Robins v. . McClure

3 N.E. 663, 100 N.Y. 328, 55 Sickels 328, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 983
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 24, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 3 N.E. 663 (Robins v. . McClure) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robins v. . McClure, 3 N.E. 663, 100 N.Y. 328, 55 Sickels 328, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 983 (N.Y. 1885).

Opinions

Miller, J.

The question to be determined in this case is whether John S. McClure, the defendant and executor under the last will and testament of his wife, Caroline McClure, is entitled to that portion of the estate of the testatrix which by her will was bequeathed to her brother, Wright Eobins, and *332 which lapsed by reason of Ms death prior to the death of the testatrix.

The testatrix, by her will, devised and bequeathed to her husband certain real estate and personal property, and also one-half of the residue of her estate, both real and personal, absolutely. The remainder, she gave to her brother, Wright Robins, and her sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Garter, to be equally divided between them. She left no descendants or ancestors. The residuary estate consisted solely of personal property. Her husband qualified as executor, and claims to be entitled to that portion of the estate which is lapsed, under the common law, by virtue of Ms marital rights.

The plaintiff claims, as one of the next of Mn and heirs at law, being a son of a deceased brother of the testatrix, Isaac Robins, an interest in such unbeqneathed personal property, • and brings this action on behalf of himself and for the benefit of such next of kin and heirs at law as will come in and contribute to the expenses thereof.

By the common law the husband became entitled to that portion of his wife’s personal property of which she was actually possessed at the time of her marriage, or which came to her during coverture. In case of the wife’s death prior to that of her-husband he was authorized to take out letters of administration upon her estate, and, as administrator, after the payment of her debts, if any there were, he retained and became the owner of the assets remaining in his hands as such administrator under the practice then existing, by means of which, before the statute of distributions, the administrator converted and appropriated the assets in his hands to Ms own use. A contest arose between the ecclesiastical and temporal courts concerning the right of the administrator to thus appropriate the funds, which contest was finally settled by the passage of the statute of distributions (22 Car. II, chap. 10), and as doubt still existed in regard to the rights of the husband, an explanatory act (23 Car. II, chap. 3) was passed, by section 25, of which it was declared that this statute should not be construed to extend to the estates of femes covert dying intestate, but *333 that the husband should have the same right to administer and enjoy such estate as before the passage of the said act.

The rule of the common law, which authorized the husband to hold the property of his wife, by virtue of administration, has been extended in this State, so as to entitle him to hold the same also by virtue of his marital rights, and numerous cases sustain this doctrine. In the case of Ransom v. Nichols (22 N. Y. 110], it was held that, where a married woman, possessed of separate personal estate, dies without having made any disposition of it in her life-time, or by way of testamentary appointment, the title thereto vests in her surviving husband, and cannot be affected by the granting of administration upon her estate to any other person. In the case cited, letters of administration had been taken out by a third person upon the wife’s estate, and an action was brought against the maker of a note to recover the amount of the same, which note was originally » given to the deceased wife, and afterward renewed payable to the husband and held by him. It appeared upon the trial that the amount of the note had been settled with the husband and taken up and canceled. It is said in the opinion : “The property, then, in this case, stands precisely upon the footing of choses in action of the wife, which have not been reduced to possession during the coverture. In this event the husband has the right to recover and enjoy them as his own, either as an incident to the marital relation and as flowing from it, or as an incident to his right of administration upon her estate; and for all practical purposes, it is immaterial to which source this right should be referred. This right of administration is secured primarily to the husband by the statute, and indeed, according to some authorities, it exists in the husband Jure mo/riti, and wholly irrespective of any statutory provisions upon the subject.” It will be noticed that the husband did not administer upon the estate of his wife, and hence it was claimed that he had no authority to interfere with her assets or to settle with the defendant who was the maker of the note. The decision expressly overrules this position and upholds his claim by virtue of his marital rights.

*334 In Ryder v. Hulse (24 N. Y. 372), the action was brought for the recovery of certain notes bequeathed by the wife of the plaintiff, who had taken out letters of administration upon her estate, to a third person, which notes had been acquired before the passage of the Married Woman’s Acts of 1848 and 1849, and it was held that the wife had no power to dispose of said notes by will, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover, and it was laid down in the opinion by Weight, J., that all the personal estate of a wife vests absolutely in the husband at the moment of marriage, and all she acquires during coverture immediately becomes his, and that the same rule applies to choses in action, and as to those she has only a contingent interest; that in the event of the wife’s death the husband does not take the choses in action not then reduced to possession by virtue of any statute of distribution or as next of kin, but the property is already vested in him, and if he should die before recovering, then they would be assets of his estate to be recovered by his representatives, and not by the representatives of his wife; that by his wife’s death her interest becomes extinct, and his becomes absolute, with the right of possession as administrator. It is further said that the same view of the question was taken in the case of Ransom v. Nichols (22 N. Y. 110), which is commented upon, and the rights of the husband by virtue of the marital relation fully sustained.

In Olmsted v. Keyes (85 N. Y. 602) the rule laid down in the cases cited is fully upheld. It is said, in the opinion by Earl, J., that “ all the choses of the wife, not reduced to possession during the joint lives, by the common law, passed to the husband upon her death. * * * He may then release them or take payment of them without administration, if he can get payment. If administration is needed to reduce the choses to possession he is entitled to it, and if there are no debts the administration is solely for his benefit. If, after his wife’s death, the husband does not release, assign or reduce to possession her choses in action during his life-time, then after his death his personal representatives are entitled to administration upon them for the benefit of his estate as part of his assets.” (See, *335 also, Westervelt v. Gregg, 12 N. Y. 210; 2 Kent’s Com. 136, 143; Reeve’s Dom. Rel. [1st ed.] 1.) In Barnes v. Underwood (47 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.E. 663, 100 N.Y. 328, 55 Sickels 328, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 983, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robins-v-mcclure-ny-1885.