Travis v. Sitz

135 Tenn. 156
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 135 Tenn. 156 (Travis v. Sitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travis v. Sitz, 135 Tenn. 156 (Tenn. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Neil

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The first question for determination is whether the following instrument created a separate estate in Laura Hudgins;

[163]*163“For the love and affection I have-for my daughter Laura Hudgins, I, James A. Hudgins, do hereby transfer and convey unto my said daughter Laura Hudgins, to take effect, and with the restrictions hereinafter, a tract of land situated in civil district No. 2, Franklin county, Tennessee. ... To have and to hold said tract of land to the said Laura Hudgins and her heirs, free from the debts, liabilities, or contracts of her husband if she should ever marry. ...
But this deed is not to take effect until the death of my wife, and my death, as the use of the place during my life, and the life of my wife, Elizabeth Hudgins, is herein and hereby expressly reserved. My clear intention is to give the said land to my daughter Laura Hudgins at the death of my wife and myself, without power of disposal in any way, and not to be liable to be sold for her debts, or the debts or liabilities of any husband she may have if she ever marries. This 4th day of October, 1879.”

We are of the opinion that a separate estate was created by the words:

“To have and to hold said tract of land to the said Laura Hudgins and her heirs, free from the debts, liabilities, or contracts of her husband if she should ever marry, . . . and not to be liable to be sold for . . . the debts or liabilities of any husband she may have if she ever marries. ’ ’

We have in this State no direct authority in any published case, but in the second volume of King’s Digest, p. 1275, section 68, there is a reference to an [164]*164unreported decision, Blackwell v. Blackwell, rendered at Brownsville in 1869, which seems to be authority on the point. In that case the conveyance contained the clause:

“None of the property shall ever be subject to the debts of the husband, and that the husband be permitted, during the joint lives of himself and wife, to use, control, work, manage, and direct all the said property as he may judge best, receiving and applying the earnings, proceeds, and profits to the joint use and benefit of himself and wife, for the support, maintenance, and education of the issues of the intended marriage, if any there be.”

It was held, according to Mr. Bang’s report of the case, that this language created a separate estate in the wife as to the corpus, and a joint estate as to the income and earnings.

In Grotenkemper v. Carver, 9 Lea (77 Tenn.), 280, the language of the ixistrument was :■

“To her sole and separate use, aixd to be held by her free from the debts, liabilities, and contracts of her present husband, William IT. Carver, or any future husband she may have.”

The court said that the words “to her sole and separate use” were sufficient to create a separate estate, and that the residue of the sentence, through being in accoxklance with an established legal usage, “was intended to make assurance doubly sure, by expressing the grantor’s object in a different form.” The same form, substantially, appears in Molloy v. Clapp, [165]*1652 Lea (70 Tenn.), 586, and Wood v. Polk, 12 Heisk. (59 Tenn.), 220; but these cases went off on other points.

The precise point, however, arose in Young v. Young, 56 N. C., 216, 219. The language there considered was, immediately following the bequest 'of a slave tp testator’s married daughter Anna Young:

“And not to be subject to any debt or debts which Jesse Young may contract, or may have contracted.”

The court said:

“Here is a plain and manifest intention on the part of the donor that the slave Mariah shall be for the sole and separate use of the wife and her children. The husband, Mr. Young, has no interest in the slave. ’ ’

To the same effect is Martin v. Bell, 9 Rich. Eq. (S. C.), 42, 70 Am. Dec., 200. The language there under examination was:

“The property, real or personal, that my three daughters (naming them) may or do receive by this my will, I hereby settle it on them and the lawful issue of their bodies forever, and I do declare that it shall in no wise be subject to the debts of their husbands, in no casé whatsoever.”

It was held the daughters took separate estates.

The matter for ascertainment in all cases of this nature is whether it was the intention of the settlér to exclude the husband. In addition to the words, to the “sole and separate use” of the wife, which are universally held to create a separate estate, the fol[166]*166lowing have in England been held sufficient evidence of the purpose, namely:

“For her livelihood,” Darley v. Darley, 3 Atk., 399; Cape v. Cape, 2 Y & C., 543; Lee v. Prideaux, 3 Bro. Chy., 383; “That she may receive and enjoy the profits,” Tyrrell v. Hope, 2 Atk., 558; “to be at her own disposal, Prichard v. Ames, T. & R., 222; Kirk v. Paulin, 7 Vin. Abr., 95; “to be by her laid out as she shall think fit.” Atcherly v. Vernon, 10 Mod., 531; “for her own use independant of the husband,” Wagstaff v. Smith, 9 Ves., 520; Dixon v. Olmius, 2 Cox, 414; Simmons v. Horwood, 1 Keen, 9; Tullett v. Armstrong, 1 Beav., 1; “not subject to his control,” Bain v. Lescher, 11 Sim., 397; '“to her own use and benefit independent of any other person,” Margetts v. Barringer, 7 Sim., 482; “to receive the rents while she lives, whether married or single,” Goulder v. Camm, De G., F. & J., 146; “her receipt to be a sufficient discharge,” Lee v. Prideaux, 3 Bro. Chy., 381, 382; Tyler v. Lake, 2 R. & M., 188; “ to be delivered to her on demand,” Dixon v. Olmius, 2 Cox, 414.

We have, in our Reports, many eases on the subject. The few which we cite will perhaps give a fair géneral view of our law, in respect of the matter, in its varied aspects. Powell v. Powell, 9 Humph. (28 Tenn.), 477; Barnum v. LeMaster, 110 Tenn., 638, 75 S. W., 1045, 69 L. R. A., 353; Williford v. Phelan, 120 Tenn., 589, 113 S. W., 365; Mitchell v. Bank, 126 Tenn., 669, 150 S. W. 1141; Hamilton v. Bishop, 8 Yerg. (16 Tenn.), 33, 29 Am. Dec., 101; Beauford v. Collier, 6 [167]*167Humph. (25 Tenn.), 487, 44 Am. Dec., 321; Loftus v. Penn, 1 Swan (31 Tenn.), 445; Gardenhire v. Hinds, 1 Head (38 Tenn.), 402; Pearson v. Davis, 1 Heisk. (48 Tenn.), 593; Eaves v. Gillespie, 1 Swan (31 Tenn.) 128; Woods v. Sullivan, 1 Swan, 507; Houston v. Embry, 1 Sneed (33 Tenn.), 480; Meredith v. Owen, 4 Sneed (36 Tenn.), 223.

It may he said of the language in the deed now before us that it is.

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Bluebook (online)
135 Tenn. 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travis-v-sitz-tenn-1915.