McNutt v. McNutt

2 L.R.A. 372, 19 N.E. 115, 116 Ind. 545, 1888 Ind. LEXIS 168
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1888
DocketNo. 13,397
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 2 L.R.A. 372 (McNutt v. McNutt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNutt v. McNutt, 2 L.R.A. 372, 19 N.E. 115, 116 Ind. 545, 1888 Ind. LEXIS 168 (Ind. 1888).

Opinion

Elliott, J.

There is evidence that a written antenuptial contract was executed between the appellant and her husband, Henry G. McNutt, since deceased, and that the writing was destroyed by her. This is the evidence upon which the trial court acted, and we can. not disregard its decision upon this question of fact. There is also evidence that the contract was in these words :

“Article of agreement this day entered into by and between the said Henry G. McNutt and Eva McBride, both of Clinton county, State of Indiana:
Whereas, the said Henry G. McNutt and Eva McBride contemplate marrying each other, and have both been married before, and have separate estates, and have children by such former marriages, it is therefore contracted and agreed by the said Henry G. McNutt and Eva McBride, that the [547]*547survivor of either shall take and hold no interest, or part of interest, by descent or otherwise, but the estate, both real and personal, shall descend to the heirs the same as it would if they had not married.”

We must take as conclusive the finding of the trial court upon questions of fact wherever it is supported by the evidence, and it is only a waste of time to argue in this court that the decision of the trial court is wrong because the weight of evidence is against it.

Eva McNutt was a widow and Henry G. McNutt a widower when this contract was executed. Both were of mature age, and both had children by their former marriages. The former was the owner of one hundred and seventy-two acres of land, which came to her from her first husband, and Henry G. McNutt was also the owner of real property. What personal property the appellant had does not appear.

The contract does not, in formal terms, recite that a consideration moved from the prospective husband to the intended wife, but it does show that it was made in contemplation of marriage, and that each released to the other all interest in each other’s property. Here there were two elements of consideration, marriage and the release of a right which, but for the release, would flow from the consummated marriage. These elements of consideration were both of the class valuable. If the contract is to be judged by the ordinary rules of law, then there can be no possible doubt that on its face it imports a sufficient consideration, since a consideration fixed by the parties is by the courts deemed a sufficient one, for the courts will not, in the absence of fraud or mistake, substitute their judgment for that of the contracting parties. Wolford v. Powers, 85 Ind. 294 (44 Am. R. 16).

If this contract .could be regarded as within the general rule, there would be no difficulty in disposing of the case, for there are two distinct elements of consideration embodied in it; but the difficulty arises upon the point made by the appellant, that a contract of this character requires a consid[548]*548eration which the court can affirm is equal to the dower right of a wife. In support of their position counsel refer us to the cases of Curry v. Curry, 10 Hun (N. Y.) 366, Gould v. Womack, 2 Ala. 83, Power v. Sheil, 1 Molloy, 296, and 4 Kent Com. (12th ed.) 56 n. a, 1 Bishop Married Women, section 247, and 3 Redfield Wills, 381.

■ There is much conflict in the authorities; the weight, however, is strongly against the appellant. Many of the modern cases hold that even where the wife has no estate of her own the marriage is of itself a consideration sufficient to support the contract of the prospective wife not to claim any interest in the lands of the husband.

Mr. Schouler clearly marks and defines the distinction — a distinction lost sight of in some of the cases — between a post-nuptial and an antenuptial agreement, shows that both classes are included within the generic term marriage settlements,” and says: In antenuptial marriage settlements, or what are called marriage settlements,’ the marriage affords a sufficient consideration.” Schouler Domestic Relations, pt. II, chapter XIII, sec. 173.

This is a just deduction from what Mr. Bishop calls the better authorities.” But we are not dealing with a case in which the prospective wife was without property of her own. She was the owner of one hundred and seventy-two acres of land acquired from her first husband. It is true that she did not own the fee, since, by force of our statute, the second marriage cut down her estate to one for life. Mathers v. Scott, 37 Ind. 303; Teter v. Clayton, 71 Ind. 237.

But, while she did not have a fee in the land acquired from her first husband, she did have an estate for life. Indeed, she had something more; she had an estate for life with a qualified right of alienation and a possible fee. R. S. 1881, section 2484. Bryan v. Uland, 101 Ind. 477.

It can not, therefore, be said that she was not the .owner of property since she had, at least, a freehold éstate. We know that the prospective husband yielded nothing except [549]*549the right that might have grown out of a possible fee, and we concur to a great extent in the view of appellant’s counsel that he yielded no then present right in the property of his wife. Prima facie, at least, he could not have taken any estate in her land at her death, since, upon the happening of that event the children by the first husband would take by descent. "While the argument of counsel establishes the proposition that the husband parted with no present and vested rights in the land of the.wife, it does not prove that the appellant had not property of her own. The question, therefore, is not what is the rule where the prospective wife is without an estate of her own in land, but what is the rule where she is the owner of at least a freehold estate ?

Our judgment is that where the prospective wife is the owner of land in her own right, and there is no fraud, and nothing making the contract unconscionable, the courts will not strike it down. Here there was no fraud. The parties were of mature years. The subject had been long under consideration. There was deliberation, not haste. There is nothing unconscionable in the contract. It was no more than equitable that the prospective husband should; at the time he made the contract, provide that his estate should go to his children by a former wife. It is, indeed, difficult to find any principle upon which courts can set aside contracts made in good faith, with due deliberation, and by persons of mature age, even though that contract be one between a man and a woman contemplating marriage. It is stretching, as many of the authorities suggest, the power of the courts a great ways to declare that a man and woman may not, even though the latter has no estate of her own, make their own contracts. In earlier ages there was, perhaps, some reason for the old English law rule, for women were not educated then as now, and were far more under the dominion of the men than in these days. The reason for the rule has failed, and where the reason faileth the rule faileth.” But whatever may be the rule, where the woman has no estate of her own, [550]*550it is different, and it ought to be different, where she has in her own right a freehold estate in land. An illustration will, we believe, prove our conclusion. Suppose the woman’s freehold estate to be of great value, yielding an annual income of ten thousand dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
2 L.R.A. 372, 19 N.E. 115, 116 Ind. 545, 1888 Ind. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnutt-v-mcnutt-ind-1888.