Quint v. Quint

359 S.W.2d 29, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 718
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 1962
DocketNo. 23421
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 359 S.W.2d 29 (Quint v. Quint) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quint v. Quint, 359 S.W.2d 29, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 718 (Mo. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

SPERRY, Commissioner.

Plaintiff, Nellie Bonebright Quint, widow of Walter H. Quint, deceased, instituted this suit whereby she sought a decree in equity adjudging void ab initio an antenuptial contract entered into between her and her deceased husband. Defendants are the lineal descendants of deceased and are the executor of his will and the sole beneficiaries under it, except for a small bequest to plaintiff. A decree was entered for plaintiff, adjudging the antenuptial contract to be void as of the date of its execution and that it did not then, and does not now, bar any rights that plaintiff might have or assert as a widow, as against the estate of deceased, as provided for by the statutes of Missouri. Defendants have appealed.

The essential facts necessary to our decision are not in dispute.

Plaintiff and deceased were first married and divorced sometime prior to October 14, 1952. Both had been previously married and each had children by such previous marriages. Prior to the legal dissolution of that marriage they entered into a property settlement whereby deceased deeded to plaintiff certain real estate and she, in consideration thereof, released all of her interest in his real estate and personal property.

On October 14, 1952, the parties again were married but, in contemplation of that marriage and before it was solemnized, they entered into an antenuptial contract. Therein it was agreed that plaintiff, upon the death of Mr. Quint, should have as her absolute property the household goods then in his home, if not disposed of prior to that time. It was further agreed that, upon the death of either, the other would not make any claim upon his or her estate; that each should continue to own, manage, mortgage or sell whatever real estate and personal property they might have as of the date of and during the marriage relationship, free from any claim on the part of the other; and that the marriage should not affect their respective property rights, or those of their respective children, after the death of either.

They lived together as husband and wife until April 12, 1960, when Mr. Quint died. He left a will which was duly admitted to probate. By its terms deceased’s descendants received all of his property except the household goods, appraised and of the value of $577.00, which plaintiff received. At the time of his death he owned a farm, appraised and of the value of $25,000.00, and other personal property of the value of $5,357.00. His debts, including expenses of last illness and funeral, totalled $1828.61.

Plaintiff’s chief contention here is that the antenuptial contract was and is void because of the provisions of Section 469.160, RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S. c. 475, Appendix, which was in effect on the date the contract was made and the marriage was consummated. That statute provided as follows:

“469.160. Marriage contract, when a bar to dower. — If any woman prior to and in contemplation of marriage, shall, in agreement or marriage contract with her intended husband, or other person, receive any estate, either real or personal, to take effect after the death of her husband, by way of jointure, as a provision for her support during life, and expressed to be in full discharge of all her claim of dower, such estate shall be valid, and a bar to dower in the estate of her husband. * * * ” (Italics ours).

That section appears in previous revisions of our statutes in its present form, as [31]*31follows: Sec. 5, p. 333, R.S.1825; Sec. 17, p. 521, G.S.1865; Sec. 2201, 1879; Sec. 4529, 1889; Sec. 2950, 1899; Sec. 362, 1909; Sec. 330, 1919; Sec. 334, 1929; Sec. 334, 1939. Jointures were first permitted as substitutes for dower in England by 27 Henry VIII. King v. King, 184 Mo. 99, 82 S.W. 101, 103. When the above section came into our law, all personalty owned by a woman vested absolutely, as a gift, in her husband; and women were otherwise economically handicapped. Logan v. Phillips, 18 Mo. 22, 28; Roberts v. Walker, 82 Mo. 200, 208. But it continued in the same form for many decades after the law in respect of women’s property rights, and their economic condition, had changed. It became an anachronism in the law but it could not be removed except by legislative action. It was repealed and replaced by section 247, Laws 1955, p. 385, now Sec. 474.120 RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S., which should be considered together with Sec. 474.220, RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S.

Comparing the new section with the former, it is clear that substantial and material changes have been made. Whether or not such changes are sufficient in view of modern social conditions is a legislative matter, not a judicial one. However, we are not here concerned with the statutory law as it now appears, because the statute as it appeared in 1952 is the law that governs the contract then made. 17 C.J.S. Contracts § 22, p. 355; Logan v. Phillips, supra, 18 Mo. 28; Roberts v. Walker, supra, 82 Mo. 208.

In Broyles v. Magee, Mo.App., 71 S.W.2d (St. Louis) 149, 152 in speaking of an ante-nuptial contract, it was said:

“It has been held that such an agreement, to be effective as a bar to a widow’s dower, must possess the attributes designated in the section of the statute which we have set out above. (The section here considered) Reger v. Reger, 316 Mo. 1310, 293 S.W. 414.”

By reference to the italicized portion of the quoted statute, it will be seen that the woman, in a valid antenuptial contract, must receive an estate either real or personal, to take effect after the death of her husband, by way of jointure, as a provision for her support during life, and expressed to be in full discharge of all her claim of dower. In Moran v. Stewart, 173 Mo. 207, 73 S.W. (Mo.) 177, 179, it was said: “Jointure is defined by Sir Edward Coke to be ‘a competent livelihood of freehold for the wife of lands or tenements, etc., to take effect presently or in possession or profit after the decease of her husband for the life of the wife at least.’ Coke on Litt. L. l. c. 5, §§ 41, 36 b.

Measured by that definition, the contract herein fails. By it no estate, real or personal, was conveyed to the wife. True, she was to receive some household goods upon the husband’s death, if not previously disposed of. Whether or not personalty of such small value would have been reasonably adequate is not material. By the contract, she was only to receive that property conditionally. Such a provision was not in compliance with the terms of the statute. It was held, in the last above mentioned case, that a provision whereby the wife should have the use and benefit of 106 acres of land for her life, or as long as she remained a widow, was insufficient.

In Mowser v. Mowser, 87 Mo. 437, 440—441, the court said: “It is against public policy to allow a man, by an agreement before marriage, which does not secure to the wife a provision for her support during life after his death, to bar her right to dower. The statutes sanction no such agreement.” (Italics ours). In Young v. Sangster, 322 Mo. 802, 16 S.W.2d 92, 95, it was said: “It may be conceded that the contract, as written, was not sufficient to bar his wife’s claim of dower in his estate, because, under the contract, she received no estate from him to take effect after his death, * * In Brandon v. Dawson, 51 Mo.App. 237, 244, it was held that an agreement between parties in contemplation of marriage whereby each agreed to make no claim against

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
359 S.W.2d 29, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quint-v-quint-moctapp-1962.