Neves v. Scott

50 U.S. 196, 13 L. Ed. 102, 9 How. 196, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1418
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 28, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 50 U.S. 196 (Neves v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neves v. Scott, 50 U.S. 196, 13 L. Ed. 102, 9 How. 196, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1418 (1850).

Opinion

Mr, Justice NELSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a.decree of the Circuit Court of the United States held in and for the District of the State of Georgia.

The bill was filed by the complainants in the court below, to obtain the possession of the undivided half of an estate, embraced in a marriage settlement between John Neves and Catharine Jewell, entered into in contemplation of marriage, and which shortly afterwards took place.

Each of the parties, being the owner and in possession of considerable estates at the time, .entered into the following agreement: —

“ Articles of agreement made and entered into this 17th of February, • 1810, between John Neves and Catharine Jewell, widow, and relict of the late Thomas Jewell, (deceased,) all of the State and county aforesaid as follows :
“Whereas a marriage is shortly,to be had and solemnized between the said John Neves and the said Catharine Jewell, as aforesaid, are, as follows, to wit: — that all the property, both real and personal, which is now, or may hereafter become, the right of the-said John and Catharine, shall rema.'a in common between them, the said husband and wife, during their natural-lives ; and should the said Catharine become the longest liver, the property to continue hers so long as she shall live ; and at her death .the ■ estate to be divided between the heirs of her, said Catharine, and the heirs of the said John, share and share alike, agreeable to the distribution.laws of this State made and provided. And, on the other hand, should the said John become the. longest liver, the property to remain in the manner and form as above.”

*208 The parties after the marriage held and enjoyed their respective estates in common, during their joint lives, and until the death of John in 1828; and 'after his death the same remained in the possession and enjoyment of Catharine, the survivor, until her decease in 1844; since which time, it has been in the possession and under the control of William F. Scott, her second husband, and one of the defendants. The other defendant is the executor under the will of John Neves, the husband.

The complainants are the brother and nephew, and only surviving heirs, of John Neves; and claim a moiety of the estate, According to the terms of the marriage settlement. And the questions presented in the case are upon the effect to be given to this instrument.

The argument, on the- part of the defendants, is,, that the deed is to be regarded in the light of marriage articles, creating executory trusts to be carried into execution at some future day by an instrument that would operate to vest the estates .according to the stipulations in the articles. And that, as the agreement is founded upon the consideration of marriage, and other considerations moving only between the parties, the complainants, being the collateral relatives of John Neves, do not, according' to the rules of equity applicable to this species of contract, come within the reach and influence of the considerations, so as to entitle them to the interposition of a court of chancery to enforce the execution of the trusts. That where the trust is executory, and rests merely in covenant, the court will interpose only in favor of one of the parties to the instrument or the issue, or one claiming through them; and not in favor of remote heirs or strangers, though included - within the scope of the provisions of the articles. (Fonbl., book 6, ch. 6, § 8; Atherly on Settlements, ch. 5, p. 125; 2 Story’s Eq. §§ 986, 987; 2 Kent’s Com. 173.)

Upon this ground, the court below sustained the demurrer to the bill, and denied the prayer of the complainants.

The numerous cases to be found in the books, several of which were referred to in the argument on this subject, are by no means uniform or consistent; and the general rule as stated, and upon which the case below turned, has been made the subject of so many exceptions and qualifications, that it can scarcely, at this day, be regarded as authority. (Vernon v. Vernon, 2 P. Wms. 594; Edwards v. Countess of Warwick, Ib. 171; Osgood v. Strode, Ib. 245; Ithell v. Beane, 1 Ves. sen. 215; S. C., 1 Dick. 132; Stephens v. Trueman, 1 Ves. jr. 73, 74; Pulvertoft v. Pulvertoft, 18 Ves. 90; 2 Kent’s Com. 172, 173; Atherly, 145-148.)

*209 The case of Vernon v.- Vernon is a direct authority in support of the limitation in question; and the other cases to which I have referred are distinguishable only upon very technical and refined reasoning, hardly reconcilable with a commonsense administration of justice. The principle is, that, in order to bring collateral relatives within, the reach and influence of the consideration, there must be something over and above that flowing from the immediate parties to the marriage articles, from which it can- be inferred that relatives beyond the issue were intended to be provided for; and that, if the provision in their behalf had not been agreed to, the superadded consideration would not have been given.

That, for any thing short of this, they will be regarded as volunteers, in whose favor a court of equity will not interpose against the settler, or any one claiming under him.

But while the rule seems generally to have been adhered to in the form in which it is stated, it has been practically disregarded ; as the slightest degree of valuable consideration imaginable is seized hold of to-give effect to the limitation.

And it need not be made to appear that, these slight considerations were intended to support the provision for the distant relatives, it being . assumed by the court as a presumption of law.

•The Lord .Chancellor in Stephens v. Trueman observed, “ The old rule was, and is now, (although of late not so strictly-adhered to,) that none can come here for a specific performance, who do not come under the consideration of the agreement ; as that it shall not be for the benefit of collateral branches in marriage articles; but, as agreements are entire, and the several branches may have been in view, the court has in later cases laid hold of any circumstances to distinguish them out of it, still preserving the general rule.”

And in Edwards v. The Countess of Warwick, the doctrine is stated still more strongly, where the Chancellor observed, “ that the consideration for the precedent limitations on a marriage settlement has been applied even to the subsequent ones; as where, on a consideration of marriage, and portion, land has been settled on the husband for life, and then to the wife for life, remainder to the children, with remainder to a brother, these considerations have extended to the brother; and the reason is, because it may be very well intended, that the husband, or his parents', would-not have come into the settlement, unless all the parties thereto had agreed to the limitation to the brother.”

The result of all the cases, I think, will show, that if, from *210

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 U.S. 196, 13 L. Ed. 102, 9 How. 196, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neves-v-scott-scotus-1850.