Polhill v. Neal

McCay, Judge.

The only precise point of the objection made to the children of Mrs. Polhill becoming parties to this bill is, as we understand it, as follows: In the petition of Mrs. Polhill, filed during her lifetime, by her next friend, there is, 1st. No express statement that she claims her wife’s equity. 2d. There is no allegation of the facts necessary to enable the Court to judge whether she ought to have any settlement, and how much. 3d. That she does not in that petition include her children. For these reasons it is said that, as she has not in her lifetime asserted any equity for her children, they are not now entitled, since they can only come in as survivors, to an assertion of right made by her for them during her lifetime: 6 Beavan, 344. We do not assent to the positions from which this inference is drawn. In the first place, this debt of Mr. Cochran to his daughters,is a trust debt; the fund, too, out of which it can alone be paid is in the custody of a Court of chancery. The husband or his creditors, who seek, to get it have come into equity to assert the marital rights of the husband. In such cases, a Court of equity will, without a petition, impose terms upon the husband, and will not lend him its aid until he himself offers to make a settlement, or affirmatively shows the wife’s assent to his reduction of the equitable claim in action to his possession: 2 Vesey, Sr., 669, *149672; Brown vs. Elton, 3 Peere W., 204; Blount vs. Bestland, 2 Vesey, Jr., 515. See also, Elliot vs. Cordell, 5 Madd. 156.

Again, Polliill, the husband, was already a party, and the very object of the bill in the stage of it when her petition was filed, was to dispose of the fund, and to off-set the trust claim of Mrs. Polliill, by a charge of Polhill’s malfeasance, and thus get a decree in direct antagonism to Mrs. Polhill’s equity. The insolvency of Polliill is the .very basis of such a claim, and in making herself a party to the bill Mrs. Polliill need only make such statements, as to her rights, as do not clearly appear by the record. That her petition does not in terms call the rights she asserts, her equity to a settlement, does not, as we think, alter the case. The record shoves that her rights, if she has any, is her wife’s equity, and we hardly think equity proceedings require, when the facts appear, a complainant to designate the claim by any particular name, or to specify 'the principle of law under which the rights arises. Nor was it necessary for the childrens’ rights that the mother should specially ask a settlement which would include them. The Court, in its decree, would include them whether she asked them or not: 1 Beavan, 593; 6 Simmons, 584; 1 Kean, 132.

Under sections 1710 and 1711, of the Code of 1863, the rights of the wife to a settlement of her claims in action, is very broadly asserted, both for herself and her children. It would seem from section 1710, that the wife need not even wait until the husband, or creditors, or assignees, attempt to reduce the claim into possession, but that she may apply indipendently. Section 1711, in distinct terms, provides for the childrens’ right of survivorship, and we are not prepared to say, under these sections, that in this State the right of the children depends on the assertion of the wife during her life. This section does not put the right of the children on any such terms, but broadly declares, “If the husband be insolvent, the wife’s equity survives to her children, if any.”

We think, therefore, the children have a right to come into this litigation, as they, by their next friend, propose, and that, if their mother would have been entitled, under the rules of *150equity, to a settlement for herself and them, that right still exists for them.

Judgment reversed.