Knippel v. Marshall & Ilsley Bank

96 N.W.2d 514, 7 Wis. 2d 335
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 96 N.W.2d 514 (Knippel v. Marshall & Ilsley Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knippel v. Marshall & Ilsley Bank, 96 N.W.2d 514, 7 Wis. 2d 335 (Wis. 1959).

Opinion

Fairchild, J.

The questions presented are: (1) Whether the antenuptial agreement must be disregarded because it is in conflict with the law of Arizona; (2) whether the agreement is to be set aside because Mr. Knippel did not make a full and frank disclosure of his worth; (3) whether the evidence compels the county court to find that the execution of the agreement was obtained by fraud. We conclude that all the questions are to be answered in the negative and that the judgment of the county court is to be affirmed.

(1) Validity of the agreement. Sec. 25-201, 9 Arizona R. S. Anno., provides in part: “A. Parties intending to marry may enter into agreements not contrary to good morals or law. They shall not enter into an agreement or make a renunciation the object of which is to alter the law of descent of property either with respect to themselves or inheritance by their children or posterity which either may have by any other person or with respect to their common children.

“B. A matrimonial agreement must be acknowledged before an officer authorized to acknowledge deeds.”

It is clear that antenuptial agreements are not wholly prohibited by the law of Arizona and that the Knippel agreement was executed in the manner prescribed by the Arizona statutes. While parties intending to marry are prohibited from including certain types of provisions, no penalty is provided for executing an agreement which contains them. *341 Presumably the effect of the prohibition is simply to make the prohibited agreement void.

The agreement was signed, the marriage ceremony performed, and the wife’s domicile, before the marriage, was in Arizona. The husband’s domicile, both before and after the marriage, was in Wisconsin. Very shortly after the marriage, in accordance with the intention of the parties, the wife came to Wisconsin with her husband and they made their home here. The only real estate involved was in Wisconsin.

It is conceded that the Knippel agreement does not conflict with the law of Wisconsin. Amicus curiae has suggested that neither is it invalid under the Arizona statute because in Arizona a husband is permitted by law to dispose of his separate property by will and his widow has no right to take any portion of his separate property given by will to others. We are not prepared to say whether under Arizona law an agreement which gives a wife a right to receive certain of her husband’s separate property at his death would be considered to be an alteration of the law of descent. Neither are we prepared to say that an agreement which, as this one does, provides that the property acquired by each spouse after marriage will be separate property, is invalid under Arizona law. Under Arizona law the property acquired during marriage, except that which is acquired by gift, devise, or descent, or earned by the wife during separation, is community property. Sec. 25-211, 9 Arizona R. S. Anno. The survivor succeeds to one half the community property and the other spouse may not dispose of that half by will. Sec. 14 — 203, 9 Arizona R. S. Anno. In view of our conclusion that validity is to be determined by the law of Wisconsin, we express no opinion on the efficacy of the identical agreement if subject for some reason to the law of Arizona.

The question of which law is to be applied has not arisen in Wisconsin with respect to an antenuptial contract. With *342 respect to various other types of contract, this court has held that the choice of law governing validity and interpretation is basically a question of the intention of the parties except where their intention is to commit a fraud on the law. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the law of the place of making the contract is presumed to be intended unless the place of performance be different. In the latter instance there is a rebuttable presumption that the law of the place of performance controls. Brown v. Gates (1904), 120 Wis. 349, 97 N. W. 221, 98 N. W. 205; International Harvester Co. v. McAdam (1910), 142 Wis. 114, 124 N. W. 1042. These presumptions do not answer the question presented in this case with complete certainty because the parties contemplated marriage in Arizona, as well as making their home in Wisconsin, and both were elements of performance of the agreement.

It is well established that regardless of the law of the place where a marriage is performed, the rights of the wife, in the absence of contract, with respect to her and her husband’s personal property are governed by the law of the matrimonial domicile, and with respect to land, by the law of the situs. 11 Am. Jur., Conflict of Laws, pp. 373, 374, sec. 86. As there stated in part:

“Where the marriage takes place in the state in which the woman has been domiciled but with the intention of the parties, which is carried out within a reasonable time, of establishing their common home in another state in which the husband is domiciled, the marital rights of the parties in the personal property of each other owned at the time of the marriage is governed, as a general rule, by the law of the state of their contemplated and subsequently established matrimonial domicile; such state is to be deemed their initial matrimonial domicile. . . .
“In the absence of evidence of the intention of the parties as to the place where the matrimonial domicile is to be *343 established, it will be presumed that it is to be established where the husband is domiciled, even though that is a state different from the one in which the marriage is celebrated, for on marriage the wife at once loses her own domicile and assumes that of her husband.”

In Schultz v. Hastings (1958), 5 Wis. (2d) 265, 92 N. W. (2d) 846, we had before us an insurance policy-executed and delivered in Illinois to a Wisconsin corporation with its principal place of business in Wisconsin covering trucks operating in Wisconsin. We applied the law of Wisconsin because it was clear that performance was to be in Wisconsin, distinguishing an earlier case where the place of performance was in effect country-wide and where we had applied the law of the place where the policy was issued.

In Auten v. Auten (1954), 308 N. Y. 155, 161, 124 N. E. (2d) 99, 50 A. L. R. (2d) 246, the New York court of appeals decided that whether certain acts constituted a breach of contract must be determined by applying the law of the place which has the most significant contacts with the matter in dispute. In the opinion Judge Fuld pointed out that this standard, also referred to as the “grouping of contacts” or “center of gravity” theory, has been adopted in a number of jurisdictions to replace rules dependent upon place of making, place of performance, and presumed intention of the parties.

“Although this ‘grouping of contacts’ theory may, perhaps, afford less certainty and predictability than the rigid general rules ... the merit of its approach is that it gives to the place ‘having the most interest in the problem’ paramount control over the legal issues arising out of a particular factual context, thus allowing the forum to apply the policy of the jurisdiction ‘most intimately concerned with the outcome of [the] particular litigation.’ . . .

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.W.2d 514, 7 Wis. 2d 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knippel-v-marshall-ilsley-bank-wis-1959.