Wadkins v. Watson

22 L.R.A. 779, 24 S.W. 385, 86 Tex. 194, 1893 Tex. LEXIS 269
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1893
DocketNo. 54.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 22 L.R.A. 779 (Wadkins v. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wadkins v. Watson, 22 L.R.A. 779, 24 S.W. 385, 86 Tex. 194, 1893 Tex. LEXIS 269 (Tex. 1893).

Opinion

STAYTON, Chief Justice.

Mrs. Lillias Wadkins, joined by her husband, executed, with all the formalities necessary to the conveyance of her separate estate, a deed, the material parts of which were as follows:

“ Know all men by these presents, that we, Andrew Jackson Wadkins and Lillias Wadkins, wife of said Andrew Jackson Wadkins, and also heir at law and daughter of William Stoneham, deceased, and his wife, Eliza Stoneham, for and in consideration of $250 paid us by Amos Morrill, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, have granted, bargained, sold, and released, and by these presents do grant, bargain, sell, and release unto the said Amos Morrill a certain tract or parcel of land situated in Grayson County, Texas, patented to Robert Nall [here follows a complete and particular description of the entire tract of land, the title to one-half of which is in controversy, by metes and bounds], containing 1136$ *197 acres of land; to have and to hold the said land, together with all and singular the appurtenances, rights, members, and hereditaments to the same belonging or in anywise incident or pertaining, unto said Amos Morrill, his heirs and assigns forever.” .

This deed was signed by Lillias and her husband, both making their marks.

On this deed a Court of Civil Appeals certifies the following questions:

“1. Where a married woman owned, as her separate estate, an undivided one-half interest in a tract of land (her brother owning the other half), and such married woman, joined by her husband, conveyed the whole estate by such a deed as is described above, would an after-acquired title to the other half, by inheritance from her brother, pass by such a deed to the grantee named therein P

11 2. Would a married woman be estopped by such a deed from asserting her after-acquired title ?”

The transaction in question occurred in 1856, and in order to determine. the powers and incapacities of married women, we must look to the common law and to the statutes in force at that time.

Under the common law, women under coverture had not capacity to convey their lands by deed, or to make other contracts.

Since the Act of January 26, 1840, the common law, so far as not inconsistent with the several constitutions and statutes of this State, has been in force. Pasch. Dig., art. 978; Rev. Stats., art. 3128.

There are but few statutes bearing on the question of capacity or incapacity of married women to contract, and they will be briefly noticed.

, Under the Act of March 13, 1848, married women were empowered to contract debts for necessaries furnished to themselves or children, and for the benefit of their separate property. Pasch. Dig., art. 4643.

That statute, changed somewhat in phraseology, was carried into the Revised Statutes. Art. 2854.

These statutes, however, have application only to the power of married women to contract debts, and this is carefully restricted to the purposes enumerated, and can have no bearing on the questions under consideration, further than that they show the unwillingness of the Legislature since their enactment further to remove incapacities of women under coverture to contract debts or incur personal obligations absolute, further than may be necessary for maintenance of themselves and children and the preservation and improvement of their separate property.

Recognizing the fact that married women have no power to execute such bonds as the law requires of persons holding certain trust relations to property, the Legislature has enacted laws which empower them, when appointed executors, administrators, or guardians, to execute such bonds as the law requires of persons holding such positions.

The statute provides, that charters of private corporations, incorpo *198 rated for support of any benevolent, charitable, educational, or missionary undertaking, or the support of any literary undertaking, th,e maintenance of a library, or the promotion of painting, music, or other fine arts, may be subscribed by married .women, and that they may become stockholders, officers, and directors thereof, “ and that their acts, contracts, and deeds shall be as binding and effective for all purposes of said corporation as if they were males; "and the joinder and consent of their husbands, and privy examinations separate and apart from them, shall not be required.” Sayles’ Civ. Stats., art. 568.

There is nothing in any of these statutes evidencing an intention to empower married women to make any contracts whatever, except such as statutes expressly or by necessary implication give them power to make; but throughout they recognize the necessity for legislation to authorize them to contract at all.

The Act of April 30, 1846, prescribes the acts necessary to be done to convey any estate or interest in lands or other property the separate estate of married women. Pasch. Dig., art. 1003.

That was an enabling act, as was the Act of February 3, 1841, and from its passage until the present time has prescribed the only mode in which married women can convey their separate property in lands.

It was enacted, as shown by the language used as well as by its title, for the purpose of enabling married women to convey their separate propT erty, as well as for the purpose of “ defining the mode of conveying property in which the wife has an interest,” and not for the purpose of enabling them to or of defining a mode by which they might convey directly or by operation of covenants expressed or to be implied, something which at some future time might become the separate property of women under coverture.

The statute, by bompliance with its requirements, empowered married women to convey “any estate or interest in any land, slave or slaves, or other effects, the separate property of the wife.”

The use of the words “ the separate property of the wife ” restricts the operation of the act, and necessarily implies that the relation of the wife to the property must be such at the time the conveyance is made as to render it her separate estate; for it is that alone which the statute empowers her thus to convey. The same manner of conveyance was required by the same statute when the purpose was to convey homestead or other exempt property.

If there could be any doubt as to the true construction of the act, so far as considered, this would be removed by that part which declares what the effect of a deed executed in accordance with its requirements shall be. I

After declaring the acts essential to be done by the husband and wife, and by the officer taking the married woman’s acknowledgment, the stat *199 ute declares, that “ such deed or conveyance, so certified, shall pass all the right, title, and interest which the husband and wife, or either of them, may have in or to the property therein conveyed.”

May have in or to the property at what time ? Certainly at the time the conveyance is made, and not such as they or either of them may subsequently acquire.

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Bluebook (online)
22 L.R.A. 779, 24 S.W. 385, 86 Tex. 194, 1893 Tex. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wadkins-v-watson-tex-1893.