Lippincott v. Mitchell

94 U.S. 767, 24 L. Ed. 315, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1940
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1877
Docket249
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 94 U.S. 767 (Lippincott v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lippincott v. Mitchell, 94 U.S. 767, 24 L. Ed. 315, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1940 (1877).

Opinion

*768 Mr. Justice Swaynb

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is brought here by appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Alabama. It depends for its determination upon a branch of the local law of real property. The question involved relates to the separate estates of married women. The facts are undisputed. The premises in question were conveyed to the appellee, Nannie C. Mitchell, by deed duly executed, bearing date on the nineteenth day of March, 1868.

On the 17th of February, 1869, Nannie C. Mitchell and J. C. Mitchell, her husband, mortgaged the premises to the appellants, J. B. Lippincott & Company, to secure the payment of certain liabilities therein described. The instrument contained a power of sale. The mortgagees advertised the property to be sold pursuant to the power. She thereupon filed this bill to enjoin the sale, upon the ground that under the law of Alabama she was incompetent thus to incumber the property; and that the mortgage was, therefore, void.

The Circuit Court decreed a perpetual injunction. The mortgagees thereupon removed the case to this court by appeal.

The Code of Alabama, art. 3, sect. 2371, declares that “ all the property of the wife, held by her previous to the marriage, or which she may become entitled to after the marriage in any manner, is the separate property of the wife, and is not subject to the payment of the debts of the husband.”

Prior to the judgment of the Supreme Court of the State in 1869, in Molton v. Martin, 43 Ala. 651, it was the settled law in that State that there were two distinct kinds of separate estates, — one designated equitable, and the other statutory. With respect to-the former, the rule was that it was wholly independent of the statute. It was as if the statute did not exist. The rights of the husband were excluded, but the powers of the wife might be defined and limited by the instrument conveying it as was deemed proper by those concerned. If no limitation was imposed, they were regulated by the general rules of equity jurisprudence upon the subject. According to those rules, where .there was no restriction, she was in effect a' feme sole as to such property. She could incumber or dispose of it at pleasure. The income belonged to her, and she was not bound to contrib *769 ute out of it any thing for the support or benefit of the husband’s family. M. Church v. Jacques, 3 Johns. (N. Y.) Ch. 77; Gun v. Samuels, 33 Ala. 201; 2 Story’s Eq., sects. 1392, 1393.

She stood, with respect to such property, in the same relation to the husband as if it belonged to a stranger. She had, therefore, the same capacity as any other person who might be the owner to mortgage it for his debts. The creation of such conventional estates was sustained, because there was nothing in them contrary to law or public policy. The parties concerned were, therefore, permitted to contract as they pleased.

But where no such separate estate existed with respect to property owned by the wife at .the time of the marriage, or acquired subsequently, the statute interposed and created a separate estate in her behalf, with such incidents and attributes as the legislature saw fit to prescribe. Among these were the right of the husband to control the property and receive the income without accounting for it, and the liability of the estate for articles of support and comfort procured for the use of the family suitable to its condition in life, for which‘the husband would have been liable according to the common law. If he survived her, and she died intestate, he was entitled, as distributee, to one-half of her personalty, and to the use and enjoyment of her real estate for life. If she survived him, the value of her separate'estate was deducted from her distributive share of his personalty and her dower. But she could not mortgage the estate for her husband’s benefit, and such mortgages were of no validity.

The judgment of the court in Molton v. Martin, supra, and in Glen v. Glen, 47 Ala. 204, and in Dennichand v. Berry, 48 id. 591, the two latter following and controlled by the former, abolished the distinction between the two classes of separate estates, and brought all such equitable estates, except where the legal title was vested in a trustee, within the statute.

It followed as a" consequence that the wife could no more mortgage an equitable than a statutory separate estate for the husband’s benefit, and that all such mortgages were void, by. reason of her disability in both cases.

Such was the state of the law when the present case was *770 decided by the Circuit Court. The conclusion reached was inevitable, whether the separate estate of the wife belonged to one class or thé other, the question then being immaterial in the jurisprudence of the State. The result, as to the point under consideration, was necessarily the same in both cases.

The subject again came, under the consideration of the Supreme Court of the State in 1875, in Short v. Battle, 52 Ala. 456. It was ably and elaborately examined. The court unanimously overruled the cases of Molton v. Martin, Glen v. Glen, and Dennichand v. Berry. The pre-existing state of the law was re-asserted and re-established. The statute was construed as it was construed before Molton v. Martin and the subsequent cases in harmony with that case were determined.

This construction is a rule of property of the State, and we are as. much bound by it as if it were a part of the statute. It is our duty to apply the law of the State as if we were siting there as a local court, and this case were before us as such a tribunal. Leffingwell v. Warren, 2 Black, 579; Olcott v. Bynum, 17 Wall. 44.

We are thus brought to the examination of the question whether the estate to which this litigation relates belongs to the equitable or to the statutory class. If to the latter, the decree of the Circuit Court is correct; if to the former, it must be reversed.

No particular words or phrases are necessary to create an equitable separate estate. The court will examine the whole instrument, and look rather to the intent manifested than to the language employed. The. creative intent must clearly appear. Doubts are resolved in favor of the husband’s marital rights. Bish. Law of Married Women, sect. 824. In Short v. Battle, supra, the Supreme Court of the State laid down this rule: “ Where the intent to exclude the marital rights of the husband is doubtful or equivocal, or rests on speculation, the statute intervenes, and fixes the character of the estate as the separate statutory estate of the wife.”

'. The deed here in question purports on its face to be exe* cuted by “Huriosco Austill, trustee for Mrs. Mary A. Marshall,” recites that the sale and conveyance were made pursuant to her written request, and then proceeds: —

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Bluebook (online)
94 U.S. 767, 24 L. Ed. 315, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lippincott-v-mitchell-scotus-1877.