Schuyler v. Hoyle

5 Johns. Ch. 196
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 27, 1821
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 5 Johns. Ch. 196 (Schuyler v. Hoyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schuyler v. Hoyle, 5 Johns. Ch. 196 (N.Y. 1821).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The question submitted in this case is, how far, and to what extent, Henry T. E. Schuyler, deceased, had reduced to possession the distributive share belonging to his wife, of the estate of Gerrit Fisher, deceased, so as to be enabled to transmit the same, as part of his per[206]*206sonal estate, to the plaintiffs, his children, and prevent it from surviving to his wife ?

After stating the facts of the case, his Honour proceeded <

The only point in the case, arising from these facts, is, whether the distributive share of the 400,000 dollars, belonging to Mrs. Schuyler, and which came from N. J. V., the administrator, to Bleecker, after the death of S., did, or did not survive to the wife, as not having been reduced to possession by the husband, in his lifetime. J. am relieved from the necessity of examining into the effect of the receipts by B., prior to the husband’s death, because his wife’s share, and more than his wife’s share of those receipts, were paid over to the husband. After looking into the authorities which have been referred to by the counsel, and upon a consideration of the doctrine of the cases, there remains no doubt in my mind, that the wife was entitled, as survivor, to all that portion of her distributive share which was not paid over to Bleecker, but remained in the hands of the administrator of F. at the time of her husband’s death. There is nbt even colour for the pretension on the part of the plaintiffs, that the assets of F., the intestate, which were in the hands of his administrator on the death of S., were to be considered as no longer things in action, and held by him, as administrator, but as actually reduced to the husband’s possession, so as to cut off the right of survivorship in the wife.

As I do not know that this question has ever been discussed in this Court, it will be satisfactory to review some of the leading cases.

We have no concern, at present, with the doctrine that establishes the husband’s right to his wife’s chases in action, in case he survives her. It appears to be settled, that he is, in that event, entitled to them, whether they were or were not reduced to possession by him, in her lifetime. Her whole personal estate in action, as well as in possession, vests in the husband upon her death, for his right to administer on her personal estate includes a right to her choses in action. [207]*207They vest in him by the statute of distributions, as her next of kin. (Squib v. Wyn, 1 P. Wms. 378. Cart v. Rees, cited, ib. 381. Elliot v. Collier, 3 Atk. 526. Humphrey v. Buller, 1 Atk. 458. Co. Litt. 351. a. note 304. Whitaker v. Whitaker, 6 Johns. Rep. 102.)

Nor have we any concern, at present, with the doctrine, that if the husband and wife give a letter of attorney to a third person, to receive a legacy due to the wife, as was the case in Huntley v. Griffith, (Gouldsb. Rep. 159, Moore, 452. S. C.) or if he alone gives a letter of attorney, according to the dicta of the judges in that case, a receipt by the attorney changes the property of the legacy, and transfers it to the possession of the husband. That doctrine does not apply, because the attorney, in the present case, did not receive the property for which the defendants are sought to be accountable, until after the husband’s death. The present inquiry then is, whether there was any such interference, or change of the wife’s property, by the husband, before his death, though it did not come actually into his possession, or into that of his attorney, as to take away the right of survivorship in the wife ? And for the more full illustration of the point, we will see what acts the husband may do, to affect the wife’s property, without reducing it to actual possession.

In the first place, he may assign, for a valuable conside - ration, his wife’s choses in action. This was agreed to in Carteret v. Paschal, (3 P. Wms. 197.) and expressly decided in Bates v. Dandy, (2 Atk. 206.) The wife, in the last case, became entitled, during coverture, to a distributive share of an intestate’s estate, and that share consisted of two mortgages, which the husband took and left with a creditor, under a promise to assign them, by way of security; but died before actual assignment. Lord Hardwicke held this to be an assignment in equity, pro tanto, so far as the debt to the creditor was concerned, and that though the husband might have disposed of the whole interest, yet as he did not the residue of interest in the mortgages belonged to the wife [208]*208surviving her husband. So, again, in Jewson v. Moulson, (2 Atk. 417.) the wife was entitled, before marriage, as a legatee of her father; and the husband assigned all the interest which he was entitled to, in her right to her father’s personal estate, to a creditor. But the Chancellor allowed the creditor’s claim only on condition of his agreeing to make a separate provision for her and her children.

The doctrine of these cases is, that the husband may assign his wife’s choses in action, for a valuable consideration, to a creditor; but even then the assignment is subject to her equity for a reasonable provision. (Vide the cases of Pryor v. Hill, 4 Bro. 139. Like v. Beresford, 3 Vesey, 506. S. P.) Those cases, also, show, that there is no distinction between the case of an interest vesting in the wife before or after coverture; and the inference from them is, (and the position is expressly conceded in other cases, and is well established. Burnet v. Kinnerton, 2 Vern. 40 ; Lord Thurlow, in Saddington v. Kinsman, 1 Bro. 51. note to P. Wms. 381.) that a voluntary assignment by the husband of the wife’s personal property in action, without consideration, will not bind her, if she survives him. This admission of the right of assignment, for a valuable consideration, so as to pass the right of property free from the wife’s contingent right of survivorship, (though not from the wife’s equity for a reasonable provision for her support,) and the denying of this effect to a voluntary assignment, were also expressly declared by the Master of the Rolls, in Mitford v. Mitford. (9 Vesey, 87.) He there held, that an assignment in bankruptcy had no greater effect than a voluntary assignment, and he applied the rule to the case of a legacy given to the wife during coverture.

It is to be observed, that we are examining the cases in respect to the question of the wife’s right of survivorship, and how far the property has been altered so as to prevent it.. We have nothing to do, at present, with the point [209]*209which so often appears in the Chancery cases, how far the husband’s assignment of the wife’s property may affect what is termed the wife's equity to a reasonable provision out of tiie property, for the support of herself and her children. The two questions are not connected, and present very different rules for consideration.

In Garforth v. Bradley, (2 Vesey, 675.) Lord Hardwicks discussed more fully the control which the husband had over the wife’s personal property lying in action.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Johns. Ch. 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schuyler-v-hoyle-nychanct-1821.