Maraman's Administrator v. Maraman

61 Ky. 84, 4 Met. 84, 1862 Ky. LEXIS 26
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 12, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 61 Ky. 84 (Maraman's Administrator v. Maraman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maraman's Administrator v. Maraman, 61 Ky. 84, 4 Met. 84, 1862 Ky. LEXIS 26 (Ky. Ct. App. 1862).

Opinion

JUDGE BULLITT

delivered the opinion op the court:

This suit was brought by the appellee, the widow of Francis Maraman, against the appellant, his administrator, to recover the amount of four notes, one of which is as follows:

“Due Martha A. Maraman nine hundred and forty-six dollars for value received of her. July 22, 1855.
F. MARAMAN.”
And another is as follows:
“Due Martha A. Maraman three hundred ninety-two dollars fifty cents, borrowed money. Feb. 2nd, 1855.
F. MARAMAN.”

The other two notes are of the same character.

Mrs. Maraman alleges that she married said F. Maraman in 1852; that she owned by inheritance^ tract of land and an interest in several slaves; that her husband being hard run for money, and much embarrassed, induced her to unite with him in selling said land and slaves, upon an express promise, and with the understanding that he would make her full compensation for the same out of his own property, that he executed said notes to her for the land and slaves, and assured her that they would secure her in the amounts they called for, and that he would pay them in money or property as soon as he got in little better circumstances; and that he died leaving her with a small child and without any means of subsistence.

The administrator, in his answer, does not deny any of these allegations in the manner required by the Code to put the facts in issue. He admits that the decedent, about a month before his death, “informed the defendant that he owed his wife about $1,700, and that he wanted it paid.” He resists recov ery upon the ground — 1st, that the notes are void because of the marital relation between the parties; 2d, that neither the conveyances of the land and slaves nor the obligations of the purchasers contained any provision that the proceeds should not be Maraman’s; 3d, that Maraman obtained credit and was dealt with upon the faith that said proceeds belonged to him; and 4th, that most of said proceeds were used in paying store accounts contracted by Mrs. Maraman, and in purchasing a carriage for her and by her direction. He also says that the [87]*87decedent’s estate is insufficient, as he believes, to pay his debts, and that he has filed a petition to settle it and for a pro rata distribution among the creditors; and prays that the two suits may be consolidated. No order of consolidation was made.

We need not state the character of the proof, because, in our opinion, it cannot change the status of the parties as fixed by the pleadings.

The circuit judge gave Mrs. Maraman a judgment against the administrator for the amount of said notes and interest, “to be allowed in the action of the administrator for a settlement of the estate, and to be reported by the commissioners;” from which this appeal was taken.

1. That Maraman’s notes are void at law is conceded. The question is whether they are also void in equity.

We are not prepared to admit, as contended by appellant’s counsel, that all contracts between husband and wife are void in equity as well as at law unless they relate to separate estate of the wife.

At law, ante-nuptial executory contracts between husband and wife, to be performed during marriage, are extinguished by the marriage, and rendered as null as if they had been void from the beginning. Yet such contracts have been frequently enforced in equity. (Cannel vs. Buckle, 2 P. Will., 243; Feryer vs. Penton, 1 Vern., 408; Acton vs. Pierce, 2 Vern., 480; Milburn vs. Ewart, 5 T. R., 384; Strong vs. Skinner, 4 Barb. S. C. R., 546; Vanallen vs. Humphreys, 15 Id., 555; Dabney vs. Kennedy, 7 Grattan, 317; Law vs. Smith, 2 R. I., 244.)

At law, as a general rule, executed as wrell as executory contracts between husband and wife, without a trustee, are void. Yet conveyances from husband to wife, without a trustee, have been frequently supported in equity. (Bright on Husband and Wife,vol. 1, page 32, 33; Wells vs. Treadwell, 28 Miss. R., 717; Simmons vs. McElvain, 26 Barb. S C. R., 420; Denning vs. Williams, 26 Conn., 236; Lile vs. Lite's Ex'r., 1 Dev. Eq., 185; Huntly vs. Huntly, 8 Ired. Eq., 250; Ward vs. Crotty, p. 59, 4 Met., decided by this court at its last term.)

At law the husband is entitled to a note given to his wife [88]*88by a stranger. Yet where the purchaser of land executed a note payable to the vendor’s wife, in pursuance-of an agreement between the husband and wife, and in consideration of her releasing dower, her right to the note was sustained in equity. (Garlick vs. Strong, 3 Paige, 440.)

A husband is legally entitled to his wife’s earnings, but his agreement to give them to her has been held valid in equity. (Slanning vs. Style, 3 P. Will., 337 ; Mangey vs. Hungerford, 2 Eq. Ca. Abr., 156 ; Wood vs. Warden, 20 Ohio, 518.) The authority of Slanning vs. Style and Mangey vs. Hungerford has been, perhaps justly, questioned by Mr. Jacob, (2 Roper's H. & W. 104, n;) not, however, upon the ground that such an agreement would not be binding in equity, but upon the ground that in those cases there was not sufficient evidence of the agreement. In Wood vs. Warden the husband had received f 100 earned by his wife, and given her his note therefor, and his estate was held liable for it in equity.

Executory contracts between husband and wife, without the intervention of a trustee, have been held to. be valid in equity-in several other cases.

In Guth vs. Guth, (3 Bro. C. C., 614,) a husband’s agreement, by deed-poll, for the separate maintenance of his wife, was enforced. That doctrine has been questioned, upon the ground that there was no consideration for the husband’s agreement; and for other reasons which indicate an implied admission of the general power of husband and wife, to make contracts which may be enforced in equity, (2 Bright on. H. & W., 330, and cases cited.) In Livingston vs. Livingston, (2 John. C. R., 537,) a parol agreement between husband and wife, that he should purchase and improve a lot for her and be repaid by the sale of another lot belonging to her, having been partially executed by him, was, at his suit, specifically enforced -against her heiis. And in Huber vs. Huber's adm'r., (10 Ohio, 371,) the court decreed payment of a note given by a husband to his wife for money derived from the estate of her former husband, and to which, when received, her second husband was legally entitled. -

We perceive no ground for the distinction contended for by [89]*89appellant’s counsel, as existing between contracts of husband and wife, with reference to her- separate estate and other contracts between them. At law their contracts as to her separate estate are void; and we perceive no reason for supporting such contracts in equity, which does not equally apply to any contract which is based upon a sufficient consideration. In Barron vs. Barron, (24 Vermont.,

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61 Ky. 84, 4 Met. 84, 1862 Ky. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maramans-administrator-v-maraman-kyctapp-1862.