Lemon v. Waterman

2 Wash. Terr. 485
CourtWashington Territory
DecidedJuly 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Wash. Terr. 485 (Lemon v. Waterman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Territory primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lemon v. Waterman, 2 Wash. Terr. 485 (Wash. Super. Ct. 1885).

Opinion

Opinion by

Turner, Associate Justice.

This is a suit in equity to remove a cloud from the title to certain real property in the City of Olympia, described in the complaint. It was heard in the Court below upon the pleadings and the evidence, and after hearing, the judgment was that the complaint be dismissed.

The plaintiff prosecutes an appeal to this Court.

The principal question for our determination arises upon the findings of the Court below, and it is unnecessary to notice the pleadings, except in a particular to be hereafter mentioned.

[490]*490Some question is made by the appellees as to some of the findings of fact, but after a careful scrutiny of the evidence, we ■think the findings substantially correct.

The second and third findings were substantially as follows:

2. That on the 2d day of February, 1867, Philip D. Moore and Phoebe H. Moore were husband and wife; that on said day Phoebe PI. Moore received from William Cook and wife a deed of conveyance to a lot or tract of land, which included the property described in the complaint, which tract of land then became the separate estate of said Phoebe H. Moore.

3. That on the 18th and 27th days of December, 1883, by good and sufficient conveyance, the property described in the complaint was conveyed to the plaintiffs by said Philip D. Moore and said Phoebe H. Moore. The fourth finding, to which the foregoing are but explanatory, and upon which the question in the case arises, was as follows :

That said Phoebe H. Moore was on the 24th day of April, 1876, the wife of Philip D. Moore, and had not nor has ever caused to be recorded, as required by law, an inventory of her separate estate, including the lots and lands hereinbefore described, in the office of the Auditor of Thurston County; and on said day the said Sheriff of Thurston County, Washington Territory, sold all the right, title, and interest of Philip D. Moore in said lands to defendants herein, under and by virtue of an execution upon a judgment against said Philip D. Moore, upon a debt contracted by said Philip D. Moore in the year 1874.

That thereafter said sheriff duly executed a deed of said interest to defendants, who had caused the same to be recorded in the office of the County Auditor of said Thurston County, at pages 184 and 185 of Volume 13, Deeds.

That said lands at the commencement of this action were vacant and unoccupied, and the said deed now remains of record in said office, and is regular in form upon its face ; and the defendants are the owners of an estate in the said lands, by virtue of the said sheriff’s sale and deed.

Under the common law, a husband was vested with a freehold estate in the lands of his wife for their joint lives, and upon the birth of a child during coverture, with a freehold estate'for his own life. This estate might be levied on, and sold [491]*491on execution at the common law for the husband’s debts. (Schouler on Husband and Wife, Secs. 167, 168, and authorities there cited; Starr v. Hamilton, Deady’s Circuit Court Reports, 268.)

But at the time this property was conveyed to Mrs. Moore, the common law, as stated above, had been modified by statute in this Territory.

In the Civil Practice Act, passed April 28th, 1854, Laws of Washington, 1854^1856, p. 129, it was declared:

“ Sec. 252. All real and personal estate to which any married woman shall hereafter become entitled in her own right, and all which may at the time of her marriage belong to her, and all the issues, rents and profits of such real estate, shall not be liable to attachment for, or execution upon, any liability or judgment against her husband, so long as she or any minor heir of her body shall be living : Provided, ‘ That her separate property shall not be exempt from attachment or execution where the debts were owing by the wife, previous to marriage, or may have been contracted for her benefit.’ ”

This law has been reenacted in each of the séveral revisions of the laws of this Territory, and may now be found as Section 841 of the Code of 1881.

It is insisted by the appellants that this provision of our statutes was intended to make the property of the wife, owned or acquired by her as defined by the statute, her separate property, as that term was understood at common law, and free from the marital rights of her husband. A somewhat similar provision in the Constitution of Oregon has been given this meaning by the Supreme Court of Oregon. (Brummett v. Weaver, 2 Oregon, 168.)

This construction was followed, and its reasoning elaborated, by Deady, District Judge, in Starr v. Hamilton. (Deady’s Reports, U. S. Courts, 1850-1869, p. 268.)

We think, however, the better opinion in the construction of our statute is, that it creates an exemption of the husband’s estate in the wife’s property in favor of the wife.

The provision is found both in the Civil Practice Act of 1854 and in the Code of 1881, in the chapters relating to exemptions, and under the title “ Exemptions.” It does not in terms [492]*492do more than create an exemption, and no good reason exist» for extending its import beyond its terms. An exemption of one person’s property in favor of a different person is an anomaly ; but when the peculiar estate of a husband at common law in property acquired-by the wife is considered, and the reasons of the law for creating such estate, the exemption will be seen to be an eminently just one, and one bearing a useful and perfectly consistent part in the scheme of the law.

The modification, then, in the common law made by our statutes at the time of the acquisition of this property by Mrs. Moore, was to exempt the estate of-'the husband therein from seizure and sale on execution for the’ husband’s debts.

Did the fact, as found by the Court, that Mrs. Moore had failed to record an inventory of her separate estate prior to the levy of execution by the sheriff upon this property, divest her of the right to insist upon this exemption ? The lower Court so found, and rendered judgment accordingly.

The law concerning the estate of the husband in the wife’s property remained in this Territory as heretofore stated, until the passage of the -act approved Dec. 2d, 1869, entitled, “ An Act Defining the Eights of Husband and Wife.” (Laws of Washington, 1869, 1871, p. 318.)

This act established the system of community property between husband and wife, tbe incidents of which are well known to the bar and the public.

It is hardly necessary to say that this act, whatever its terms, did not operate to divest the estate of either the husband or the wife in property held by them, or either of them, at the time of its passage. But there are provisions in the act which, it is-claimed, have the effect of requiring the wife to do certain things, if she would insist on the exemption in her favor made by the Act of 1851, and which cuts off said exemption if she fail to do them.

Section 3 of the act requires the wife to make a full and complete inventory of her separate property, and to acknowledge and record said inventory in a manner pointed, out by said section.

Section 5 provides: “The filing of any such inventory in the auditor’s office shall be notice of the title of the wife, and all [493]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Wash. Terr. 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemon-v-waterman-washterr-1885.