Warren v. Wagner

75 Ala. 188
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 75 Ala. 188 (Warren v. Wagner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren v. Wagner, 75 Ala. 188 (Ala. 1883).

Opinion

BBIOKELL, O. J.

A married woman, having a statutory-separate estate, is relieved of the disabilities of coverture by decree of the chancellor, rendered in pursuance of the statute (Code of 1876, § 2731). Subsequently, with the concurrence of her husband, manifested by his joining in the execution of the lease, she leases her lands for a term of years, taking notes payable to herself alone, for the installments of rent as they accrue according to the lease. Two questions are raised upon this state of facts: First, is the lease valid; secondly, can the wife in her own name maintain an action at law for the recovery of the rents as they fall due.

The effect of the statute, and of the decree of the chancellor rendered in conformity to it, has been of frequent consideration in this court; and, as is insisted by counsel for appellant. the statute has been regarded as- enabling the wife, as enlarging her capacity to contract, and her capacity to sue and be sued alone, only to the extent, and for the purposes specified. It has not been construed as conferring a capacity to contract generally; nor a capacity of suit, otherwise than as it may result from her contracts or engagements, entered into in the exercise of the right with which she is invested.—Dreyfus v. Wolffe, 65 Ala. 496 ; Holt v. Agnew, 67 Ala. 360 ; Ashford v. Watkins, 70 Ala. 156. The right or power with which she is invested, in the words of the statute, is, “ to buy, sell, hold, convey and mortgage real and personal property, and to sue and be sued as a feme sole.” Though the right or power to lease lands is not in express words conferred, a construction of the words sell and convey, which would not include it, would be exceedingly narrow and illiberal, rendering the statute an abridgment, rather than an enlargement of the power over her lands, which the wife, in conjunction with her husband, could exercise, either at the common law, or under the preexisting statutes, which disable the husband from taking title to her property of any kind, and confer upon her capacity to hold it as if she were a feme sole.

The common law, upon marriage, “ without the birth of issue, casts upon the husband an estate in all the wife’s real property in possession, whether of inheritance or of freehold for life, during the joint lives of himself and wife.” — 1 Bish. Mar. Women, § 529. The death of the wife, or the death of the husband terminated the estate. If there was issue born alive of the marriage, capable of inheriting the estate, the estate of the husband endured for his own life. Without the concurrence of the wife, the husband could bargain, sell and [198]*198convey bis estate in her lands; and the larger power included the less of leasing them, reserving the rents to himself alone. The term created by the lease could endure only during the continuance of his estate; for the principle of the common law was inflexible, “that no man could grant alease to continue beyond the period at which his own estate was to determine.” 4 Kent, 116. The wife was incapable of leasing her lands, and her lease, like her conveyance in fee, was void, not voidable, as was the lease of an infant; void, not only because the present interest was in the husband, but because coverture disabled her from binding her estate, or binding herself personally. In the absence of statutes authorizing a lease of the lands of the wife by husband and wife jointly, they could join in a lease, and, during the continuance of the estate of the husband, it’was valid and operative. Upon the expiration of his estate, the lease was voidable, not void f the wife surviving, or, in the event of her death her heirs, had the election to affirm or dis-affirm it; an acceptance of rent was an affirmance. — 1 Bish. Mar. Women, §§ 538-45. Statutes, expressed in general terms, empowering husband and wife to convey her lands, included the power of leasing them; and a lease, executed in the mode prescribed by the statutes, was binding upon the wife, or her heirs, after the death of the husband and the expiration of his estate. — 1 Bish. Mar. Women, § 549 ; Jackson v. Holloway, 7 Johns. 81; George v. Goldsby, 23 Ala. 326. In Jackson v. Holloway, supra, said Thompson, J.: “The wife may, during coverture, part with the whole, or any portion of her interest in real estate, if the deed be acknowledged in the mode prescribed by the statute, concerning the proof of deeds. The words of the act are general, extending to any estate of the feme covert.”

The statute creating and defining the separate estates of married women, and the provisions of the Constitution preserve to the wife the capacity of taking and' of holding property, notwithstanding coverture, and operate to deprive the husband of the right he had by the common law of taking and of holding property owned by her at the time of marriage, or to which she subsequently,became entitled. In very general terms, it is declared : “ The property of the wife, or any part thereof, may be sold by the husband and wife, and conveyed by them jointly, by instrument of writing, attested by two witnesses.” The acknowledgment of the conveyance before an officer authorized to take acknowledgments of conveyances, is the equivalent of an attestation by two witnesses. — Code of 1876, §§2707-08. The statute has not been construed as empowering husband and wife to mortgage the estate of the wife; for a power simply to sell and convey, does not include a power to mortgage, unless [199]*199there is “something added over and above, showing that the power of sale is not to be taken in its primary sense, but means a power to mortgage.”—Bloomer v. Waldron, 3 Hill, 361. It is not an absolute, unconditional sale, a sale outright, which is authorized ; a conditional sale is equally within the meaning of the statute.—Peeples v. Stolla, 57 Ala. 53. A lease is a sale and conveyance of a partial, qualified, limited interest in lands. It is defined as “ a species of conveyance for life, for years, or at the will of one of the parties, usually containing a reservation of rent to the lessor.” — Taylor’s Land, and Ten. 314. There can be no good reason assigned for compelling husband and wife to a sale, absolute or conditional, of the entire estate or interest, when a lease for a term, conveying a limited interest, the reversion remaining in the wife, would be more beneficia,! to them. The lease for a term that may possibly endure beyond the life of husband and wife, may be necessary to preserve the estate from waste, or to make it a source of income. The estate, as is the fact in reference to the premises, the subject of present lease, may be fitted and adapted to uses requiring an outlay of capital, or skill and experience to manage and operate them profitably. Neither husband nor wife may have the skill and experience, or they may not have the capital, or, if they have it, may be unwilling to appropriate it to these uses. The interests of the wife, the preservation of her real estate, will often be best promoted b} leasing it, rather than by sale, converting it into some other species of property. AÍ1 principles of just construction require that the general words of the statute, authorizing a sale and conveyance of the wife’s statutory estate, should be interpreted as comprehending a lease, which is a sale and conveyance of a qualified, partial interest, in contradistinction of a sale and conveyance of the entire estate.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Ala. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-wagner-ala-1883.