Kirby v. . Boyette

24 S.E. 18, 118 N.C. 244
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 24 S.E. 18 (Kirby v. . Boyette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirby v. . Boyette, 24 S.E. 18, 118 N.C. 244 (N.C. 1896).

Opinion

Avery, J.:

“An 'examination of the brief filed by counsel for the appellant in Hardy v. Holly, 84 N. C., 661, will show that the argument in that case fully covered the .ground upon which we are asked to review the decision of this Court, (116 N. C., 165,) and with it to overrule aline ■of cases extending over fifteen years past. The exhaustive brief of the learned counsel who appeared in that case and the questions raised by the appeal invited and demanded, :at that ¡juncture, -a review of the previous cases in which *255 the doctrine of the- respective rights and powers of married women and trustees, holding for their sole and separate use, in selling and disposing of the separate property. The le'arned Justice (RuffiN) who delivered the opinion started out in the discussion by stating the English doctrine that a married woman was regarded as a feme sole as to any estate conveyed to her separate use, except in so far as she was restrained by the positive prohibition in the the instrument creating the estate.

After a cursory review of the previous cases in our reports bearing upon the subject, the Court said in Hardy v. Holly, supra, “ "When the question next arose in Knox v. Jordan, 8 Jones Eq., 175, the Court as then constituted, without division and without any sort of reservation, repudiated the doctrine of the English courts and adopted that which prevails in most of the courts of the States, and whether this was wisely done or not, that case has been too often approved, and doubtless too often acted upon in matters intimately connected with the interest and comfort of families, to admit of its correctness being now called in question.” The Court then proceeded to crystallize the law as they understood 'it to have been declared in Knox v. Jordan. It is insisted that this statement of the rule, established by previous decisions, was a dictum, as well as a departure from the doctrine theretofore laid down by our own and other courts of this country. It may aid us in disposing of this contention to reproduce the rule which it is insisted was a dictum, followed by the language used in Knox v. Jordan, cited as authority to sustain it. In Hardy v. Holly, the Court said, “We must take it to be the- settled law of this State, at least, that a married woman, as to her separate property is to be deemed a feme sole only to the extent of the power expressly given her in. the .deed of settlement. Her power *256 of disposition is not absolute but limited to the mode and maoner pointed out in the instrument, and when that is silent she is powerless.” The same principle was stated by MaNly, J., under the inspiration of a Court constituted differently, twenty-one years before, as follows: “We prefer adhering as closely as may be, consistently with decided cases, to the rule that a separate estate for the support of a married woman does not confer any faculties upon her except those which are found in the deed of settlement, and that in all other respects she is a feme covert and subject to the nsual disabilities.” It is difficult to distinguish between a rule that a married -woman, as to property limited to her sole and separate use, is a feme sole except as to “ faculties ” or powers “ found in the deed,” and the proposition that her power of disposition is not absolute but limited to the mode and manner pointed to (instead of the powers found) in the instrument creating the trust, and “when that is silent she is powerless.” If the rules are plainly expressive of the very same principle as th e Court in Hardy v. Holly held that they were, the lapse of fifteen years since its reiteration would enhance the probability that it had been too often acted upon to be disturbed, if the subject had never been since discussed. But in Kemp v. Kemp, 85 N. C., Justice Ruffin, again speak-* mg for the Court, said: “ A married woman is to be deemed a feme sole as to her separate estate, only to the extent of the power conferred upon her in the deed of settlement, and if no power of disposition be given in that instrument she is altogether without such power.” In Mayo v. Farrar, 112 N. C., 66, the same rule was again substantially reiterated, and the Ooui’t cited 2 Pomeroy Equity Jurisprudence, Section 1105, where the author classifies this Court as one of those where the wife’s power over the estate, conveyed to a trustee for her separate use, *257 is made to depend solely upon the permissive provisions of the instrument creating such estate. 2 .Pomeroy, supra, note 1, p. 1651. Again, in Monroe v. Trenholm (at the same Term) 112 N. C., 634, the Court laid down the rule that where land was conveyed to a trustee for the sole and separate use of a inarried woman, she had “ no power of disposition except such as is clearly given in the instrument.” "With the explanation that the restriction would not continue as a rule when the married woman should become discovert, the opinion in the case last mentioned was affirmed on the rehearing, 114 N. C., 590. The doctrine of Hardy v. Holly was also approved in Broughton v. Lane, 113 N. C., 16. There was therefore a line of decisions, sustaining the principle governing this case, which extended over 35 years, when it was first heard. If it were conceded that every opinion since Knox v. Jordan, supra, in so far as it incorporated this rule restricting the powers of married women, was a dictum, still that - case would remain with its plain and forcible announcement of the solution of a vexed question which the Court had, upon careful consideration, promulgated as the law. Can this Court, consistently with its constitutional obligation to adhere to decisions which may have become a rule of property, alter or modify the principle upon which the people of the State have been invited to invest their money for so long a period? The proposition, upon which the contention of the petitioner to rehear is based, is unsound in law and cannot be acted upon without grave danger to the rights acquired under a well-founded confidence in 'the stability of judicial decisions. The theory is that if a Court in the elucidation of the questions involved in any given controversy finds it necessary to crystallize the law upon the subject into a clean-cut rule, which will prove a guide to *258 the profession, snob rule may be abrogated after it has been acted on for over 30 years, because the case in hand might have been decided by stating the principle governing the particular case, instead of the broader one founded upon the reason of the thing but decisive also of other cases as well as that at bar. To lend our sanction to such a view of the law would be to imperil the security o¿ many principles upon which titles have been acquired under the advice of the most competent counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.E. 18, 118 N.C. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirby-v-boyette-nc-1896.