Townsend v. Brown

16 S.C. 91, 1881 S.C. LEXIS 135
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 3, 1881
DocketCASE No. 1094
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 S.C. 91 (Townsend v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Townsend v. Brown, 16 S.C. 91, 1881 S.C. LEXIS 135 (S.C. 1881).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

McIver, A. J.

On the 4th of October, 1872, J. Allen Duncan made a quit-claim deed to respondent, Simon Brown, for a certain tract of land, which deed concluded as follows: In testimony whereof, I, the said J. Allen Duncan, and my wife, Madeline M. Duncan, in token of her renunciation and release of all right of dower in the premises, hereunto set our hands and seals, the day and year hereunto written, to wit, 4th October, 1872.” The deed was signed and sealed, and purports to have been delivered by Mr. and Mrs. Duncan in the presence of two witnesses, and was duly proved and recorded. After the death of J. Allen Duncan, his widow, the said Madeline M. Duncan, set up a claim for dower in the premises described in the deed. The Circuit judge held that under the provisions of the constitution of 1868, the execution of the deed by Mrs. Duncan was effectual to bar her of her dower, and from his judgment this appeal has been taken. So that the only question raised here is whether Mrs. Duncan is barred of her dower by reason of having executed the above-mentioned deed.

It is conceded that prior to the adoption of the present constitution the appellant would not have been barred of her dower, and the inquiry, therefore, is whether there is anything in the constitution of 1868, or any act passed in pursuance of its provisions, which will render the execution of said deed effectual to bar her of her dower. The portion of the constitution relied on for the purpose is Section 8, Article XIV., which is in the following words: “ The real and personal property of a woman, held at the time of her marriage, or that which she may thereafter acquire, either by gift, grant, inheritance, devise or otherwise, shall not be subject to levy and sale for her husband’s debts, but shall be held as her separate property, and may be bequeathed, devised or alienated by her the same as if she were unmarried; provided, that no gift or grant from the husband to the wife shall be detrimental to the just claims of his creditors.”

[96]*96The leading object of the section just quoted appears to have been to relieve the property of the wife from liability for the husband’s debts, and to release it from any control by the husband; for the first provision is to exempt the wife’s property from levy and sale for the debts of the husband, and the second is to authorize the wife to dispose of her property without, or even against, the consent of the husband. The real purpose, therefore, does not appear to have been to confer any new powers upon a married woman by changing her legal status, but simply to protect her property from liability for her husband’s debts, and to release it even from the partial control of the husband by dispensing with the necessity which had previously existed of obtaining his assent and concurrence before her property could be disposed of. These seem to have been the sole purposes of the clause in question, and as they can be fully accomplished without, in any manner, affecting any of the other relations between husband and wife growing out of marriage, we think we are bound to confine the operation of this clause of the constitution to its declared and manifest objects. If it be so confined, then, it is obvious that the clause in no way applies to the wife’s right of dower — -a right which the law has always regarded as an object of watchful solicitude and jealous care — for it is not, and could not, in any way be made liable for the husband’s debts, nor could it in any way be made subject to the marital rights of the husband,- and thus render necessary his assent to and concurrence in any disposition of it. We think it clear, therefore, that the above-mentioned section of the constitution was never designed to apply to the wife’s right of. dower, and that it cannot have the effect of rendering valid, as a renunciation of dower, the deed of October 4th, 1872.

But even if it should be conceded that the object and effect of this clause of the constitution was to make a married woman sui juris in all respects, we see no reason why the legislature might not require a privy examination of the wife as evidence of the fact that she had really signed the deed, just as it might require the deed of a corporation or a partnership to be executed with certain particular formalities, as the only conclu[97]*97sive evidence of the fact that such deed was, in fact, the deed of the corporation or partnership.

It is contended, however, that if the constitution does not render the conveyance effectual as a renunciation of dower, the act of January 27th, 1870, (14 Stat. 325, incorporated in the Gen. Stat, Chap. G., p. 482,) does.

Without stopping now to consider whether this act, in so far as it purports to go beyond the constitution and confer upon married women other powers than those specially provided for in that instrument, can be regarded as constitutional— a question which has been made the subject of grave argument in another case now before us

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Related

Ex Parte Clark
126 S.E. 137 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.C. 91, 1881 S.C. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townsend-v-brown-sc-1881.