dissenting: Tbe requirements of Revisal, 952, as to tbe conveyance of real estate by a married woman bave been in every particular scrupulously complied witb. Tbe deed was executed by ber and ber busband witb due proof thereof as to both tbe busband and tbe wife, and ber private examination duly certified. Tbe first cause of action alleging fraud or undue influence is negatived by tbe jury, and there is no appeal on that point.
Tbe plaintiff seeks to set aside tbe deed because be insists that tbe court should write into tbe statute words that are not placed therein by tbe Legislature and which are not in tbe Constitution, to wit, “tbe busband being 21 years of age.” He insists that these words are implied because a conveyance of realty can only be made by one 21 years of age. But “tbe written assent of the busband,” which is all that is required by tbe Constitution and to which the Legislature cannot add, and has not sought to add, is not a conveyance.
Tbe busband bad nothing to convey. He has no interest in bis wife’s estate. Tbe Constitution expressly prohibits bis having any. It says (Const., Art. X, sec. 6) that “The real and personal property of any female in this State . . . shall be and remain tbe sole and separate property of such female . . . and may be devised and bequeathed and, witb tbe written assent of ber busband, may be conveyed by ber as if she were unmarried,” If tbe property of a married woman “shall be and remain ber sole and separate property, as if she were unmarried,” ber busband certainly cannot bave any interest therein during ber lifetime, nor acquire any at ber death, unless by ber will or dying intestate be succeeds thereto under tbe general statute of distribution and descent. Such “possibility of inheritance” is not an “interest in” ber property. He is forbidden tbe latter by tbe Constitution. Her children or ber heirs at law bave exactly tbe same possibility of succeeding to ber property by devise, or in case of intestacy. But that does not confer on them any interest in ber estate which requires them to join in any conveyance of ber property.
This written assent does not invest him witb any interest in tbe property, but is merely a “veto power,” and there is nothing *112in tbe Constitution or in tbe statute wbicb requires that tbe busband should be 21 years of age. To so bold is for tbe Court to write into tbe Constitution words wbicb are not placed there, and wbicb tbe Legislature has not attempted to place in tbe statute, and wbicb would have been unconstitutional if it bad done so, by requiring an addition to tbe simple requirement of tbe Constitution. That simply gives tbe busband a veto power. It requires merely for tbe “written assent” tbat be shall be her “busband,” and nothing more.
It is true tbat Revisal, 952, does require tbat tbe busband must join in tbe deed, and proof of bis execution must be made. If this meant tbat be must convey, it is an additional requirement, negativing tbe guarantee given by tbe Constitution tbat bis “written assent” shall be tbe only clog upon tbe wife’s right to convey her property as if she bad “remained unmarried.” It can only be construed tbat tbe law required bis formal acknowledgment to tbe deed, not as a conveyance (for be has nothing to convey), but simply as a method of authenticating bis signature; and being such, there is no necessity of bis being-21 years of age. If be is old enough to be legally her “bus-band,” be is old enough under tbe Constitution to withhold bis assent, or to give it.
Tbe privy examination wbicb is still required of women by tbe statute as to conveyances of her own property has been sustained by tbe Court “upon tbe ground solely tbat it is not an additional clog upon her power of conveyance (because tbe Legislature could not add additional requirements), but because it was merely a means of authenticating her signature, and is therefore allowable.” Rea v. Rea, 156 N. C., 532; Douglas, J., in Weathers v. Borders, 124 N. C., 621.
After tbe sweeping provision t>f tbe Constitution wbicb emancipated women as to their property rights, retaining only-tbe requirement of tbe written assent of tbe busband as to conveyances of realty, tbat provision came to be construed by judges who were imbued with tbe previous learning as to tbe status of married women and whose decisions, to say the least, were not in accordance with tbe clear meaning of tbe Constitution. Some of these decisions have been overruled since and *113others have been sustained by the majority of the Court solely upon the ground that it “has been so decided.” Connor, J., Ball v. Paquin, 140 N. C., 90, 94. Many of these have since been cured by repeated acts of the Legislature conforming the law more closely to the terms of the Constitution. But up to this time there has been no decision of the Court that has written into the Constitution, or the statute, the words requiring the husband to be of age when he gives or withholds his written assent.
But it is urged that it is in the eternal order of things that before a man can make himself responsible, or do any act, he must be 21 years of age. That is true in our law, as to conveyances and contracts, but the “written assent” of her husband required by the Constitution is neither a conveyance nor a contract. He has nothing to convey, for he has no interest in his wife’s land; nor is it a contract, for there is no consideration to him from the grantee. There is nothing magical in being “21 years of age.” For the purposes of contracts and conveying and of suffrage there must be some arbitrary age substituted for proof of discretion which otherwise would be required for each conveyance or contract. This is purely arbitrary, and varies in different countries. In many countries the age for suffrage is 25, and in some it is 30. In Russia, and indeed in most countries, a monarch who is a minor becomes of legal age, and is invested with the highest powers of government, at 16. We know that in this country the Governor of one of our territories was under 21 years of age when he succeeded to that position under the authority of the President. U. S. v. Bixby, 10 Bissell (U. S.), 520. In that case there is a full discussion of the subject by Judge Gresham, who points out that notaries public are not required to be 21 years of age except in those few States where this is specially required by statute. He says: “While at common law persons are not admitted to full enjoyment of civil and political rights until they have attained the age of 21 years, yet infants are capable of executing mere powers and, as agents, of making binding contracts for others. In England they are allowed to hold the *114office of park keeper, forester, jailer, and mayor of a town; and in both. England and this country they are capable of holding and discharging the duties of such mere ministerial offices as call for the exercise of skill and diligence only.” He then points out that Stevens S. Mason at 19 years of age was appointed Secretary of the Territory of Michigan by President Jackson in 1831, and succeeded to the duties of Governor before he was 21, which he discharged with “vigor and wisdom, that vindicated the propriety of his appointment.” We know that LaEayette was a major general in the American Army at 19, in the command of four brigades, the duties of which position he discharged with ability. We need not multiply other well-known instances which are numerous. It is sufficient to say that neither the Constitution, nor the statute, nor the eternal fitness of things requires the Court to write into the Constitution an additional requirement that a married woman cannot convey her realty “as if she remained single” unless her husband is “21 years of age.” It may be that the courts could write a better Constitution in some respects than the Convention witi the approval of the people have done, but that duty was not committed to the courts, and we should observe the plain requirements of the Constitution, adding nothing thereto and taking nothing therefrom.
That the husband has no interest in the wife’s estate has been again and again held by this Court, but we need only cite the lucid remarks of Merrimon, C. J., in Walker v. Long, 109 N. C., 510, in which he says: “The Constitution, Art. X, sec. 6, has wrought very material and far-reaching changes as to the rights respectively of husband and wife in respect to her property, both real and personal, and enlarged her personality and power in respect to and control over her property. It provides that The real and personal property of any female in this State acquired before marriage, and all property, real and personal, to which she may after marriage become in any manner entitled, shall be and remain the sole and separate estate cmd property of such female, and shall not be liable for any debts, liabilities, or engagements of her husband, and may be devised and, bequeathed and with the written assent of her hus-*115baud conveyed by her as if she were unmarried. This provision is very broad, comprehensive, and thorough in its terms, meaning, and purpose, and plainly gives and secures to the wife the complete ownership and control of her property as if she were unmarried, except in the single instance of conveying it. She must convey with the assent of her husband. It clearly excludes the ownership of the husband as such, and sweeps away the commoriAaw right of estate which he might at one time have had as tenant by the curtesy initiate. The strong and exclusive language of the clause above recited is that the property ‘shall be and remain the sole and separate property of such female.’ The husband shall be, not tenant by the cur-tesy initiate, but tenant by curtesy after the death of his wife, in ease she die intestate.” The Court in Tiddy v. Graves, 126 N. C., 622, cited verbatim and indorsed the above quotation, and negatived the argument which was insisted on, in that case, that the curtesy of the husband in the whole of the wife’s realty is the correlative of the dower of the wife in one-third of the husband’s realty, and hence, that if the Legislature can confer dower, it can retain curtesy. The Court referred to the Constitution as conclusive of the absolute and unlimited ownership of the wife in her property during her lifetime, and vests the power in the Legislature to confer both dower or curtesy,. after the death of a party, upon the ground that no one has a natural right' to control his property after death, and that the disposition thereof, whether by will or by inheritance, is purely statutory.
The decision in Tiddy v. Graves, 126 N. C., 620, that the tenancy by the curtesy initiate as an interest in the wife’s property has been destroyed by the Constitution and is now only a personal right to associate with his wife, and the possibility of inheriting (like her heirs at law) if she dies intestate, is not only a summary of all previous decisions, but it is the last discussion of the subject. Indeed; it has never been questioned since, but has' been cited and approved, on rehearing, 127 N. C., 502 (though the result was changed in that case on the ground that it did not appear that the marriage occurred since 1868); Ex Parte Watts, 130 N. C., 242; Hallyburton v. Slagle, ib., 482; s. c. (on rehearing), 132 N. C., 948; S. v. Jones, ib., *1161047; Watts v. Griffin (Walker, J.), 137 N. C., 579; Eames v. Armstrong, 146 N. C., 6 (where Connor, J., says, “That her' husband had ‘no estate or interest’ in the land, notwithstanding birth of issue, is settled”); Richardson v. Richardson (Walker, J.), 150 N. C., 553. The husband, therefore, had nothing to convey, and there is no ground to require him to be “of age.” He could marry under age, and his veto power is given by virtue of marriage, and not by virtue of his age.
Long before Walker v. Long, this Court, in Manning v. Manning, 79 N. C., 293 and 301, in a strong and lucid opinion by Bynum, J., had affirmed the absolute ownership and control of her property by a married woman, and held that the husband had no interest therein of any kind whatever.
In three cases, filed on the same day and written by three different judges, Thompson v. Wiggins, 109 N. C., 508; Walker v. Long, ib., 511; and Jones v. Coffey, ib., 515, all three speaking for a unanimous Court, it was held that while a husband may still be called a “tenant by the curtesy initiate” and deemed a freeholder for the purposes of sitting on a jury, he has in fact no estate or interest whatever in his wife’s property, and was entitled to no more than the right of ingress and egress, and that she could, as the statute provides, sue for the possession of her property and for rents and damages thereto without joining her husband. There are numerous other decisions to the above effect.
It being clear upon the face of the Constitution and the above cited decisions' that the husband has “no estate or interest” in his wife’s property which be can convey or refuse to convey, there is nothing that authorizes judicial legislation to read into the Constitution, or the statute, additional words which will forbid a wife to convey her realty, when she has the written assent of her husband, without the additional clog added by the courts, “provided such husband is 21 years of age.” This is not required by the Constitution, nor by the statute, nor by the “reason of the thing,” which gives a husband the veto power ex virtute officii, without any reference to his age.
No opinion can be found which denies the power of a wife to convey her realty unless her husband is of age. McGlennery *117v. Miller, 90 N. C., 216, which is relied upon by the plaintiff, states in the face of the opinion that “the marriage took place in 1850; the wife was seized in fee of the lands at the time of the marriage, and there were children of the marriage born alive. Hence the husband has a life estate in the land as tenant by the curtesy initiate.” The opinion is by Merrimon, J., who wrote Walker v. Long, 109 N. C., 510, and there said that the Constitution "sweeps away the common-law right of estate which he might at one time have had as tenant by the curtesy initiate.” The case of Barker v. Wilson, 51 Tenn., 268, speaks of a “bargain and sale” made by an infant husband jointly with a wife of full age, and is under a Constitution totally different from ours. Indeed) Revisal, 2102, especially restricts the tenancy by the curtesy to cases “after the death of the wife intestate.” The absolute power of the wife to devise her property is set out in the Constitution and in Revisal, 2098, which could not be the case if the husband had any vested interest in her realty. Walker, J., Watts v. Griffin, 137 N. C., 572. This is further recognized by Revisal, 2116 and 2117, which make the deed of the wife of her property valid if the husband is an idiot or lunatic or has abandoned her, without any assent of the husband, which could not be the case if he had any interest therein. See numerous cases cited in Pell’s Revisal under those sections, holding them constitutional.
It may be noted that in all the more recent State constitutions the requirement of the “written assent” of the husband has been dispensed with, as has also been the case in England and in Australia and Canada and other English-speaking countries. The requirement of a privy examination of the wife to a deed was abolished in England some forty years ago, and also this has been followed in Australia and Canada and in all the States of this Union, including all the States adjoining us — Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia, and Tennessee — except in North Carolina and seven others. There can therefore be no protection, and only an unnecessary clog, in requiring an addition to the “written assent” of the husband which is not set out in our Constitution nor in any statute.
BbowN, J., concurs in the opinion of ClaR¿, C. J.