Ketchum v. Walsworth

By the Court,

Smith, J.

This was a certiorari directed to the Circuit Court of Columbia county in conformity with a rule of this court. The material facts in the case are as follows: — -

On the 6th day of June, 1853, Asa C. Ketchum, administrator de bonis non, on the estate of Silas Walsworth, deceased-, presented, to the county judge of Columbia county, his petition, for the sale of lands and real estate of the deceased for the payment of his debts. The petition is in due form, and sets forth that the debts outstanding against the deceased amounted to some $1,100, giving a description of the real estate of which the-deceased is alleged to have died seized, and the condition and-value of the lot and parcels thereof; and the petition further states, that the lands mentioned and described in the petition were entered by the said Silas Walsworth in the year 1846, during his lifetime, in the joint names of himself and Theresa Wals-*100■worth, his wifé, the present defendant in error; and the petition prayed for a license to sell the real estate of the said Walsworth to pay his debts, &c.

At the day appointed for the bearing of the said petition, Theresa Walsworth, the defendant in error, appeared in the County Court to oppose the petition, and filed her answer thereto, showing, among other things, for cause why such license should not be granted, &e., and setting forth the marriage of the said Silas with the said Theresa in February, 1845; that the lots of land described in said petition were entered by Silas Walsworth with money furnished by and belonging to her as her separate property, at Green Bay, on the 14th day of December, 1846, and for the benefit of herself and children by a former marriage ; that the debts, for the payment of which it is sought to subject the lands in question, accrued prior to her marriage with the said Silas, none of which were sought to be enforced against, or satisfied out of, said lands until after the decease of said Silas, and the whole thereof had accrued to her as survivor of her husband, the said Silas Walsworth; and the answer further alleges, that she never parted with her interest in said lands, and claims the whole thereof in her by survivorship.

To this answer the administrator demurred, and, after argument, the County Court sustained the demurrer, on the ground that, by'the laws of this state, in force at the time of the said Silas Walsworth’s death, the said Silas and Theresa Walsworth were tenants in common of the lands aforesaid, and that there was no right of survivorship in the said Theresa; and, after the usual proofs, ordered a sale of the lands.

From this decree the defendant in error appealed to the Circuit Court, where the order of the county, or probate court, was reversed, the Circuit Court holding that the right of survivorship did attach, and that Silas Walsworth left no interest in said lands subject to be sold for the payment of his debts. To reverse this judgment of the Circuit Court, and to procure the affirmance of the order of the County Court, this writ of certiorari is sued out.

There is but a single question presented to us for considera*101tion and adjudication, viz : wbetber, under tbe facts and circumstances stated in tbe answer of Theresa Walswortb, Silas Wal-worth left, at bis decease, any interest in tbe lands mentioned which could be subjected to tbe payment of bis debts, or, in other words, wbetber bis wife at bis decease took the whole interest in tbe lands by what is commonly termed the right of survivorship.

Overlooking all equitable considerations in tbe case, we have sought to adjudicate upon tbe rights of tbe respective parties as tbe law fixed them at tbe time of tbe decease of Silas Wals-wortb. Prior to that time the legal title in the lands was in Silas and Theresa jointly. They were husband and wife. But at tbe time of his death, tbe present Revised Statutes were not in force, and we must look to tbe statute then in force and ascertain tbe proper construction to be given it, so far as it relates to tbe rights of tbe parties involved in the case.

We are not aware that this question has ever before been presented in tbe courts of this state. • We are also aware that a statute in all essential respects like our own, then in force, has existed in other states, and that it has not bad a uniform construction, so far as it related to tbe tenancy of ]jeal estate held by tbe husband and wife. These considerations have induced a careful and extended examination of tbe various authorities upon the subject, and we have arrived at a unanimous'conclusion, "which we think is sustained by a great preponderance of authority, and most certainly by- every equitable suggestion furnished by the facts in this particular case.

-y^The plaintiff in error contends that tbe common law doctrine of survivorship was not in force in this state, or territory, at tbe time of tbe death of tbe intestate, Silas Walswortb, having been abrogated by the statute of tbe territory then in force, even if it bad ever been a part of tbe law of tbe territory. This statute is found on page 178 of tbe territorial Revised Statutes, and is as . follows: uNo estate in joint tenancy in lands, tenements or hereditaments, shall be held or claimed by or under any grant, devise or conveyance whatever, hereafter to be made, other than to executors or trustees, unless tbe premises therein mentioned *102shall expressly be thereby declared to pass, not in tenancy in common, but in joint tenancy; and every such estate, other than to executors and trustees, unless otherwise expressly declared as aforesaid, shall be deemed to be in tenancy in common, any law, custom or usage to the contrary notwithstanding.” It is substantially the same as, and was borrowed from, the statutes of other states, in which it had received a judicial construction.

It is claimed by the plaintiff in error that it applies as well to estates held by husband and wife jointly, as to estates held by other persons jointly, and by the operation of this statute they are all reduced to the same character, viz: tenancies in common. But this construction of the statute is too restricted, and is to be sustained only by disregarding the peculiar rights, incidents, interests and laws growing out of the marriage relation.

In contemplation of law, the husband and wife, for most purposes, are considered as but one person. Chancellor Kent, in his Oommenlaries, says, If an estate in land be given to the husband and wife, or a joint purchase be made by them during coverture, they are not properly joint tenants, nor tenants in common, for they are but one person in law, and cannot take by moieties. They are both seized of the entirety, and neither can sell without the consent of the other, and the survivor takes the whole.and he cites Preston on ^Estates, which, with the authorities there cited, abundantly sustain his exposition of the law.

This species of tenancy is sui generis, and arises from the unity of husband and wife. As between them there is but one owner, and that is neither the one nor the other, but both together, in their peculiar relationship to each other, constituting the proprietorship of the whole, and of every part and parcel thereof. There can be no partition during coverture, for this would- imply a separate interest in each; and for the same reason neither can alien, without the consent of the other, any portion or interest therein; and hence the legal necessity results, that the survivor must take the whole, for the estate being incapable of partition during the life of either, nothing could'descend by the death of either. This consequence necessarily results from the nature of the estate, and the legal relation of the parties.

*103The peculiarity of this relation is further manifested by the case of á grant of an estate to the husband and wife and other parties. If the grant be made to the husband and wife and B., or to the husband and wife and B. and C., the grantees are all joint tenants, as between themselves, but the husband and wife are tenants by entireties, as between each other; and, as to all the purposes of ownership, the husband and wife are but one person in the law, they take only a moiety of the land in the one case, and only a third of it in the other.” “ The same words of conveyance which would make two other persons joint tenants, will make the husband and wife tenants of the entirety. This is a nice distinction laid down in the old books, but it continues to the present day to be the law.” 2 Kent’s Com. 133, and cases there cited.

.If, therefore, the husband could not alienate his interest in the estate with the consent of his wife, how could it become charged with his debts, especially debts contracted before co-'Verture, and before the acquisition of the estate?; We lay out of view, for the present, the fact that the estate was .purchased with the separate money or property of the wife; and jit seems to us that the law is imperative in support of the claim of the wife to survivorship, unless the statute of the territory changes the entire scope and effect of the law, as it otherwise exists. The author above .quoted asserts the law to be, and cites numerous authorities, all sustaining the position (which indeed seems to result inevitably from the circumstances and relations of the parties), that the husband eannot alienate or incumber such an estate, if it be a freehold estate, so as to prevent the wife and her heirs, after his death, from enjoying it discharged from his debts and engagements.

It is to be remembered that a statute, similar to the old territorial statute above quoted, has existed in many of the states for many years. It existed in Michigan as early as 1821, from which ours was probably copied, and the judicial construction thereof has been almost uniform, to the effect that the provisions of the statute did not relate to estates so held by husband and wife; and for the reasons before stated, that although similar in *104kind jet they differed essentially from estates in joint tenancy. In case of the former, the grantees took by entireties, and not per my et per tout; that neither conld alienate without the consent ©jf the other, &c., and that therefore not being strictly joint tenancies,' they were not' within the purview of the statute in -question. Reference is here made to repeatedly adjudicated cases in New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Yermont, Tennessee, Missouri, and a number of others, a particular reference to which is not deemed necessary, as they are referred to in the elementary treatise above quoted. These cases all conclude that the statute of which ours'is substantially a copy, does not relate to estates held by husband and wife; and that they differ essentially from joint tenancies, and that the doctrine of survivorship applies to them, notwithstanding the statute.

It is true that in Ohio, and some other states, the doctrine of survivorship, even in relation to husband and wife, has been denied; but it has been almost, if not uniformly, so held, for the -reason that the common law in that respect had never been adapted in such states, and not because of the operation of a statute like ours. See Sargeant vs. Steinberger, 1 Ohio, 424; 11 S. & R. 191; 1 Conn. 48 ; 11 id. 337.

It is true that the provisions of the Revised Statutes upon the same subject (B. R. ch. 56, §§.44, 45), do not apply to this case, as it was not enacted at the time of the decease of the intestate; ■but it expressly excepts from its operation, estates held by husband and wife, 'thereby indicating the policy of the state; and with all the preponderance of authority that exists in favor of such exception, even from the operation of the territorial statute, we would hardly be justified in following the few authorities which have taken a different view, .even if our opinions coincided with the latter.

Such, however, is not the case. We think that the stern logic of the common law supports the weight of authority, as we have found it to be, and even without the legislative expression since given, we should be impelled to the same conclusions to which the courts of New York and other states have arrived, *105supported as they are by nearly, if not quite all, the English decisions of ancient and modern times.

But there are strong, equitable considerations in this case, which, though they have been, left out of view in determining the legal principles on which the rights of the parties are alleged to depend, may well reconcile one to the application of the law here, however harshly it may operate in some other cases. The creditors of Silas Walswortb can have no equitable claim upon this estate. It appears to have been purchased with the separate property of the wife, for her benefit and that of her children. There was no meritorious act of accumulation by the husband, which added to his resources, out of which his previous creditors had an equitable right to claim satisfaction of their pre-ex-isting debts.

We are satisfied that the decision of the Circuit Court is correct, and that the judgment should be affirmed.

Judgment of the court below affirmed, with costs.