Molloy v. Clapp

70 Tenn. 586
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 70 Tenn. 586 (Molloy v. Clapp) 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
Molloy v. Clapp, 70 Tenn. 586 (Tenn. 1879).

Opinion

McFarland, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 5th January, 1859, D. B. Molloy, the husband of the complainant, conveyed to her certain real estate in the city of Memphis, to hold to her sole and separate . use, free from ’ the claims or liabilities of her said husband — the deed being silent as to the power of disposition.

On the 30th of September, 1871, said Molloy and the complainant join in the execution of a deed conveying the same property to J. W. Clapp, trustee, to secure certain debts of the said D. B. Molloy, the husband. The deed being executed and acknowledged before the clerk of the county court, as the law requires in the case of married women.

[587]*587The trustee was proceeding to advertise and sell the property in accordance with the trust, when the complainant filed the present bill, praying for an injunction and the removal of the cloud upon her title.. The relief is predicated alone upon the want of power in the complainant to make the deed of trust. The ease turns upon the construction of the act of 1869-70, ch. 99, Thompson & Steger’s Statutes, sec. 2486, a. b. c.,, and the question whether the act applies to the present case.

The latest decisions of this court, having settled that where the deed of conveyance creating the separate estate is silent as to the power of disposition, the wife cannot convey, although the husband join in the deed. Gray v. Robb, 4 Heis., 74. It remains to see whether the power of disposition is given by the act referred to. The act is as follows:

Section 1. “Married women over the age of twenty-one years, owning the fee or other legal or equitable interest or estate in real estate, shall have the same power of disposition by will, deed or otherwise, as are possessed by femes sole or unmarried women.”

Sec. 2. The power of said married woman to sell, convey, charge or mortgage their real estate, shall not, depend upon the concurrence of the husband, provided her privy examination to any deed, mortgage,, or other conveyance shall take place before a Chancellor or Circuit Judge of this State or Clerk of the County Court.”

Sec. 5. “Femes covert or married women owning a separate estate settled upon them for their separate [588]*588use, shall have the same power of disposition by deed, will or otherwise, as are given by the first and second •sections of this act, provided the power of disposition is not expressly withheld in the deed or will under which they hold the property.”

The first two sections relate to real estate owned by a married woman, other than separate estate, and as to this the important change is made which gives to her, if twenty-one years of age, the same powers of disposition by will, deed, or otherwise, as are possessed by a feme sole, provided her privy examination is taken in the manner specified. The third section gives the same power to femes covert as to their separate estate, provided the power of disposition is not expressly withheld in the deed or will under which they hold the property.

It is argued upon certain language used by this court in some of the cases, that silence in the deed as to the power of disposition is equivalent to expressly withholding the power, as the omission to grant the power is equivalent to saying that it shall not be exercised; but it is manifest that the proviso to the above statute means that the power of disposition must in terms and in language be withheld, either by expressly denying the power, or by specifying the mode of disposition which may be used to express the intention that it shall not be conveyed in other modes, (Lightfoot v. Barr, 2 Tennessee Ch. Rep.) in order to take the case out of the operation of the act, otherwise the act would be nugatory. For if the power of disposition be in terms withheld, it is clear the act [589]*589by its terms does not apply; if a deed or will crer-ating tbe estate, silent as to the power of 'disposition, is to stand upon the same ground, then the act could have no effect, for if the deed gives the power of disposition, the act is not needed.

The language of the act leaves no room for doubt as to its extent and scope in all cases to which it applies. By the first and second sections, married women shall have the same power of disposition of their real estate by will, deed or otherwise, possessed by femes sole, and their power to sell, convey, charge or mortgage shall not depend upon the concurrence of the husband. And by third section femes eovert owning a separate estate, are to have the same power of disposition, provided it is not expressly withheld in the conveyance under which they hold. So it is beyond doubt, that a married woman may dispose of her real estate whether it is her separate property or not, by will, deed, or otherwise, without the concurrence of her husband in the manner stated, provided that in the case of separate estate the power be not expressly withheld in the title under which she holds; and so this court held at the June term, 1875, at Knoxville, that a husband and wife may make a valid mortgage of the wife’s separate property to secure a debt of the husband, where no mode of disposition was prescribed in the instrument under which the wife holds. Hodges v. Williams, MS.

The statute gives the power to the wife to convey alone in the mode prescribed, but it is manifest, that if she can convey alone, the unnecessary joining of her [590]*590husband does not vitiate her deed, as was held at the present term in a case where the conveyance- was under a similar ¡zower given by the decree settling the property upon the married woman. Myers v. James, MS.

Rut the argument principally relied upon is, that the act in question shall not have a retrospective operation ; or, in other words, that it shall not apply to separate estates owned by mari’ied women at the time the act was passed, but only to such as were acquired afterwards. The argument is not so much that the act is unconstitutional as being retrospective, and impairing the obligation of the contracts in respect to estates then existing, as that the law ought not to be construed as being intended to apply to such cases. The language of the act is certainly broad enough to cover both classes of cases; “ it is femes covert owning real estate/-’ etc., or “owning separate estates settled upon them/’ etc., and no good reason can be perceived why it should be limited to estates since acquired, unless a contrary construction in feet tends to impair the obligation of the contract.

This leads us to inquire upon what ground was it previously held that a married woman could not (her husband joining) convey her separate estate where the instrument under which she held was silent as to the power of disposition? It was fettled in a series of cases in t-h'e State, beginning with Morgan v. Elam, 4 Ter., that where the mode of disposition was pointed out in the instrument creating the estate, or the power withheld altogether, either in terms or by clear inten[591]*591tion tó be gathered from tbe purpose of the settlement, that there could be no conveyance, except where the mode was pointed out, and then only in that mode.

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70 Tenn. 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/molloy-v-clapp-tenn-1879.