Nixon v. Rose

12 Va. 425
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1855
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Va. 425 (Nixon v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nixon v. Rose, 12 Va. 425 (Va. 1855).

Opinion

MONCURE, J.

I think that the bequest of slaves and other property made by Mrs. Rose to trustees for the use and benefit of her daughter Mrs. Coupland, or her heirs, was of an absolute interest in the property, and not óf a life estate only; and that the limitation -over to her son Gustavus A. Rose or his heirs forever, in the event of the death of her said daughter without an heir or heirs of her body, is void for remoteness. The cases on this subject are very numerous; and it is unnecessary to review or even cite them; as, in the view which I take of this case, it is immaterial whether the said bequest be of an absolute or of a life estate. I will consider it, for the purposes of this case, as a bequest of an absolute estate.

I am of opinion that it is a bequest for the separate *use of Mrs. Coup-land. Among the words which have been held, per se, and independently of any contrary intention to be collected from other parts of the will, to create a trust for the wife’s separate use, are the following: “For her sole use and benefit;” “for her sole use;” “for her livelihood;” “for her own use and benefit, independent of any person;” “that she should receive and enjoy the issues and profits.” 2 Roper on Legacies by White 1414; White’s Leading Cases in Equity, 65 Law Libr. 366, 376. But no particular form of words is necessary ; and whenever it appears, either from the nature of the transaction, or from the whole context of the instrument, that the wife was intended to have the property to her sole use, that intention will prevail. 2 Bright on Husband and Wife 211. Though it seems that the intention to give her such an interest, in opposition to the legal rights of her husband, must be clear and unequivocal. Id. 206.

In the case under consideration, whether we look to the particular words used or the whole context of the will, the intention of the testatrix to exclude the marital rights of the husband, and secure the property to the separate use of the wife, is plainly apparent. In the first place, the property is given to trustees; which is a circumstance in favor of the intention to give it to the wife’s separate use, though not of itself a sufficient evidence of such intention. 2: Roper 1415. In the second place, it is “to be held by them in trust, only for the use and benefit” of the w-ife or her heirs. These words are at least as strong as some of those which, we have seen, have been held, per se, to create a trust for separate use. It is difficult to perceive any substantial difference between the words “only for the use and benefit of the wife,” and the words, “for her sole use and benefit,” or the words ‘ ‘for her own use and benefit, independent of any person.” In the third place, the testatrix expresses her ‘ ‘ will and desire to *guard in the most ample manner against the imprudent sale or other disposition of the property” during the life of the wife; and for that purpose, wholly and solely confides it to the discretion of the trustees, in what manner the wife “shall receive and enjoy the profits arising from the hire or other disposition of the slaves aforesaid.”

Here an intention is plainly indicated that neither the wife nor the husband should have a right to sell or otherwise dispose of the property; which is inconsistent with the idea of its being given, sixbject to his. marital rights; in which case the jus dis-ponendi would have been a necessary incident. It is wholly and solely confided to the discretion of the trustees in what manner the wife (not the husband, nor even the husband and wife) “ shall receive and enjoy the profits.” These are the very words which were used in Tyrrell v. Hope, 2 Atk. R. 558; and which the master of the rolls observed could admit of no other construction than that the property should be for the wife’s separate use. He asked to what end she should receive the profits if they were to be the husband’s property the next moment; and added, that the word “enjoy” was very strong to imply a separate use to the wife. 2 Bright 211. The intention to. create a trust for the wife’s separate use is at least as plain in this case as is that of West v. West’s ex’ors, 3 Rand. 373, in which this court unanimously held that a separate estate was given. See also Scott v. Gibbon, 5 Munf. 86; Smith v. Smith’s adm’rs, 6 Id. 581; Markham v. Guerrant, 4 Leigh 279; Lewis v. Adams, 6 Id. 320; and Perkins’ trustee v. Dickinson, 3 Gratt. 335.

I am further of opinion that Mrs. Coup-land has no power to' alien her separate estate or any part of it. The jus disponendi is an inseparable incident of property held by a person who is sui juris. But nothing is now better settled than that it may be severed from “the separate estate of a feme covert. 2 Bright, ch. vii, p. 274; Steedman v. Poole, 6 Hare’s R. 193, 31 Eng. Ch. R. 193; and other cases cited by Bright. In respect of her separate estate she is considered in equity as a feme sole. “Her faculties as such and the nature- and extent of them (says Lord Langdale), are to be collected from the terms in which the gift is made to her, and will be supported by equity for her protection.” — “If [655]*655the gift be made to her sole and separate use without more, she has, during coverture, an alienable estate independent of her husband. If the gift be made for her sole and separate use, without power to alienate, she has during the coverture, the present enjoyment of an unalienable estate independent of her husband.” — “The separate estate may, and often does, exist, without the restriction, but the restriction has no independent existence; when found, it is a modification of the separate estate, and inseparable from it.” Tullett v. Armstrong, 1 Beav. R. 1, 17 Eng. Ch. R. 132. “When the court first established the separate estate (says Lord Cottenham) it violated the laws of property between husband and wife; but it was thought beneficial, and it prevailed. It being once settled that a wife might enjoy separate estate as a feme sole, the laws of property attached to this new estate, and it was found, as part of such law, that the power of alienation belonged to the wife, and was destructive of the security intended for ■ it. Equity again interfered, and by another violation of the laws of property, supported the validity of the prohibition against alienation.” Same Case, on appeal, 4 Mylne & Craig 377, 18 Eng. Ch. R. 405.

This is the doctrine in England. In the United States, the right to restrict the power of alienation of a separate estate is universally admitted. In many of the states it has even been held that the wife has no such power, unless it be given her by the instrument *which creates the estate. It has been so held, it seems, in South Carolina, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and Mississippi. See the cases cited in the notes of Hare and Wallace to White’s Equity Cases", 65 Law Libr. 370-378.

In the case of the Methodist Episcopal Church v. Jaques, 3 John. Ch. R. 77, Chancellor Kent was of opinion, that “instead of holding that the wife is a feme sole to all intents and purposes as to her separate property, she ought only to be deemed a feme sole, sub modo, or to the extent of the power clearly given by the settlement.

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Related

Scott v. Gibbon & Co.
5 Munf. 86 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1816)
Woodson v. Perkins
5 Gratt. 345 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1849)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Va. 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nixon-v-rose-va-1855.