Mitchell v. Chattanooga Savings Bank

126 Tenn. 669
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 126 Tenn. 669 (Mitchell v. Chattanooga Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Chattanooga Savings Bank, 126 Tenn. 669 (Tenn. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill in this case was filed by the administrator of Mrs. Arthur E. Yale, to recover from the administrator and distributees of Arthur E. Yale certain personalty, or its value, formerly the property of Mrs. Yale.

During their married life, Mr. Yale g’ave his wife various sums of money, amounting to several thousand dollars, which she deposited in a bank in Chattanooga, [671]*671to her own credit. She died, and Mr. Yale took charge of this money, the hank turning it over to him without question, and no objection was made by any one during Mr. Vale’s life. About two years after the death of his wife, Mr. Vale died. He never administered on his wife’s estate. After his death, at the instance of Mrs. Vale’s relatives, an administrator Avas appointed for her estate, and this suit is brought by this administrator for the purpose aforesaid.

The case is before us on bill and demurrer. Without undertaking to quote the language of the bill, it is sufficient to say that we find therein direct averment of the gift of this money by the husband to the wife; but we find no averment of any clear or distinct expression of the husband, at the time of this gift or afterward, that he intended to surrender his right of survivor-ship with respect to his wife’s separate estate so created by him.

A demurrer was interposed, which pointed out the absence of an averment of any distinct expression on the part of the husband indicating an intention to cut off his right of survivorship respecting this money, and the demurrer was sustained by the chancellor. Complainant has appealed to this court.

Complainant insists, regardless of any definite expression in a gift of personalty from a husband to his wife, indicating that he intended to part with his right to administer upon and appropriate the personalty so given at her death, that by force of the gift itself he should be held to have parted with his entire jus mariti [672]*672in the subject of the gift, his rights during coverture, and his rights after coverture.

He certainly, by such gifts, surrendered all his rights with respect to the funds duiing coverture, and created a separate estate in same in his wife. Barnum v. Le Master, 110 Tenn., 638, 75 S. W., 1045, 69 L. R. A., 353; Snodgrass v. Hyder, 95 Tenn., 575, 32 S. W., 764; Carpenter v. Franklin, 89 Tenn., 142, 14 S. W., 484.

It has, however, long been the settled law in Tennessee that, in the absence of some particular words used in the creation of a separate estate indicating clearly an intention to cut off after coverture the husband’s rights therein, such rights are held to be suspended merely during the period of coverture, and again attach after the death of his wife to the property so given her.

In the case of Hamrico v. Laird, 10 Yerg., 222, a marriage contract was executed between the parties, in which the intending husband agreed to relinquish all claims he had, or ever could have, to the property therein settled to the separate use of his wife. It was held that the agreement to release all interest the husband ever could have to this property cut off his marital rights entirely.

In Brown v. Brown, 6 Humph., 127, though, it was said:

“By marriage, the sole and absolute property of the. wife’s chattels vests in the husband, and if there be a marriage contract, whereby this right is abridged, it is taken away only to the extent stipulated in the settlement. When the settlement makes no disposition of the [673]*673property in the event of the wife’s death, and provides only for her dominion over it during coverture, the right of the husband as survivor is a fixed and stable right, over which the court has no control, and of which he cannot be divested.”

In construing a marriage contract, and discussing the husband’s right to administer upon his deceased wife’s separate estate, in Loftus v. Penn, 1 Swan, 445, this' court said:

“To determine this question, we must examine the contract of the parties, and ascertain what was their intention in reference to the ultimate disposition of the property; for, if by the contract, the husband parted with all claim to the property and excluded his marital right beyond the point of coverture, the law will exclude him, and the property will go to the next of kin. But if, on the other hand, he is not excluded beyond the period of coverture by the plain meaning of the contract, his marital right, although suspended during coverture, attaches immediately upon the death of his wife, and he is entitled to the administration and to the property jure mariti.”

Tn Hays v. Bright, 11 Heisk., 325, it was said:

“It is settled that by marriage the absolute property of the wife’s chattels vests in the husband, and, if there be a marriage contract whereby this right is abridged, it is taken away only to the extent stipulated in the settlement. When the settlement makes no disposition of the property in the event of the wife’s death, and pro-vids only for her dominion over it during coverture, the [674]*674right of lier husband as survivor is a fixed and stable right, over which thé court has no control, and of which he cannot be divested.”

So it is .perceived the rule is well settled, where a separate estate in chattels is created by marriage contract, and it must be that, when created by gift from a third party, the husband’s right to such estate is only suspended or abridged during the period of coverture; and unless his right as a survivor is cut off by clear and distinct expressions, he is entitled to administer, and to take possession of, his wife’s separate estate at her death.

Why should the husband’s rights in a separate estate created in the wife by marriage settlement, or by gift of a third party, be different from his rights respecting her separate estate created by direct gift of personalty from him?

There can certainly be no reason for taking such a distinction in equity and good conscience. Most men, as they prosper, give to their wives, from time to time, jewelry, money, and other personalty. Such gifts are made partly in token of affection, and also by way of putting something beyond the reach of misfortune and any creditor that the husband may thereafter have. These gifts, under our decisions, become the separate estate of the wife, and over such estate the husband has no dominion or control whatever The wife is free to dispose of it during her lifetime, if she so desires; and, under our statute, she is free to will it at her death to whomsoever she may choose. If she does not, however, [675]*675make any disposition of it, as women often do not, it is right and just, at her death, in the absence of a contrary expression from her, that this estate should go back to her husband who created it, rather than to the wife’s kin, for whom she usually has less affection than she entertains for her husband.

Counsel for the complainant presses the case of Bingham v. Weller, 118 Tenn., 70, 81 S. W., 848, 69 L. R. A., 370, 106 Am. St. Rep., 803, upon the consideration of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
126 Tenn. 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-chattanooga-savings-bank-tenn-1912.