Merritt v. Scott

6 Ga. 563
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 15, 1849
DocketNo. 78
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 Ga. 563 (Merritt v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merritt v. Scott, 6 Ga. 563 (Ga. 1849).

Opinion

By the Court.

Lumpkin, J.

delivering the opinion.

It shall be my aim to popularize this opinion as much as possible. For while I am not enthusiast enough to believe that the time will ever come when every man will be his own lawyer, still I feel it to be a duty to accommodate our decisions, so far as we can, to the comprehension of those who are not lawyers by profession. The Legislature has se'en fit to require the Reports to be distributed to all the Counties in the State. All men here are, by birth-right, hereditary law-makers, and judges upon the reputation and lives, as well as arbiters of the property of their fellow citizens, and that in the last resort. Every man is presumed to know the law. He is bound to do so at his peril. While ignorance of the fact excuses in civil as well as criminal conduct, ignorance of the law does not. It is right, therefore, that every man should read and understand the decisions of the Courts, and to enable him to do this, they should be divested, as far as practicable, of all technicality and intricacy.

Science, so long locked up in cloisters and colleges, has been brought, through the-.medium of popular tracts and lectures, to the hearth and home even of the cottager, and has thus been made eminently useful to the ordinary business of life. Shall botany, chemistry and philosophy in all its branches, be thus republicanized, and the law alone, in this age of inquiry and progress, remain a secret system, which the initiated only can pry into 1 The Americans, above all others, are a plain, practical people, and they will have justice dispensed to them in a plain and intelligible manner. . .-

Moreover, all factitious distinctions in society, created by professions or any thing else, should be discouraged; and among the benefits resulting from the practice suggested, would be the removal, to a good degree, of those prejudices which now exist in [570]*570the bosoms, even of enlightened men, against this noble science, the mother of peace, the handmaid of morality. The sooner she is emancipated from the cumbersome appendages of the scholastic and feudal ages, the better.

With these preliminary observations we will proceed, after a brief summary of the facts, to the questions presented in the record.

This bill was filed by the complainants against the defendants, to enforce certain articles of agreement entered into by John Neves and Catherine Jewell, anterior to their marriage, to this effect: “ That all the property, both real and personal, which was or might thereafter become the right of the said John and Catherine, should remain in common between them, the said husband and wife, during their natural lives; and should the said Catherine become the longest liver, the property to continue hers so long as she might live, and at her death to be divided between the heirs of the said Catherine and the heirs of the said John, share and share alike, agreeably to the distribution laws of the State ; and, on the other hand, should the said John become the longest liver, the property to remain in the manner and form as above.”

The marriage, it appears by the bill, was consummated. John Neves died in 1828, some eighteen years thereafter, having previously made and published his will, by which he devised and bequeathed one-half of his estate to one George Rowell.

Catherine, the widow, instituted proceedings on the Chancery side of the Superior Court of Baldwin County, against Richard Rowell, the executor of John Neves’ will, wherein she insisted that, under and by virtue of the marriage -articles heretofore set forth, she was entitled to the whole property during her life, after paying the debts of the estate, and the expenses of administration ; and that said settlement between her and her deceased husband could not be affected or controlled by his testament. The following final decree was rendered by the Special Jury in the premises: “We find for the complainant a life estate in the property, agreeably to the provisions of the marriage contract, leaving all other persons to contest their rights at her (Mrs. Neves’) ieathP

Under this decree Catherine Neves took possession of the property, real and personal, and remained in possession of the same until her intermarriage with one William F. Scott, in 1835, and [571]*571Scott, after the marriage, exercised control thereof. Catherine died in 1844, without ever having had issue. Scott has since died, and this bill is filed by Shimei Merritt and others, who claim to be the first cousins and heirs at law of the said Catherine, and as such entitled to recover the one-half of the whole estate which came to the hands of Scott upon his intermarriage with the widow of John Neves.

Are the complainants, as heirs at law of Catherine Scot.t, entitled to the interposition of a Court of Equity, to compel the performance of the marriage articles in their behalf, entered into between John Neves and Catherine Jewell?

We hold the following propositions to be well settled, namely:

[L] First. That marriage articles like these will be specifically executed upon the application of any person within the scope of the consideration of the marriage, or claiming under such person.

But, secondly, that in no case whatever will Courts of Equity interpose in favor of me>-e volunteers, whether it be upon a voluntary contract, or a covenant, or a settlement, however meritorious may be the consideration,- and although they stand even in the relation of a wife or a child.

And thirdly, that where a bill is brought by persons who are within the scope of the marriage consideration, or claiming under them, there Courts of Equity will decree a specific execution throughout, as well in favor of mere volunteers as the plaintiffs in the suit, so that indirectly mere volunteers may obtain the full benefit of the articles in cases where they could not directly insist upon such rights. Atherley on Marr. Sett. ch. 5, p. 131 to 145. Story’s Eq. Jur. §§433, 706 a, 793 a, 986, 987, 1040.

[2.] Who, then, are within the reach a.nd influence of this consideration of the marriage? In Morgan Jenkins and Dame Margaret Kemishe, (reported by Sir Thomas Hardres, p. 395,) Lord Hale remarked, that “ the consideration of marriage and of the marriage portion, will run to all the estates raised by the settlement.” But this dictum has not been followed, either in England or in this country, but, on the contrary, its authority has been pretty uniformly questioned or denied. Repudiating, then, what is reported to have been said by the Chief Baron in Jenkins and Kemishe, I answer, in the language of Lord Macclesfield, in Osgoode vs. Strode, (2 P. Wms. 255,) that “ the marriage and marriage portion, support only the limitations to the husband and [572]*572wife and their issue, and such as claim under them, which are all that can be presumed to have been stipulated for by the wife or her friends.” And that Equity will interpose at their instance only, all others being volunteers ; and the reason why relief will be granted upon the application of those is, that the settler is under a natural and moral obligation to provide for them, whereas no such reason applies to distant heirs or relatives or mere strangers.

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

Related

Dove v. Dove
680 S.E.2d 839 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2009)
Sieg v. Sieg
455 S.E.2d 830 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1995)
In Re: Estate of Knight
22 So. 2d 249 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1945)
McNutt v. McNutt
2 L.R.A. 372 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Ga. 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merritt-v-scott-ga-1849.