Wells v. Stout

9 Cal. 479
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 9 Cal. 479 (Wells v. Stout) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells v. Stout, 9 Cal. 479 (Cal. 1858).

Opinion

Field, J., after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the Court—Terry, C. J., and Burnett, J., concurring.

To the judgment, the appellants urge various objections : first, the impolicy of upholding voluntary separations between husband and wife; second, the illegality of the contract under the civil law; third, the invalidity of the trust for want of acceptance by the trustee; fourth, title in the defendants, or those under whom they hold by virtue of the sale and judgment of April, 1850; fifth, want of registration of the deed, and consequent absence of notice to the purchasers under the sheriff's sale; and sixth, subsequent reconciliation and cohabitation between the husband and wife.

It is admitted by the counsel of the appellants that deeds of separation between husband and wife have been upheld by the Courts of Chancery in England, but it is insisted that this has been done with expressions of regret by the later Judges that they have felt themselves bound by previous adjudications, as otherwise they would not have hesitated to pronounce such agreements void as against the policy of the law. Our attention is particularly called to the observations of Lord Eldon, in the celebrated case of Lord St. John v. Lady St. John. (11 Vesey, 526.) In that case Lord Eldon doubted whether such agreements could be the foundation of cither action or specific performance, and said: That doubt has long had place in my mind. If this were res integra, untouched by dictum or decision, I would not have permitted such a covenant to be the foundation of an action, or a suit in this Court. But if dicta have followed dicta, or decision has followed decision, to the extent of settling the law, I cannot, upon any doubt of mine as to what ought originally to have been the decision, shake what is the settled law upon the subject.” The same opinion was reiterated by the Chancellor several years afterwards, in the case of The Earl of Westmeath v. The Countess of Westmeath. Previous to the decision in Lord St. John v. Lady St. John, agreements of this kind, made through the intervention of a trustee, were upheld in a great variety of cases, and notwithstanding the observations of Eldon, the law seems to have undergone no change. Indeed, it is settled by an unbroken series of decisions, from Seeling v. Crawley, decided by the Master of the Bolls in 1700, (2 Tern on, 385,) to Wilson v. Wilson, decided by the Vice-Chancellor in 1845, (14 Simons, 405,) that agreements of this nature are valid, and not liable to the objection that they are against sound principles of policy.

Those who feel an interest in the investigation of the subject will find a citation of the English authorities in the opinion of [493]*493the Vice-Chancellor in Wilson v. Wilson, and will find it difficult, after their examination, to dissent from his judgment “that the matter is concluded by authority.”

And the law in the United States is equally well settled as in England, as will appear by reference to some of the principal cases in which the question has arisen. In Carson v. Murray, (3 Paige, 483,) Chancellor Walworth said:

It has, however, long since become the settled law in England, that a valid agreement for an immediate separation between a husband and wife, and for a separate allowance for her support, may be made through the medium of a trustee; and, as-, many of the decisions which have gone the greatest length on this subject took place previous to the Revolution, they have been recognized here as settling the law in this State (Hew York) to the same extent.”

In Nichols v. Palmer, (5 Day, 47,) the Supreme Court of Connecticut held such agreements valid, and Smith, J., in his opinion in the case, said: “ Contracts between the husband and some third person, for the separate maintenance of the wife, have the uniform sanction of the Courts, in England, from the earliest period of their jurisprudence, and is a part of the ancient common law. In this coxintiy, it is believed, that our ancestors have been in the habit of making similar arrangements, from the first settlement of the country; and many exist at this time, in various parts of the State, which have been made in pursuance of this usage. Such being the common law of England at the time our ancestor’s emigrated from that country, and such having been the usage in this country ever since, it ought now to be binding on our Courts as the common law of the land.”

In Hutton v. Day, (3 Barr, Penn., 100,) the article of agreement was entered into without the intoi’vention of a trustee, and the wife, after the death of her husband, sought to invalidate it, and recover the portion of his estate which she had relinquished by the ai’ticle; but the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania upheld the contract as having been consummated, and in its opinioxx, said:

“ Deeds for the separation of husband and wife are valid and effectual, both at law and in equity, provided their object be actual and immediate, and not a contingent or future separation. This distinction runs through all the cases, and, although the wisest Judges have frequeixtly assoi’ted that deeds of separation are at variance with the policy of the law, it is now too firmly settled to be shaken. The agreement here contemplates an immediate separation; it was carried into effect in good faith by the husband; has nothing unreasonable in it; and, consequently, the wife, after the death of the husband, is not entitled to the aid of the Court in any attempt to violate it.”

In Battle v. Wilson, (14 Ohio, 257,) the Supreme Ooxxrt of Ohio held that articles of separation, through the medium of a tx’ustee, [494]*494where the separation takes place, are not void, as against public policy.

In Chapman v. Gray, (8 Geo., 341,) the Supreme Court of Georgia, after an extended consideration of the English and American cases, sustained the validity of an agreement of separation. Mr. Justice Lumpkin, in delivering the opinion of the Court, expressed doubts as to the policy and morality of voluntary separations, but considered the law on the subject too well settled to be departed from.

In Reed v. Beazley, (1 Blackford, 97,) the Supreme Court of Indiana upheld the agreement, and to the objection that the contract was void, as against the policy of the law, said : “ that contracts of this nature are supported by a long train of English decisions; and we are satisfied that it comports with good policy to act in conformity with those decisions. How much soever we may regret the unhappy state of society that renders articles of this nature necessary, we see no reason to regret that such contracts, so far as they provide for the maintenance of the wife, are considered obligatory.”

From these authorities, and others to the same effect might be cited, it is clear that, by the settled law in the United States, such agreements are not invalid, because against sound principles of policy, and are upheld and enforced, when entered into through the intervention of a trustee, if followed by immediate separation, or, if separation has previously taken place.

The second objection urged upon our attention, is the illegality of the contract under the civil law. The deed was executed on the sixteenth of February, 1850.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Cal. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-stout-cal-1858.