Vanderheyden v. Mallory & Hunter

1 N.Y. 452
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 N.Y. 452 (Vanderheyden v. Mallory & Hunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vanderheyden v. Mallory & Hunter, 1 N.Y. 452 (N.Y. 1848).

Opinion

*462 Jewett, Ch. J.

By the common law a married woman is disabled from disposing of either real or personal estate during the marriage, with the exception of the former by fine, and, by our law, by any legal conveyance executed under a due examination ; and of the latter with the privity and concurrence of her husband. That being the legal'rule, a married woman cannot, at law, bind herself personally by any contract in re gard to her separate property. In conformity with this principle courts of equity hold that her general personal engagements will not affect her separate propérty. And to this extent courts of law and equity act in concert. But as a consequence of the principle established that a married woman may take and enjoy property to her separate use, courts of equity enable her to deal with it as a feme sole. The right of disposition or appointment is an incident belonging to such interest and power. She may sell, pledge, or incumber her separate estate when she shows an intention so to dispose of it, in the same manner as if she -were a feme sole, unless specially restrained by the instrument under which she acquires it; and every security thereon executed by her is to be deemed an appointment pro tanto of the separate estate. (Hulme v. Tenant, 1 Brown's Ch. 16 ; Fetteplace v. Gorges, 1 Ves. jr. 46 ; 2 Story’s Eq. Jur. §§ 1392, 1399; Jaques v. The Methodist Epis. Church, 17 John. R. 549; Gardner v. Gardner, 22 Wend. R. 526.)

The great difficulty is, to ascertain what circumstances, in the absence of any positive expression of- an intention to charge her separate estate, shall be deemed sufficient to create such a charge, and what sufficient to create only a general' debt. But it is agreed, that there must be an intention to do so, otherwise the debt will not affect her separate estate.

The fact that the debt has been contracted by a woman during her coverture, either as a principal or as a surety, for herself, or for her husband, or jointly with him, seems ordinarily o be held prima facie evidence to charge her separate estate *463 without any proof of a positive agreement or intention so to do. (3 Story’s Eq. Jur. § 1400.)

The doctrine of appointment or appropriation in equity, however, relates wholly to engagements made or debts contracted by a.married woman, as such, having a-separate estate, and in reference to it. It has no application to debts contracted or engagements entered into by a feme sole.

The bill contains no allegation that Mrs. 'Vanderheyden, after her marriage with her present husband, did any act or made any engagement with or promise to the complainants in reference to their debt against her or in reference to her separate estate, other than, it is alleged, that soon after the intermarriage of the defendants and at several different periods subse quently, one of the complainants made application to them, urging them to make some arrangement by which the appli cation of the debt due to the complainants from said Lenchy would be made oil the debt which they owed the estate of Bradt in the hands of his executor, and that they, until about the month of February, 1843, constantly upon every request so made, evinced a desire to have an arrangement made with the executor of Bradt by which such application would be made, and that they agreed that such an arrangement should be made. This is all that the bill contains of acts charged upon Mrs. Vanderheyden since she has been a married woman, to sustain a claim of an appointment in equity by her for the payment of the complainants’ debt out of her separate estate ; and this, it seems to me, falls far short'of bringing the claim within any principle heretofore established in equity. Even if Mrs. Vanderheyden had contracted the debt subsequently to her marriage with Vanderheyden, the facts charged expressly negative the idea that she. intended to pay, or that the complainants expected to be paid, their debt, out of what is now denominated her separate estate. The allegation in that respect is, that there was a large amount due to her from, and that she had a claim upon, the estate of her late husband, Bradt, out of which she agreed to make an arrangement with nis executor to enable the complainants to have applied upon *464 the debt which they owed Bradt in the hands of his executor, the amount of the debt which she had contracted and should contract with the complainants, and that the complainants knowing that she was thus entitled and would have abundant means therefrom to pay any debt she might contract with them, credited her. It is nowhere alleged that any part of the amount to which Mrs. Vanderheyden was entitled from the estate of her former husband, out of which she promised to pay, and out of which the complainants expected to be paid in the manner stated, has ever come to her hands. For any thing appearing in the bill, the same remains in the hands, of Bradt’s executor, or has been collected and received by Vanderheyden, or if not, has passed to the assignee in his proceedings in bank ruptcy. The thirty-five shares of bank stock was owned and held by her from 1833 to July, 1842, when it was formally transferred to her for her separate use. The residue of the stock which is now held by her in that character did not come from the estate of her former husband. It is a part of her share bequeathed to her by her father. And although it is alleged that Mrs. Vanderheyden now holds in her own right and name a large amount of other property, it is not averred that it was all or any portion of her share in, or claim upon, her former husband’s estate, in the hands of his executor, at the time of the accruing of her indebtedness to the complainants, in refer ence to which exclusively, she when sole, and she and her present husband since their intermarriage, it is alleged, so agreed to make an arrangement respecting the payment of the complainants’ debt. Therefore I see no ground stated in the Dill, which would authorize a court of equity to subject the separate property of Mrs. Vanderheyden to the payment of the complainants’ debt against her. There is nothing which gives countenance to the idea, that she ever, either before or since her marriage, made any contract with the complainants indicating any intention to affect, by it the property which she now holds to her separate use; but on the contrary,, the bill expressly negatives such intention. The whole dealing and contract, as well orior as subsequent to her marriage, referred to other and dif *465 ferent property as the means of paying the debt contracted by her.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.Y. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanderheyden-v-mallory-hunter-ny-1848.