Wilkinson v. Cheatham

45 Ala. 337
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 45 Ala. 337 (Wilkinson v. Cheatham) 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
Wilkinson v. Cheatham, 45 Ala. 337 (Ala. 1871).

Opinion

PETERS, J.

This is a bill filed by a married woman, by ber next friend, against her husband and her and bis mortgagee and tbe assignee of such mortgagee, to enjoin a sale of ber statutory separate estate, mortgaged by ber and her busband to secure tbe payment of a debt purporting to be contracted by the wife for a loan of two thousand dollars to ber after her marriage. The sale was enjoined by the chancellor below, and the defendants in that court bring tbe case here by appeal, and assign the chancellor’s decree for error.

No notice is taken, in this opinion, of the common law [339]*339and equity powers of a married woman to make contracts in reference to her separate estate at common law ; because it is presumed that the law governing such estates has nothing to do with this estate, which is strictly a statutory estate, such as was unknown at common law, and it is to be governed solely by the statute creating and regulating it.

The correctness of the chancellor’s decree, in this case, depends upon the construction of the law of Alabama governing “ the separate estate of the wife.” — Revised Code, §§ 2370 to 2388, both inclusive. This important statute was not intended to operate upon the contract of marriage, but to place the wife’s estate upon a basis hitherto unknown to our jurisprudence. It was intended to enlarge the powers over it after her marriage, to a certain limit, and to restrain and circumscribe the powers of the husband for her protection; for, had she been able to protect herself, there would have been no necessity for such a law. The statute was not intended so to operate upon her as to make her a feme sole, or a “ free dealer,” and to enable her to do business on her own account, as if she had never been married. But so far as her property is concerned, it was intended to modify her marital powers over it in connection with her husband; and it defines alike her control over it during her coverture, and her power over it after the marriage has terminated, and also the light of her husband as her trustee. This creates a peculiar statutory estate, to be held, controlled, and conveyed in the manner and for the purposes the statute has directed. It is not a law modifying the common law rights of the wife, as wife, but it is a new rule which wholly displaces the common law in reference to her title to her estate and her power to dispose of it. It is a trust estate in the hands of her husband, “ as her trustee,” for her use, to be held and disposed of as the statute prescribes. Separated from her estate, the wife is still a married woman, under all the disabilities of coverture, save so far as these disabilities are modified by the statute. But, connected with her estate, her powers over it are only such as the statute bestows. As a trust estate, the husband may be aided by the extra[340]*340ordinary powers of a court of chancery to direct him in its management, or the wife in its protection, under such exigencies as may require such an interference. But neither the husband, nor the wife, nor both together, without the aid of a court of chancery, can deal with the estate thus created, otherwise than the law of its creation may permit. The coverture of the wife merges her capacity to make contracts generally in the husband, except in such cases as the statute enables her to deal with her own property. —2 Story Eq. §§ 1370, 1367; Cannel v. Buckle, 2 P. Williams, 243, 244; 1 Bla. Com. 442, 443. She cannot deal by contract with her husband, nor with others, except to the extent and in the manner prescribed by the statute. She may receive property, but she cannot sell it, except in the way and for the purpose prescribed by law.— Goree v. Walthall, Adm'r, January Term, 1870; Revised Code, §§ 2371, 2384. In the case of Bibb v. Pope, 43 Ala. 190, it is said, “ The sale that the wife and her husband are permitted to make without the aid of chancery, is only such a sale as is mentioned in the act; that is, a sale for the purpose of re-investing the proceeds in other property, which is also the separate estate of the wife, or for the support of the family.” — p. 200. To this it may be added, that they may sell it to pay the wife’s debts contracted before marriage ; (Rev. Code, § 2370;) or the proceeds to be used by the husband in such manner as is most beneficial for the wife. — Rev. Code, § 2374. The wife may also dispose of her statutory separate estate by will, but she has not the powers of a feme sole over it, until the husband has been removed by decree of the chancellor, on a proceeding for that purpose in a court of equity. — Rev. Code, §§ 2378, 2384. Undoubtedly, a court of chancery will aid the husband and the wife in the proper administration of her statutory separate estate. Under our system a married woman is, in a great degree, a ward of chancery, and her estate is a trust estate. In such a case, courts of equity have a peculiar jurisdiction over her and her estate, which will always be exercised for her protection and the preservation of her estate. — 2 Story Eq. §§ 1327, 1366, 960, 961; [341]*341Revised Code, § 2372; Marsh v. Marsh, Adm’r, et al., 43 Ala. 677.

The statute does not make the wife a trader in general, with powers to enter into all kinds of contracts touching her separate estate, and to bind herself as a feme sole. Without a statutory separate estate, she would be under all her common law disabilities, as to making contracts of any kind; so that her power to make contracts at all, grows out of her connection with her separate estate. When this is gone, her power to make contracts is gone also. Then, her statutory separate estate being the creature of the statute, her powers over it are also derived from the statute. These are, — the power to pay her debts contracted before marriage, the power to sell it for re-investment or to be used by the husband for her benefit; the' power to subject it to the burden of the support of her family; the power to dispose of it by her will; and the power to resume the absolute control of it, as a feme sole, on the removal of her husband as her trustee, by decree of the chancellor on a proceeding for that purpose, in a court of Equity. — Rev. Code, §§ 2370, 2373, 2374, 2376, 2378, 2383, 2384. Here the statutory powers of the wife end; and over such an estate she has no others. Her estate is wholly statutory and her powers^over it are wholly statutory. If she needs more she must resort to a court of chancery. And these powers, thus given to her by the statute, are, wisely, all that are needed, and possibly, all that can be wisely bestowed upon her, unless the legislature shall abandon all idea of her protection, and the preservation of her estate. And it is not this that the legislature has been seeking to accomplish. Under the powerful control of the husband, the wife can hardly be said to be free. Swayed by the subtle influence of love and fear, she has nothing that she ¿would willingly deny him. Knowing this, a wise and humane legislation has attempted to provide against its often fatal effects upon her estate. It has restrained both the husband and wife to limited and well marked powers over her estate, so that neither he nor she shall waste it. She cannot therefore go into the market as a trader; she cannot make contracts, save as the statute [342]*342permits. For, personally, as a married woman, she has no such power to make contracts, except as this power is an incident belonging to her separate estate, and as it is given by express statutory grant in connection with her estate.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Ala. 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkinson-v-cheatham-ala-1871.