Phelps v. Phelps

72 Ill. 545
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 72 Ill. 545 (Phelps v. Phelps) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phelps v. Phelps, 72 Ill. 545 (Ill. 1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The decision in this case depends upon the construction that shall be given to the ante-nuptial agreement between the petitioner and her late husband, Michael Phelps, deceased.

Under our Statute of Wills, the -widow, in all cases, is allowed certain specific articles of property for the benefit of herself and family, and the petitioner in this case would be entitled to the benefit of that provision unless her right is barred by the terms of that agreement. The clause which it is insisted bars the right is as follows: “It is agreed that the

property of each shall be kept separate and distinct, held and enjoyed by each separately and distinctly, by each in the same manner as if they were and had continued unmarried; and, upon the death of either party, his or her real estate and personal property shall pass to his or her heirs, executors and administrators, free from all claims of survivor.”

The decedent had children by a former marriage. It was provided that the issue of their marriage, if any, should inherit the estate of the husband equally with his other children. One child was bom unto them, which was living with the widow at the time of filing this petition.

No doubt ante-nuptial agreements are to be construed liberally for the purposes which they were intended to accomplish. The obvious meaning of the agreement in the case at bar is, that it cuts oif all the interest the widow would personally have by reason of her marriage, in the property of her husband, both real and personal, but further than that it does not go. It was certainly never contemplated it would debar the wife of the right of support at the hands of her husband during his lifetime, nor release him from his obligation to support their children, the fruits of their marriage, if there should be any. Neither party ever expected it to have such an effect. It was only intended to operate upon her interest in his property, but not to relinquish the means of support which it was his duty to furnish her and her family. That duty the law imposed . upon him during life. Surely he was not released from his obligation in this regard, by anything contained in the ante-nuptial agreement.

The law also charges the husband’s estate with the support of his widow and his children residing with her, for the period of one year after his death, at least to the extent of certain articles of property, or their value in money. This latter right is one created by positive law, and attaches in all cases, whether there is sufficient property or not to pay the debts of the decedent. Being a statutory right, it is one of which the husband can not deprive his wife and children, no more than he can relieve himself of his obligation to support them while living. It is in no case affected by the widow renouncing or failing to renounce the benefit of the provisions made for her in the will of her husband, or otherwise. Our laws on this subject have always been liberal, but the tendency of more recent legislation is to enlarge, rather than abridge, the beneficent provisions in this regard. The same protection has been extended by statutory enactments to the minor children of the decedent, where he is a householder at the time of his death, and leaves no widow.

The right of the wife to support during marriage is not an interest, strictly speaking, in the property of her husband. It is a benefit arising out of the marital relation by implication of law. Treating the provision which the law makes for the widow and the children residing with her, by the allowance of specific articles of property, as a means of support, it can not be said to be an interest in the property itself of the husband. It comes within no definition of property. It is a benefit created in their favor by positive law, and adopted for reasons deemed wise and politic.

The ante-nuptial agreement in this case makes no allusion to these rights. Hence it can not be said that the petitioner has released her right to the benefits of the obligations imposed upon her husband and his estate which are to inure to her and her family in case of his death. Its effect would be, to debar her dower in the estate of her husband, and prevent her from taking any portion as heir under the statute; but it is an unreasonable construction to say that it deprives her of the provisions the law has made in her behalf and for her husband’s minor children residing with her. The specific allowance is as much for the advantage of the children of the decedent as for his widow. It is an absurd conclusion that any ante-nuptial agreement can deprive the children of the means of support, in their tender years, which the law has given. Should the construction contended for prevail, the debts of the decedent might exhaust the entire estate, and leave the family in utter destitution. As we said in Sin’cmn v. Strawn, 53 Ill. 263, it was the design of the legislature to furnish the necessary sustenance for the household for one year after the death of the husband. We are at a loss to understand how this humane provision of law for the family of a deceased party can be affected by an ante-nuptial contract, however broad and comprehensive its terms.

■ The suggestion, the petitioner may have had separate property at the time of her marriage, can make no difference in the decision of the case. She was not bound to use it for the support of his children, to the exclusion of the estate of her husband; but if that question was material, we can not know the amount of the property, nor that any portion of it was preserved until the death of her husband. So far as anything appears in the record, the family may be entirely dependent on the estate. Independently of the question whether there is sufficient property to discharge the debts, .the law has appropriated to the widow and the family residing with her such specific allowance as was deemed necessary for their support for one year, and made it a first charge upon the estate, to be • first discharged to the extent there may be assets belonging to the deceased.

But there is another ground upon which the agreement may be held to be inoperative as to the widow’s award. The statutory provision that exempts a portion of a man’s estate from the payment of his debts, for the maintenance of his widow and minor children for a limited period, was adopted from motives of public concern. It is, that they may not become a charge upon the eleemosynary institutions of the State, as in many instances they would, but for this humane provision of the law. It is undeniable law that a party may waive the advantage of a statute intended for his sole benefit, but there are grave reasons why a law enacted from public considerations should not be abrogated by mere private agreement. The statute we are considering is of this character. It was intended to throw around the persons named that protection they are unable, in their helplessness, to procure for themselves. This is not a matter of mere private concern. It would be in contravention of the policy of this enactment to permit a- party, by an ante-nuptial contract, to relieve his estate altogether from the maintenance of his widow and his children, when they could no longer sustain themselves.

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Bluebook (online)
72 Ill. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phelps-v-phelps-ill-1874.