Shinn v. Shinn

42 Kan. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 42 Kan. 1 (Shinn v. Shinn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shinn v. Shinn, 42 Kan. 1 (kan 1889).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

The only questions presented in this case are with reference to the character of the title, interest and estate conveyed by Abner Shinn on April 17,1882, to his son, Eugene F. Shinn, and to his son’s wife, Ella Shinn, and whether such title, interest and estate have since been forfeited and lost, or not. It is not claimed in this case nor even pretended that Abner Shinn did not have the power to convey tó his son and to his son’s wife any kind of estate, interest or title in or to the land which he might have chosen to convey, for he held the whole- of the estate and a perfect title, and could convey just what he chose. The questions presented, however, are these: What did he convey, and has the same been forfeited or lost ? It seems to be admitted that Abner Shinn conveyed or transferred to his son and to his son’s wife an interest of some kind in the property in question for the period of ten years, subject to a condition subsequent, and conveyed to them the full and complete title and estate forever afterward, subject to a condition precedent; but it is claimed by Abner Shinn that these conditions were afterward brought into existence, and that they so operated as to [7]*7produce a forfeiture of the grantee’s interest in the property, and a transference of the same back to the grantor. It is probable, however, that the intention of the grantor was to convey to the grantees the entire estate and a fee-simple title, modified only by a limitation upon the power of the grantees for ten years to “sell, mortgage, or incumber” the property. The conditions upon which the property was conveyed as expressed in the deed, are that the grantees should not “sell, mortgage or incumber the same in any way for the period of ten years” from April 17, 1882. It is not claimed that the grantees have sold or attempted to sell the property, or that they have mortgaged or attempted to mortgage the same, but it is claimed that by their acts and sufferance they caused the same to be incumbered in the following manner, to wit: After this deed was executed, and on August 6, 1884, Eugene F. Shinn commenced an action for a divorce against his wife, Ella Shinn. Such action was afterward dismissed; but while it was pending the court rendered a judgment in favor of Ella Shinn and against Eugene F. Shinn for $30 as alimony; and it is claimed that this judgment is a lien and an incumbrance upon the lpjud, and such an incumbrance as was contemplated when the property was conveyed by Abner Shinn to Eugene F. Shinn and his wife, and therefore it is claimed, that such judgment has so operated as to divest Eugene F. Shinn and his wife of all their right, title and interest in and to the property, and to restore the same to Abner Shinn. Is this claim correct ? Did the aforesaid judgment work a forfeiture of the estate of Eugene F. Shinn and his wife, and reinvest all interest in the property in Abner Shinn? Now whatever interest or title may have been conveyed or transferred by Abner Shinn to his son and to his son’s wife as between the grantor himself and the grantees, whether the same were great or small, and whatever may have been the effect of the conditions contained in the deed, there was nothing contained in the deed or elsewhere prescribing what kind of an estate the grantees should take as. between themselves; hence under-the authority of the case of Baker v. Stewart, 40 Kas. 442, et seq., [8]*819 Pac. Rep. 904, et seq., and the numerous cases cited in that case, they took their interests in the property, whatever such interests were, by entireties, and not as tenants in common or as joint tenants. In other words, each took the entire estate conveyed to him and did not take a separate portion of any estate. In such a case one alone, without the consent of the other, could not sell, mortgage or incumber the property. It would take the affirmative action of both to dispose of or to incumber the same or any interest therein. In procuring the aforesaid judgment both did not act. It was the act of the wife alone without the consent of her husband. And hence it would seem that this action on the part of one alone, and the non-action or resistance on the part of the other, and the resulting judgment, could not amount to or constitute a lien or an incumbrance upon the property. It will certainly not be claimed that merely suffering a lien to be procured upon the property would work a forfeiture of all interest under the deed; for if so, then the property must necessarily have been forfeited on the very first moment of the first day of the next November after the deed was executed, for on that day taxes became due upon the property, and became a lien and an incumbrance thereon, and these taxes could not possibly have been paid or avoided prior to their becoming a lien and an incumbrance. But as before stated, Eugene F. Shinn and Ella Shinn owned their interests in the property by entireties, and not as joint tenants or tenants in common. Neither owned a separate interest in the property, but each owned the entire property, and surely Ella Shinn in procuring a judgment in her own favor could not create a lien or an incumbrance upon and against her own property. And she certainly would not cause an execution to be issued to sell her own property. At common law the husband had the right to the use and control of all his wife’s property, including that which she held as a tenant by the entirety with her husband as well as that which she held in her own right and by a separate title, and that which she held as a tenant in common or joint tenant with her husband or others. But our statutes have [9]*9materially changed this rule of the common-law. Under our statutes the wife now has the same right to the use and control of all her own property as her husband has to the use and control of his. She now has the same right to the use and control of the interest in property which she holds with her husband or others as tenants in common, or as joint tenants, or as tenants by the entirety, as her husband or any one of the other tenants has to the use and control of a like interest in the property. The statutes do not attempt to abolish or affect tenancies by the entirety any more than they attempt to abolish or affect tenancies in common. Both kinds of tenancies still exist, and both are alike affected as between a husband and wife by the foregoing statutes. But as the wife now has the same right to the use and control of property held by herself and husband together as tenants by the entirety as he has, and as she has the right as well as he to the entire use and control of such property, the selling on execution or the otherwise disposing of the husband’s interest in such property without her consent could not divest the wife of her right to the possession of the entire property, nor of her right to the use and control of the same. In this connection see Davis v. Clark, 26 Ind. 424, and the several cases hereafter cited.

As long as the wife lives the property cannot be legally seized or sold on execution for the husband’s debts; nor could the purchaser, if the property should be sold, take the possession of it, for the wife has the exclusive right to the possession thereof, and to the use and control of the same, except as against her husband alone, who has a like right to the possession, and to the use and control of the same.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Kan. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shinn-v-shinn-kan-1889.