Staib v. German Insurance Bank

200 S.W. 322, 179 Ky. 118, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 176
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 5, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 200 S.W. 322 (Staib v. German Insurance Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Staib v. German Insurance Bank, 200 S.W. 322, 179 Ky. 118, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 176 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion op ti-ie Court by

Judge Thomas —

Affirming.

On and prior to July 13, 1915, J. Lewis Staib, husband of appellant and defendant below, was indebted to appellee and plaintiff below, German Insurance Bank, in the sum of $8,829.52, evidenced by various notes, and on that day he renewed all of his indebtedness to the plaintiff by executing to it one note for the entire sum due four months afterward. To secure it he and his wife, the defendant,. executed a mortgage to the plaintiff bank on certain lots in the city of Louisville, some of which he owned, while his wife owned the others. The real estate was not deemed sufficient security by the 'bank and it demanded more, resulting in pledging to [119]*119the bank as further security 66 shares of the capital stock of the Louisville Bridge & Iron Company, a corporation doing business in. the city of Louisville. Three of the shares were held by the husband as his property, the certificates for which had been issued to him, while the other 63 shares were issued to and held by the wife. But on the day before the date of the note (July 12, 1915) defendant signed a blank endorsement on the back of the certificate for the shares which she held in her name with the view and purpose that the husband might use the stock as collateral to a note to be executed by him in extending his indebtedness. The endorsement which the defendant so signed is in these words: “For value received the undersigned hereby assign and transfers unto.......................................'.................................... shares of the capital stock of the Louisville Bridge & Iron Company, and do hereby constitute and appoint........................................................... true and lawful attorney irrevocable for and in name and behalf to make and execute all necessary acts of assignment and transfer required by the regulations and by-laws of said company.

“In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this 12th day of July, Í915. Nettie N. Staib. In presence of Alice Puddefoot.’’

Before the maturity of the note it was credited by $72.00, leaving a balance of $8,757.52 wholly unpaid at the date of maturity, November 13, 1915, on which day a note for that sum was executed by the husband to the plaintiff due sixty days thereafter.

Upon the day of the execution of the first note for $8,829.52, the husband executed a separate writing setting forth the collateral pledged as security, which was taken in addition to the mortgage, the stock as well as the first note being retained by the bank as collateral to the renewal note. After the latter became due, and being unpaid, this suit was brought against appellant and her husband for the purpose of obtaining a judgment against the latter for the amount of the debt, and to foreclose the mortgage lien upon the real property and a sale of the stock which had been- pledged as collateral to the note. The real estate was sold, but did not realize enough to pay the debt, and the wife is resisting the appropriation of the stock upon the ground that it was her property and that it could not be pledged as security for her husband’s debt except in the manner pointed out [120]*120by section 2127 of the Kentucky Statutes, which she insists was not complied, with in this case, and that her stock is not bound for any portion of the debt. Upon trial, the court below overruled the wife’s contention and entered judgment subjecting the stock to the payment of the balance of the debt, and to reverse that judgment she prosecutes this appeal.

The part of the statute applicable to the question raised reads: “No part of a married woman’s estate shall be subjected to the payment or satisfaction of any liability, upon a contract made after marriage, to answer for the debt, default or misdoing’ of another, including her husband, unless such estate shall have been set apart for that purpose by deed of mortgage or other conveyance. ’ ’

A most vigorous insistence is made that inasmuch as there is nothing in the signed endorsement to show the purpose which the wife had in view and intended'to accomplish thereby, the statute has not been complied with and there was consequently no lien created upon her stock. In other words, it is insisted that the intention of the statute and the purpose which the legislature had in view was to require, before a married woman’s property could be pledged as security for the debt of . another, that she should both set it apart and express her purpose in doing so by some kind of writing; i. e., that both the setting apart and the purpose must.be shown by written proof, and neither of them can be established by parol proof. Counsel for plaintiff insists that all the statute requires is that the setting apart by the wife shall be evidenced by writing, and the purpose for which such setting apart was made is capable of being established by parol proof. An additional insistence by plaintiff’s counsel is that if he is mistaken in his interpretation of the statute the judgment is correct, because the wife constituted her husband her agent to .carry out the purpose of her endorsing the stock, which he did in the writing he executed in pledging the stock as collateral to the note. In support of appellant’s contention we are referred to the following cases from this court. Wirgman v. Miller, 98 Ky. 620; New York Life Insurance Co. v. Miller, 56 S. W. R. 975; Hart v. Bank of Russellville, 127 Ky. 424; Swearingen’s Ex’r v. Tyler, 132 Ky. 453, and Third National Bank v. Tierney, 128 [121]*121Ky. 836; but an examination of those cases does not convince us of their relevancy to the facts of this case.

The' principal question dealt with by them is whether the debts involved were those of the wife-as principal, or -whether she had attempted to become liable only as surety for her husband or another. It is recognized in all of them that the wife can not become personally liable as surety on a note, even that of her husband, and that to reach her property for the debt of her husband or another she must have set it apart for that purpose in the manner required by the statute. So that when we analyze those eases, we find nothing’, as we view them, to assist us in the determination of the question here presented, which is the proper interpretation of the clause “unless such estate shall.have been set apart for that purpose by deed of mortgage or other conveyance,” found in the statute.

The effect of the statute which was enacted by the legislature in 1894 was to enlarge the rights and powers of a married woman concerning her property, both real and personal, and to curtail the rights of the husband therein which had theretofore existed by virtue of the marital-relation. But, as we understand, there was no substantial change made concerning the power of the wife to subject or place in lien her property for the debt of another. It was evidently the purpose of the legislature in the enactment of the law to provide that there should be no appropriation (setting apart) of a married woman’s property to the payment of another’s debt wThere the fact of appropriation by her rested only in parol proof; but on the contrary that such appropriation (setting apart) must be done and evidenced by some kind of solemn act of no less dignity than a writing suitable for the purpose of creating such “setting apart.” When the transaction furnishes such written proof of the “setting apart,” it would seem that the purpose of the ' statute was accomplished without the additional requirement (which appellant insists upon) that the reason or purpose

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Bluebook (online)
200 S.W. 322, 179 Ky. 118, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staib-v-german-insurance-bank-kyctapp-1918.