Harris v. Spencer

Andrews, C. J.

The plaintiff set forth in the complaint that his intestate, who was his wife, in her lifetime owned eighty shares of a certain stock worth -f2,000 j that shortly before her death she transferred said shares, by a transfer apparently absolute, to the defendant; that his said wife “ did not make said transfer of her own free choice and will, but in consequence of the unlawful and fraudulent and deceitful acts and inducements exercised upon and towards her by the said defendant. ” This transfer was made on the 2d day of August, 1897. Mrs. Harris died on the 28th day of September next following. In his prayer for relief “ the plaintiff claims by way of equitable relief that said transfer of stock so obtained by the defendant from the said Cora Harris may be set aside and declared null and void, and that title thereto may be vested in the plaintiff as administrator on the estate of the said Cora Harris.”

The plaintiff as the administrator of Cora Harris, takes the *236title to, and is entitled to have the possession of, all the personal property of which she was the owner at the time of her death. If Cora Harris was on the day of her death the owner of the said shares of stock,, then the plaintiff is entitled to have this prayer for relief granted, otherwise not. The question may he stated in this way: Did Mrs. Harris on the last day of her life have such a right to these shares of stock that she might have maintained a suit therefor against the present defendant ? Stated in this way the answer comes from the finding. The trial court has found that the transfer of the said shares was an absolute gift by Mrs. Harris to the defendant, perfected by the change of possession; and that it was without fraud, illegality, or undue influence. This finding is decisive. Mrs. Harris could not, at any time in her life after making that gift, have maintained á suit therefor against the defendant. It is clear that as administrator the plaintiff shows no ground for a decree in his favor. As respects him, a title by gift in the defendant is not distinguishable from a title by purchase for a valuable consideration. Camp’s Appeal, 36 Conn. 88, 92. See also Gilliyan v. Lord, 51 id. 562.

This case has been argued here—it seems to have been tried in the court below—as though the plaintiff was seeking to recover, not as administrator, but in his own right as husband. The plaintiff and his wife were married on the 3d day of March, 1897. The claim of the plaintiff in this behalf is that, as by the statute, General Statutes, § 623, he would be entitled to an interest in the property which his wife might leave at her death, she could not, by a voluntary gift of all her property in her lifetime, deprive him of that interest. This claim cannot be sustained. These shares of stock belonged to Mrs. Harris at the time of her marriage to this plaintiff. Another part of the same statute—now § 2796—provides that as to all property held by a woman at the time of her marriage, “ she shall have power to make contracts with third persons, and to convey to them her real and personal estate, as if unmarried.” If being an unmarried woman Mrs. Harris had power to make the gift which she made to the defendant, so that it would have been a valid and binding one, being a married *237woman her power to make the gift is no less; the gift is equally valid and binding on her and her estate. The language of the statute gives her such power. Comstock's Appeal, 55 Conn. 214; Spitz's Appeal, 56 id. 184. The fact that the plaintiff and Ms wife were married since 1877, and that outliving his wife he would be entitled to a portion of her estate under the statute of that year, is clearly immaterial. That statute gives to a surviving husband a share of the property owned by his wife at her decease; it does not prevent the wife during her life from disposing of her property in any lawful way that she pleases, or incumbering it by any lawful agreement. Crofut v. Layton, 68 Conn. 91, 100. Since the statute of 1877 a married woman has at law, over all her property during her life, the same power that she had prior to that statute, in equity, over her sole and separate estate,—complete dominion. Imlay v. Huntington, 20 Conn. *146, *175, citing Jacques v. Methodist Church, 17 John. Rep. 548; 2 Story’s Equity, § 1890. Mrs. Harris owed no debt or duty to the plaintiff in respect to these shares of stock, and she might do with them whatsoever was her pleasure. Ullrich v. Ullrich, 68 Conn. 580.

There is no error.

In this opirnon the other judges concurred.