract of purchase, on account of which the note sought to he collected was [687]*687given, was procured by the misrepresentations of the plaintiff as to the value and prospects of the paper which ivas the subject of the contract, and therefore that payment of the note ought not to be decreed. The defence set up in the answer of the trustee was, that the property of the husband ought to be first exhausted before decreeing against the estate of the wife, because the note was signed by her as surety for the husband. hTo replication appears to have been filed, except to the answer of the trustee, but testimony was, nevertheless, taken on both sides.

When the cause came on to be heard, the court below, being of opinion that the note constituted a charge on the separate estate, appointed a receiver to rent out the real estate mentioned iu the bill, until such time as the rents and profits realized therefrom would be sufficient to pay the note. Uo decree was rendered against the husband.

1. The appellants, the husband and wife, contend that inasmuch, as there was no replication to their answer in the court below, the averments of the answer must be taken as true, and that therefore the decree must be reversed. This position, hoAvever, is not Avell taken. It appears that objection on the ground of a want of replication Avas made by way of exception to the commissioner’s report, and overruled, after which the defendants proceeded to take depositions, upon Avhich in part the cause was heard. The case is, therefore, Avithin the statute, which provides that “ no decree shall be reversed for Avant of a replication to the answer, Avhere the defendant has taken depositions as if there had been a replication,” and which also provides that a decree shall not be reversed at the instance of a party who has taken depositions, for an informality in the proceedings, when it appears that there was a full and fair hearing upon the merits, and that substantial justice has been done.” Code 1873, ch. 177, §4; 1 Bart. Ch. Pr., p. 416; Simmons v. Simmons’ Adm’r, 33 Gratt., 451, 459.

[688]*6882. The question as to the competency of the husband as a witness in the case has also been discussed, but as his deposition was admitted, and the appellee is not complaining, the question is of no practical importance, so far as the present case is concerned. We are of opinion, however, that as the husband and wife were joint makers of the note, neither was a competent witness, notwithstanding no relief as against the husband is prayed for in the bill. 1 Greenl. Ev., §395. In Hayes v. Virginia Mutual Protection Association, 76 Va., 225, which was a suit on a policy of insurance for the benefit of the wife, it was held that she was a competent witness, because the husband was not beneficially interested in the suit, and was joined as a party with her simply because the statute, commonly known as the “Married Woman’s Act,” required it. And in Farley v. Tillar, 81 Va., 275, which was an action of unlawful detainer against the wife as a sole trader, in which the husband was joined as a defendant, it was for the same reason held that she was a competent witness, but that he was not.

The difference between those cases and the present is, that here the husband and wife are jointly and directly interested, and hence neither can testify without testifying for or against each other, which the common law, unaltered in this particular by statute in Virginia, forbids. Frank & Alder v. Lilienfeld, 33 Gratt., 377; N. & W. R. R. Co. v. Prindle, 82 Va., 122. Both were therefore incompetent; and, as the defendants were incompetent, the plaintiff was thereby rendered incompetent also; but his testimony, like that of the husband, was admitted by the court below, and it is agreed that the case shall he considered here upon the record as it is.

3. The question, then, is, whether the defence to the note is sustained by the proofs. The case, it is proper to say, is not affected by the statute last above mentioned, as the estate of the wife is not a separate legal estate, created by operation of the statute, but is an equitable estate held subject to the provi[689]*689sions of the deed of settlement. By the terms of that deed, the wife is empowered to charge the estate, and, in signing the note upon which the suit is brought, the presumption is that she intended to charge it, and the note is, therefore, a charge upon the estate, unless the defence set up in the answer be well founded. For the rule is now too well settled to be questioned, that if a /erne covert, having a separate estate, contract a debt, either as principal or surety, she is presumed, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, to intend a charge on her separate estate, though no reference to the estate be made when the debt is contracted. Hulme v. Tenant, 1 Bro., Ch. 16, 1 Lead. Cas. Eq., Pt. IL., 481; Burnett v. Hawpe’s ex’or, 25 Gratt., 481; Frank & Alder v. Lilienfeld, supra; Christian & Gunn v. Keen, 80 Va., 369; 2 Bl. Comm., 293 n. (12).

"We think the defence is not sustained. The case of the appellants rests almost exclusively upon the testimony of the husband, who testifies that he was induced to enter into the transaction, on account of which the note was given, by the representations of the plaintiff, and that he had no other means of knowledge upon the subject; that the plaintiff represented the newspaper in question to be in a prosperous condition, having not less than seven hundred and fifty subscribers, and a paying advertising patronage besides, and. that it could be made to yield a clear profit of not less than one hundred dollars per month; all of which representations, he says, were false and- fraudulent. He further says that, in point of fact, the paper had less than three hundred subscribers; that its receipts from advertisements were insignificant, and that, so far from its paying a profit, its receipts were less than the expense of conducting it. In short, he says it was virtually a defunct concern and worthless.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smyth Bros.-McCleary-McClellan Co. v. Beresford
104 S.E. 371 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1920)
Hannon v. Fink
1917 OK 461 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1917)
Deepwater Council v. Renick
53 S.E. 552 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1906)
Hoge & Hutchinson v. Turner
32 S.E. 291 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1899)
Simon v. Ellison
22 S.E. 860 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1895)
Shipman v. Fletcher
22 S.E. 458 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1895)
Thornton v. Gaar
12 S.E. 753 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1891)
Tate v. Perkins
7 S.E. 328 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1888)
Bowers' Adm'r v. Bowers
29 Va. 697 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1878)
Tate v. Vance
27 Va. 571 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1876)
Evans v. Spurgin
11 Gratt. 615 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1854)
Archer v. Ward
9 Gratt. 622 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1853)
Chamberlaine v. Marsh's Administrator
6 Va. 283 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1819)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 S.E. 799, 84 Va. 685, 1888 Va. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-degge-va-1888.