Leakey v. Maupin

10 Mo. 368
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 10 Mo. 368 (Leakey v. Maupin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leakey v. Maupin, 10 Mo. 368 (Mo. 1847).

Opinion

Scott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was a proceeding commenced in the County Court of Howard •County hy Maupin the appellee, to obtain from J. J.. Leakey, administrator of Jeremiah Leakey, deceased, a distributive share in right of his wife of the estate of the said Jeremiah Leakey. In 1841, Maupin married S. Leakey, a daughter of the said Jeremiah, who died'intestate in March, 1842. In October, 1842, Sarah Leakey, the wife of Maupin the appellee, departed this life without issue, leaving heirs preferred to her husband as distributee under our statute of descents and distributions. No distribution of the estate of her deceased father had been made at the time of the death of Sarah Leakey. The County Court refused Maupin a distributive share of said estate in right of his deceased wife, and on an appeal to the Circuit Court that judgment was reversed, and the cause brought here.

The only question arising under this state of facts is whether Maupin, the husband of Sarah Leakey, deceased, or her heirs, are entitled to her distributive share in the estate of her deceased father?

If this was a question depending upon the English law for its solution, it could not admit of any doubt. By that law the right of the husband as administrator to his deceased wife’s choses in action not reduced into possession during the coverture would be unquestionable, but as some of the provisions of the English law in relation to this subject have been • omitted and others varying from them have been incorporated into our [370]*370system of laws, it becomes a question whether a husband under our law is entitled to his wife’s choses in action not reduced into his possession during her life time, she leaving heirs preferred to the husband under our statute of distribution.

In ancient times when a man died intestate, the. King as parens patriee, took possession of his effects to be employed in defraying the expenses of his burial, paying his debts, and for the support of his wife and children or other kin. The execution of this trust was devolved on the clergy, and many abuses growing out of their conduct in relation to it, the statute of Westminster, 2, 13 Ed. I., which was said to be in affirmance of the common law, .enacted that the ordinary should pay the debts of the intestate as far as his goods extended, in the same manner the executors were bound in case the deceased had left a will. But the residuum after payment of debts remained in the hands of the ordinary to be applied to any purposes his conscience might approve. Great abuses arising under the exercise of this power, the Legislature again 'interposed, and by the statute of 31st Ed. III., required the ordinary to depute the next and'most lawful friends of the intestate to administer his goods. This is the origin of administrations in England. The statute 21st, Hen. VIII., enacted that administration might be granted by the ordinary to the widow of the deceased or his next of kin, or both in his discretion. In none of the statutes on the subject of administration is express mention made of the right of the husband to administer on his deceased wife’s estate. His right was always unquestioned, and the only dispute was as to the source of that right; some holding that he held it. under the statute 31st, Ed. III., as the next and most lawful friend of his wife ; others, that he derived it from the common law, and that the husband jure mariti was entitled to administer on his deceased wife’s effects, but the right being established and admitted on all hands, its source was a matter of no importance.

As the appointment of an executor was by the common law a gift to him of the residuum after the payment of funeral expenses and the debts, as a recompense for his trouble for administering, so the administrator coming in the place of the executor had the whole personal estate of the' intestate after the payment of debts. 2 Bac. 72, the writ de rationabile parte bonorum to which the wife and children were entitled being grounded on the customs ,of London and York, and some other places. 3 Thos. Coke, 317. The hardship of this privilege upon the next of kin of the intestate, was the occasion of making the statute of 22 and 23 Chas. II., Cap. 10, which compelled the administrator, after the payment [371]*371of funeral charges, debts and all expenses, to distribute the remainder of the personal estate to the wife and children and children’s children, if any there be, or otherwise to the next of kindred to the dead person.

We have seen that the husband was entitled to administration on his deceased wife’s estate, and like all other administrators, had by the common law, exclusive enjoyment of the residuum after the payment of debts. Doubts arose under the statute of Charles, before recited, whether the husband, like all other administrators, was not compelled to make distribution among the next of kin of the wife; to remove these doubts the 25th section was engrafted on the statute of frauds and perjuries, 29 Chas. II., which provided that the act of 22 and 23 of Chas. II., Cap. 10, nor any thing therein contained shall be construed to extend to the estates of Femme Coverts that shall die intestate, but that their husbands may demand and have administration of their rights, credits, and other personal estates, and recover and enjoy the same as they might have done before the making of the said act.”

We have not adopted into our system of laws this section, but on the contrary, it is provided by the statute of descents and distributions, §3, that if there be no children nor their descendants, father, mother, brother nor sister, nor their descendants, nor any paternal or maternal kindred capable of inheriting, the whole shall go to the wife or husband of the intestate. From the omission of a provision similar to that contained in the 25th section of the act of 29th, Chas. II., and the insertion of a provision that the husband should only receive his deceased wife’s estate in the event of there being no children, father, mother, brother, sister, nor any maternal nor paternal kindred capable of taking, the inference would seem irresistible that it was not the intention of the Legislature that the husband should receive his wife’s estate and not account for it as other administrators.

In order to surmount the obstacles to his claim presented by thef dissimilarity between ours and the English system of laws in relation to this subject, it was contended by the appellee that there was a distinction between chases in action belonging to the wife at the time of marriage and those which accrued to her during coverture ; that the former belong to the husband sub modo, provided that he - reduces them to possession during coverture, otherwise, if the wife survive him, she will be entitled to them, but that the latter are an absolute gift to the husband, and in the. event of the survivorship of the wife would belong to her. It must be confessed that the cases read from the Kentucky reports, 4 Dana, 333, and 7 J. J. Marshall. 169, 3 Little, 281, would seem to giro [372]*372some sanction to the distinction, but it is a little remarkable that while these cases hold that ehoses in action accruing to the wife during coverture, vest absolutely in the husband, yet they admit that if the wife survives the husband she will be entitled to them, and not his representatives ; now nothing is clearer than that the property of the wife which vests in the husband absolutely, in the event of his death will belong to his representatives and not to the wife.

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10 Mo. 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leakey-v-maupin-mo-1847.