Cardwell v. Perry

JUDGE HIKES

delivered the opinion op the court.

Mrs. Inman, an unmarried woman, being the owner of certain real estate and contemplating marriage with. *131Alfred Perry, entered into a written agreement with Perry by which it was provided that all the property, both real and personal, belonging to Mrs. Inman should be held by her after marriage as her separate estate. The intention to create a separate estate being expressed in this language: “It being intended that the said Mary A. Inman shall hold the said property as her separate estate in the same manner as if she were sole and unmarried.”

The agreement was executed and witnessed in the presence of two persons, and after marriage acknowl- • edged and placed to record as required in case of conveyances of real estate. Subsequent to this Mrs. Perry (previously Mrs. Inman), jointly with McCoy, purchased a drug store, and for one of the deferred payments -executed her note, with McCoy, for $600. This action was brought to subject the real estate mentioned in the agreement to the payment of this note, and from a judgment dismissing the petition this appeal is taken.

The sole question is, whether this agreement oper.ated to change the character of the general estate in Mrs. Inman into separate estate in • Mrs. Perry. A separate estate is that from which the dominion and ■control of the husband is excluded, and from which he is to derive no benefit by reason of the marital relation. It may be acquired or created by conveyance, devise, or gift from another, or by relinquishment by ante-nuptial ■contract of the husband’s marital rights, or by deed Of husband.and wife after marriage, where the conveyance is to another for the express purpose of reconveyance to the wife with exclusion of the husband’s rights in or to the property. In such case the property'revests in *132the wife, shorn of the character of general estate, and is as much separate estate as if the title had been originally derived by the wife from a third party with like limitation as to nse and alienation. If the character of the estate may thus be changed by indirection, there appears no reason why it may not be done directly through conveyance by the husband in which he, in a solemn and notorious manner, makes relinquishment of his rights, which is .all that is designed and effected by the conveyance and re-convevance to and by the third party.

In this case the execution and the putting to record of the agreement is, in effect, a conveyance to the wife of all interest that would otherwise have been in the husband. From this conclusion it does not follow, nor is it necessary to decide, that the contract confers, upon the wife the right to trade as a feme sole. It affects the character of the estate, however, rendering the property liable for her debts contracted for her benefit, where the credit is extended on the faith of the property, and when such contracts are made the presumption is that the feme intended to bind her separate estate. This presumption is not destroyed by the fact-that the payee required the property purchased to be-kept insured. That was nothing more than requiring security for the payment of the debt which would not destroy the payee’s right to look to the separate estate of thsfeme covert for payment, as there is nothing else-in the record to indicate that the credit was not extended on the faith of the separate estate.

Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with direction to subject the real estate mentioned in the petition, to the payment of the debt.