[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 159 By section 1387 of the Code Napoleon, the law in reference to the conjugal relation is prescribed in default *Page 160 of special agreement; and by section 1393, in default of special stipulations, the law of community prevails. By sections 1401 and 1402, the community consists of such movable property as fall to either party during the marriage by any title whatever, and all immovables acquired during marriage. By section 1404, the immovables which fall to them during marriage by title of succession do not enter into the community. Section 1433 provides that if an immovable belonging to one party be sold and the price paid into the community, there is ground for the deduction of the price so paid in from the community for the benefit of the party who was proprietor of the immovable sold. Section 1436 declares that recompense for the price of an immovable belonging to the wife is claimable by her out of the property of the husband, in case of the insufficiency of the goods of the community. By section 1470, on the dissolution of the community, from the mass, each one deducts the price of immovables which have been alienated during the community, and for which compensation has not been made. By section 1471, the shares of the wife take precedence of the husband, and by section 1472 the wife is entitled, in case of insufficiency in the community, to exercise her claims out of the property of the husband. Section 1441 declares that the death of either of the parties works a dissolution of the community, and by section 1453 after the dissolution, the wife has the power to accept or renounce it. By section 1493, the wife who renounces has a right to receive the price of the immovables alienated, for which compensation has not been made to her. And by section 1495, she may exercise all actions and previous demands as well against the goods of the community as against the personal goods of her husband.
From this examination of the French law it follows that the property of this plaintiff which came to her during marriage, by succession from her mother, being immovable, still belongs to her: that she could alienate it, as she did, with her husband's consent: that he had the management of it, *Page 161 and had a right to retain the avails of the sale, and keep them during the existence of the community, and had a right to the enjoyment of its emoluments; and that on his death, he having received the price of its alienation, she had a valid claim for that price, first to be paid out of the property of the community, and that failing, out of the property of the husband, and that her claim was entitled to priority of payment.
Such would have been the rights of the parties, if both had continued to reside in France.
Are these rights changed by the circumstance of the husband coming to this country and dying here?
That the price of the wife's immovables thus sold and realized by the husband, constituted a valid debt against him by the laws of France, where this marriage took place, admits of no doubt. Is the debt discharged by the husband's coming to this country?
The rule laid down by Parsons on Contracts (2 Pars., 110), would seem to answer this suggestion. He says: "It is the general rule, both in England and in this country, that the incidents of marriage and contracts in relation to marriage, as settlement of property and the like, are to be construed by the law of the place where these were made; for any different construction cannot be supposed to carry into effect the intentions and agreements of the parties, or to deal with them justly."
Many cases are cited to sustain the text, and among others, those in our own state, of Decouche v. Savetier, 3 John. Ch., 190; Crosby v. Berger, 3 Ed. Ch., 538, and De Barante v.Gott, 6 Barb., 492. These cases hold that where there is an express contract between the parties, that contract will be enforced, and the rights acquired under it maintained and upheld, though there be a change of domicil. Rights dependent on the nuptial contract are governed by the lex loci contractus. There would be no difficulty in this case, therefore, in sustaining the rights and claims of the plaintiff, if the provisions of the Code Napoleon had been embraced in an express contract. Some foreign jurists hold that the law of matrimonial domicil attaches all the rights and incidents of marriage to it proprio *Page 162 vigore, and independent of any supposed consent of the parties. (1 Boullenois Obser., 29, pp. 741, 750, 757, 758; Huberus, Lib. 1, tit. 3, De Confl. Leg., § 9.)
Others hold that there is in such cases an implied consent of the parties to adopt the law of the matrimonial domicil by way of tacit contract, and then the same rule applies as in cases of express nuptial contracts. Dumoulin was the author, or at least the most distinguished advocate, of this doctrine. (Story on Conflict of Laws, § 147.) This rule has also been adopted by Bouhier, Hertius, Pothier, Merlin, and other distinguished jurists. (Id., § 148.)
Story, after reviewing the opinions of jurists and the decisions having a bearing upon the question, sums up the whole by saying, in section 159, that perhaps the most simple and satisfactory exposition of the subject, or at least that which best harmonizes with the analogies of the common law is, that in the case of a marriage, where there is no special nuptial contract, and there has been no change of domicil, the law of the place of celebration of the marriage ought to govern the rights of the parties in respect to all personal or movable property, whenever acquired or wherever situate; but that real or immovable property ought to be left to be judged by the lex reisitæ, as not within the reach of any extra-territorial law. When there is any special nuptial contract between the parties, that will furnish a rule for the case, and, as a matter of contract, ought to be carried into effect everywhere, under the general limitations belonging to all classes of contracts.
In this case a new element is introduced by the removal of the husband from France, and consequently a change of his domicil.
In section 161, Story quotes from Bouhier, who lays down the rule in general terms that in relation to the beneficial and pecuniary rights (les droits utiles et pecuniaries) of the wife, which result from the matrimonial contract, either express or tacit, the husband has no power by a change of domicil to alter or change them, according to the rule nemo potest mutareconsilium suum in alterius injuriam, and he insists that this *Page 163 is the opinion of jurists generally. To the same effect that the change of domicil by the husband shall not deprive the wife of any separate interests or separate rights she may have, is the case of Harteau v. Harteau (14 Pick., 181).
And this rule is a reasonable and proper one. As a general rule, the domicil of the wife follows that of the husband and there is much force in the argument, that in the absence of an express agreement defining the matrimonial rights, the law of the contemplated or any future domicil should govern. But in the case now under consideration, the domicil of the wife has not been changed, and the rights she acquired by the tacit contract made in the matrimonial domicil are not, we think, lost or impaired by the change of the domicil of the husband. Those rights did not mature until the death of the husband. They were postponed till the happening of this event, and then by the law of the matrimonial domicil, by virtue of the tacit contract made between the parties, the right of the wife to a return of all her individual property received by the husband, revives and can be enforced.
We see no reasons of public policy, why rights thus secured should not be recognized or enforced, equally as those arising from an express contract.
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
COMSTOCK, Ch. J., DENIO, HOYT and JAMES, JS., concurred.