Lee v. Bennett

31 Miss. 119
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 31 Miss. 119 (Lee v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Bennett, 31 Miss. 119 (Mich. 1856).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

It appears from the record in this case, which is very inartificially made up, that a paper purporting to be the last will and testament of Mrs. Elizabeth M. Lee, was, upon due proof of the execution and publication, admitted to probate at the October term, 1853, of the Court of Probates of Madison county. The instrument in question shows upon the face of it> that at the date of its execution and publication, the testatrix was a feme covert — the wife of Thomas Lee. It is in form a will of the separate personal estate of the testatrix, and appears, from an instrument attached to it, attested by witnesses, and signed and sealed by her husband, to have been made by and with his consent.

The executors appointed by the will having renounced, the plaintiff in error, the said Thomas Lee, made application for letters of administration, with the will annexed, on the estate of the deceased, at the January term, 1854, of said court. At the same term James Lee, the son, and one of the heirs-at-law of the deceased, applied, whether by petition or motion, the record does not inform us, to have the former probate of the will annulled and set aside; and for letters of administration on the estate. The court, after due consideration, upon the application thus made by James Lee, revoked and set aside its previous decree, by which the said testamentary paper was probated as the last will and testament of the decedent.

The record does not show that notice in any form whatever was given of this proceeding to the persons interested as legatees under the will. Indeed, the court seems to have based its action upon the assumption that the will of a feme covert, although made with the [124]*124express written consent of the husband, is a mere nullity, and hence that a court of probates could not take cognizance of such an instrument as the testamentary act of the party making it, and consequently, that the decree of the court admitting to probate, as the last will and testament of the decedent, the document in question, was absolutely void.

We will not stop to notice the error into which the court appears to have fallen, in regarding the probate of the will, under the circumstances stated in the record, as a simple nullity, and consequently, that it had authority to set it aside in this summary mode, without notice to the parties claiming rights under the will, but will proceed to examine the question upon which this controversy must ultimately turn.

The question is this — has a married woman, under the laws of this State, capacity, with the consent of her husband, to make a will of her separate personal estate ?

In the case of Garrett v. Dabney, 27 Miss. R. 335, this question in reference to the estate of a feme covert held under the statutes enacted for the protection of married women, was elaborately discussed, at bai', by the counsel. But as that cause could be finally, disposed of upon other points, no opinion was expressed or intimated in regard to the capacity of a married woman to make a will of her separate estate. And it is not a little strange, in the multiplicity and great variety of litigation to which the exigencies of the times has given rise, in this State, that in no cause ever adjudicated in this court, was a decision of this question essential to a determination of the suit.

It is contended by those who maintain the negative of the question, that the power or right of femes covert to make a testamentary disposition of their estates, is expressly taken away by the statute “concerning last wills and testaments,” passed in 1822, and that, also, by the Act of the-28th of February, 1846, amendatory of the Act usually called the “Woman’s Law,” this power is, by necessary implication, excluded.

By the fourteenth section of the Act of 1822, it is declared that: “ Every person aged twenty-one years, if a male, or aged eighteen years, if a female, or upwards, being of sound and disposing mind, [125]*125and not a married woman, shall hare power, at his or her will and pleasure by last will and testament, or codicil in writing, to devise all the estate, right, title, and interest in possession, &c., which he or she hath, or at the time of his or Ker death shall have, of, in, or to lands, &c.” Hutch. Code, 649.

The fifth section of the Act of 1889, provided that the slaves owned by a feme covert, under the provisions of that act, might “be sold by the joint deed of the husband and wife, executed, proved, and recorded agreeably to the laws (then) in force in regard to the conveyance of the real estate of femes covert, and not otherwise.” Hutch. Dig. 497. The Act of 1846 repeals this section, and enacts, in the sixth section, similar provisions in relation to the conveyance of the real estate of femes covert.

These directions are the only provisions of our Statute Law which have any bearing upon the subject. The Act of 1839, commonly called the “Woman’s Law,” and the amendatory Act of 1846, were passed avowedly for the better preservation and protection of the rights of married women. They enlarge their capacity to acquire and hold property, real and personal, and are to be regarded strictly in the character of enabling statutes. The Act of 1839, was so construed by this court in Dougherty v. Radcliff, 24 Miss. R. 181; and there can be no doubt that the Act of 1846, should be regarded in the same light. Hence, it would be absurd, because it would defeat the legislative intention, to give them such a construction as would abridge, instead of enlarging the rights of married women. Aside from this consideration, we think it very manifest that the subject of the disposition and transfer of the property of femes covert, by will,, was not present to the legislative mind; but that the acts under consideration, so far as they relate to the transfer of their property by married women, was designed to apply, not to testamentory acts which could only take effect after the death of the testratrix, but exclusively to conveyances inter vivos.

The only provisions of our code, then, according to the view we take of the “Woman’s Law,” and the amendatory act, upon which the position that a feme covert, under any and all circumstances, is incapacitated to make a will, can be at all maintained, is contained [126]*126in the clause above quoted from the fourteenth section of the Statute of Wills, by which femes covert are excepted.

At all times, under the English law, it was the general rule that a feme covert was incapable 6f making a will; but to this rule there are certain exceptions. “Where personal property is actually given or settled, or agreed to be given or settled, to the separate use of the wife,” she is entitled to dispose of it, to the full extent of her interest as a feme sole; although no particular form to do so is prescribed in the instrument by which the settlement or agreement was made. When once a feme covert is permitted to take personal property to her separate use as a feme sole, she takes it with all its privileges and incidents; one of which is the jus disponendi. 1 Jarm. on Wills, 33; 17 Johns. R. 585, and cases there cited and reviewed. The wife may make a will of every thing she is entitled to in autre droit,

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31 Miss. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-bennett-miss-1856.