Sims v. Everhardt

102 U.S. 300, 26 L. Ed. 87, 12 Otto 300, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2039
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 25, 1880
Docket31
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 102 U.S. 300 (Sims v. Everhardt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sims v. Everhardt, 102 U.S. 300, 26 L. Ed. 87, 12 Otto 300, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2039 (1880).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Strong,

after- stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

Assuming, as we think it must be assumed, and as it is certainly held in Indiana, that the deed "of Mrs. Sims, in which her husband joined, though made during her minority, was not void as against her, but only voidable, and hence that it was incumbent upon her to disaffirm it within a reasonable time after she came of age, the inquiry is still to be met, What was a-reasonable time under the circumstances of the case ? She gave notice of her disaffirmance almost immediately after she became dis-covert, — certainly within less than two months. This was, however, a. little more than twenty years after she attained her majority. ■

The Circuit Court dismissed the complainant’s bill for the reason that it did not appea-f she had disaffirmed the deed of May 28,1847, within a reasonable time after the attainment of her majority, being pf opinion that the' rule was established in Indiana she must have so disaffirmed it, notwithstanding her coverture; that is, in the same time as if she had been discovert.

We find no decision of the Indiana courts that ought to be regarded as establishing that rule. The case relied upon by the appellees in support of the judgment of the Circuit Court is Scranton v. Stewart, 52 Ind. 68. The facts of that case, it must be admitted, were in some respects like those of the present, though in others essentially different. The plaintiff was at the time of her marriage an infant, aged sixteen. She was then seised in fee-simple of a tract óf land, containing forty-five acres, and also of an undivided interest in another tract. On the second day of March, 1864, when she was in the nineteenth year of'her age, she and her husband conveyed the lands to one George W. Stewart, for a consideration of $2,500, a considerable part of which -was paid. Mrs. Scranton came of age on the 12th of January, 1867, gave notice to Stewart of her disaffirmance of the <ieed on the 22d of 'July, *307 1870, and- shortly after brought her action to recover the land.' This was’ more than three years and a half after she had attained her majority. The Supreme Court held that her disaffirmance was in time. It .was all the case required. But the judge went on to declare that a married woman who has made a deed of her lands during her infancy and. coverture must disaffirm it within a reasonable time after she arrives at age, notwithstanding her coverture, .and that the fact of the continued coverture would not extend the time ■ for the disaffirmance. All this was (¡biter.. It had nothing to do with the . case before the court. Nothing in the facts or the judgment required the assertion of such a rule. And it is observable that it was said in a case in which it appeared the married woman was seised of her land before her marriage, and that slie was married in 1864,- after the statutes of the State had greatly enlarged the power of a feme covert over her property. Those statutes had given her the rights of a feme sole in regard to her lands, and empowered her to sue as such without joining her husband. ■ They had denied to á husband the rights which at common law lie acquired in the wife’s property by the marriage. They had made her lands and the profits of them her separate property, as fully at if she was unmarried, with the single exception that she could not incumber or convey them except by deed in which her husband should join.- The effect of the State statute, touching the marriage relation and the liabilities incident thereto, was in part considered in Miles v. Lingerman (24 id. 385), where it was said by. the Supreme Court of the State : “ Under our present statute the wife may bring her action in regard to her own estate as though she were a feme sole. Still our legislature has seen proper to continue the protection formerly accorded to her as a feme covert-, although as to her power to disaffirm her contracts made during minority her legal disability has been removed. . She has the .legal-power to disaffirm her contracts made during infancy, and to bring her action without the assent, and even' against the will, of her husband.” ■ This language, if not a positive assertion of its converse, contains at least a strong implication that her power to disaffirm a conveyance .made by her during infancy did not exist at common law, or before the statutes of 1847 and 1852 were enacted.

*308 We find nothing in any prior decision of the Indiana courts that sustains what was said obiter in Scranton v. Stewart. Law v. Long (41 Ind. 586), to which reference has 'been made, decided that the deed of a minor, conveying' her land for a valuable consideration, is'voidable only and not void, and that the right to avoid it on coming of age' is a personal privilege of the minor and her heirs. It also decided- that when the act of an infant is executed, as when -a deed has been made and delivered, the infant must, on attaining full age, do some act to disaffirm the contract, and that such act must precede the commencement of an action. But the case did 'not define what is a reasonable time, or rule that if the wife came of age during coverture she was bound to disaffirm the contract notwithstanding her coverture, as if she was a feme sole. ' In that case the conveyance was made by the wife- and her husband before the act of 1852 was passed. He died in 1852. She married again in 1853, and came of age in 1854. Her second husband died in 1864, and she married a third time in 1868; It was not until after her third marriage that her suit was brought. • She had been discovert during more than four years after her deed was made, and after she had reached her majosity, and yet she had taken no step or done any act to disaffirm the deed prior to the institution of her suit. No intimation is given in the case that she was bound to disaffirm or could disaffirm during her. coverture. Nothing, therefore, in Law v. Long supports what was said, but not decided, in Scranton v. Stewart.

But if the law was accurately stated in the opinion given by the court in Scranton v. Stewart, as applicable to a deed of her lands made by an- infant feme covert after the statute of 1852, it by no means follows that it should rule the present case. There is a radical difference in the facts of the two cases. Mrs. Sims was married before the act of 1852 or that of 1847 was passed, and while the common law relative to the marriage relation existed. By the marriage her husband acquired a vested freehold interest in her lands, and became entitled to the rents and profits. His control over the usufruct thereof' became absolute. His- interest extended during their joint lives, or at least as long as the marriage relation continued. Tt was an interest capable of sale. When, therefore, the deed *309 was made to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
102 U.S. 300, 26 L. Ed. 87, 12 Otto 300, 1880 U.S. LEXIS 2039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sims-v-everhardt-scotus-1880.