Love v. Watkins

40 Cal. 547
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1871
DocketNo. 1,425
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 40 Cal. 547 (Love v. Watkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Love v. Watkins, 40 Cal. 547 (Cal. 1871).

Opinion

Temple J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff acquired her title to the premises in controversy in April, 1854, (she being then a femme solé), and on the third of November, 1854, after her marriage, jointly with her husband, signed and delivered to Howard and Perley, an agreement in writing, by the terms of which Howard and Perley agreed to prosecute the claim of plaintiff for a tract of land, including the demanded premises, before the United States Land Commission. In consideration of such services plaintiff was to pay Howard and Perley one tenth of said tract of land, or if it should be advisable to sell any portion of the land, then Howard and Perley were to have one tenth of the proceeds. As soon as the claim was decided by the Commission (if confirmed) the portion [557]*557of Howard and Perley was to be immediately set off to them, tbeir beirs or assigns, and possession given. This contract, although signed and delivered, was not acknowledged by the plaintiff in the manner required by the Statute, so as to be binding upon her, until the fifth day of January, 1861, when it was duly acknowledged and recorded. Before that time all the services mentioned in the agreement had been performed by Howard and Perley, and the claim had been confirmed by the Commission, and this was known to the plaintiff and her husband at the time.

In January, 1855, defendant entered upon the premises without color of right and against the will of the plaintiff, and has since remained in possession of the portion sued for, being about twelve and one half acres. On the seventeenth of February, 1863, he acquired the interest of Howard in the contract and in the land, acquired by virtue of the contract, and has since remained in possession, claiming the right of possession under the contract, and has made improvements thereon.

The plaintiff sued the defendant in ejectment on the thirteenth day of December, 1865, the claim having been duly confirmed within a period of less than five years before the suit was instituted. The answer of the defendant, setting up the facts above stated as an equitable defense, and claiming a specific performance of the contract, was filed January 3d, 1866. Judgment below was for the- plaintiff, and apparently was principally based upon the proposition that a right of action upon the contract to convey (if such a contract is valid) accrued on the fifth day of January, 1861, and was, therefore, barred by the Statute of Limitations before the commencement of this action.. The defendant’s equity, therefore, was not a live equity, and not available in his defense. But it is claimed here, not only that the rights of the defendant under the contract (if any such rights ever existed) are barred by limitation} but that the contract itself is invalid because a married woman has no power to make an executory contract. It is not contended that the contract was valid prior to the time it was properly [558]*558acknowledged in 1861. At tbat time Howard and Perley bad fully performed the contract on tbeir part, and by its terms were entitled to an immediate partition and to possession of tbeir share of tbe land.

Tested by tbe principles of tbe common law tbe plaintiff’s contract would undoubtedly be beld invalid, and tbe only question is, wbetber tbe Constitution and tbe Laws of tbis State bave conferred upon married women tbe power to bind themselves by such contracts. In tbe case of Maclay v. Love (25 Cal. 367), tbe power of a married woman to execute a contract which imposes a general liability, not expressly made an incumbrance upon her separate estate, was fully discussed, and to tbe conclusions there arrived at we still adhere. Tbe precise question involved here did not arise, and was not discussed in tbat case.

It is first objected to tbe power of a married woman to bind herself by an executory contract to convey, tbat a Court of Equity has no power to compel a specific performance of her contract; tbat tbe acknowledgement is an essential part of tbe conveyance of tbe separate property of a married woman ; tbat her consent must be perfectly free, and tbat up to tbe last moment until these facts are duly certified by a proper officer, and tbe deed delivered, she may retract tbe execution of tbe same. Of course tbis state of facts cannot exist when a deed is obtained by compulsion of a court.

Tbis argument is equally conclusive against tbe power of tbe courts to compel tbe specific performance of a contract made by a married woman, dum sola. If, therefore, while a femme sole, she enters into a contract to convey, and receives tbe full consideration for tbe land sold, she cannot be compelled to perform tbe contract, though in law it is perfectly valid, if, before conveyance is made she becomes a femme covert. I cannot think tbe Statute was intended to work any such result, or tbat by any fair construction it has tbat effect.

Tbe provisions of tbe Act concerning conveyances were not intended to interfere with or abridge tbe [559]*559powers of Courts of Equity, to compel tbe performance of contracts which are binding upon married women. They apply to those cases where the deed or other instrument in writing, is the evidence of the sale or contract a married woman has made, and for her protection require her contract to be executed and proven in a certain way. Where, therefore, a married woman has, prior to her marriage, entered into a contract which is binding upon her, a specific performance may be decreed notwithstanding her subsequent marriage; and if she refuse to execute the deed, a commissioner may be appointed to execute it for her.

So, too, if the statutes, aside from the Act concerning conveyances, authorize her to bind herself by such a contract, that Act creates no difficulty in compelling a specific performance. The only question is, whether the executory contract is binding upon her. If it is valid, the usual consequences must follow, and in case of her refusal to perform it, the other party has the. same remedy as in any other case.

The practice of Courts of Equity in regard to equitable estates of married women, throw no light upon this question except by analogy. Here the estate is a legal estate, and the contract, if valid at all, such as will be recognized, and enforced by courts of law.

Sec. 14, Art. XI., of the Constitution of this State, defines what shall constitute the separate property of a married woman, and, as was said in Selover v. American Russian Commercial Co. (7 Cal. 266), conferred upon her the power to retain it, with such incidents as necessarily attach to such ownership. In that case it is also said that her capacity to hold her property is equal to that of any other individual, and that the same incidents attach to her ownership, and that the Legislature could not impair her rights any more than the rights of her husband. Now, in equity- a married woman has generally been treated as discovert, so far as effects her power to dispose of or charge her equitable estate. The object of creating the trust for her benefit was that she might have sole control over the trust pro[560]*560perty, and in equity this right was recognized. In Maclay v. Love, (supra),

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Azar v. Azar CA1/3
California Court of Appeal, 2023
Gioscio v. Lautenschlager
73 P.2d 1230 (California Court of Appeal, 1937)
Rafferty v. Mitchell
41 P.2d 563 (California Court of Appeal, 1935)
Wade v. Howe
38 P.2d 439 (California Court of Appeal, 1934)
Valley Mercantile Co. v. Bailey
216 P. 789 (Montana Supreme Court, 1923)
Peixouto v. Peixouto
181 P. 830 (California Court of Appeal, 1919)
Steinberger v. Young
165 P. 432 (California Supreme Court, 1917)
Grotefend v. May
165 P.2d 27 (California Court of Appeal, 1917)
Dufour v. Weissberger
155 P. 984 (California Supreme Court, 1916)
Wright v. Brooks
130 P. 968 (Montana Supreme Court, 1913)
Bloom v. Bennett
74 S.E. 906 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1912)
Andrews v. Rio Grande Livestock Co.
120 P. 311 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1911)
Levy v. Ryland
32 Nev. 460 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1910)
Edwards v. Beck
106 P. 492 (Washington Supreme Court, 1910)
Talley v. Kingfisher Improvement Co.
1909 OK 201 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1909)
Hooper v. Young
102 P. 950 (California Court of Appeal, 1909)
Clint v. Eureka Crude Oil Co.
86 P. 817 (California Court of Appeal, 1906)
Fleishman v. Woods
67 P. 276 (California Supreme Court, 1901)
Pinkham v. Pinkham
83 N.W. 837 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1900)
Fogarty v. Fogarty
61 P. 570 (California Supreme Court, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 Cal. 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/love-v-watkins-cal-1871.