Hedlund v. Hedlund

Decision Date07 July 1930
Docket Number12566.
Citation87 Colo. 607,290 P. 285
PartiesHEDLUND v. HEDLUND.
CourtColorado Supreme Court

In Department.

Error to District Court, Lincoln County; Ralph E. Finnicum, Judge.

Action by Arthur L. Hedlund against Cora R. Hedlund. Judgment for plaintiff, and defendant brings error.

Affirmed.

John Horne Chiles and Jacob L. Sherman, both of Denver, for plaintiff in error.

John G Reid, of Hugo, and Charles H. Haines, of Denver, for defendant in error.

BUTLER J.

Cora R Hedlund seeks the reversal of a judgment recovered against her by her husband, Arthur L. Hedlund. The husband will be referred to as the plaintiff, and the wife as the defendant.

The plaintiff and the defendant were married in 1912. The plaintiff was employed at Hugo, in this state, by a railroad company. In 1921 he was transferred to Denver, and in 1922 he was transferred to Columbus, Neb., where he now resides. The defendant remained at all times in Hugo, where she now resides. From time to time the plaintiff handed or sent to the defendant various sums of money with which to pay the family expenses, the surplus to be invested for the plaintiff. He alleges that she invested the surplus in securities, which she refuses to deliver or account for to him, and that she commingled with her own earnings moneys thus delivered to her by the plaintiff, and kept no separate accounts thereof. The plaintiff owned a house and lot, the house being furnished, the plaintiff allages, with his money. There were negotiations for the sale of the house and lot and, at the defendant's request, the plaintiff executed and sent to the defendant a deed with the space for the grantee's name left blank, so that the defendant could insert the purchaser's name. The deal fell through, however, and the defendant, without the consent of the plaintiff, he alleges, inserted her own name in the deed as grantee, and filed the deed for record. The plaintiff also alleges that the defendant is withholding from him an insurance policy belonging to him. He prays for an accounting, and 'a fair and equitable division of the accumulations of the parties.' The defendant says that all the money that she received from the plaintiff she used for family expenses and in the necessary support and maintenance of their family; that she inserted her name in the deed as grantee at the requestof the plaintiff; that he gave her the house and lot; that the furniture was purchased principally with her own money and partly with money belonging to the 'common fund.'

The decree ordered the defendant to convey the house and lot to the plaintiff and to surrender possession thereof to him, and to surrender the insurance policy to the plaintiff. It also ordered an equal division of the furniture purchased since the marriage. The rest of the property (i. e., 'warrants, moneys and loans') claimed by the plaintiff was decreed to be the property of the defendant. The property decreed to be the property of the plaintiff was procured by him with money earned by him after his marriage to the defendant.

Counsel for the defendant contend 'that a wife or husband cannot maintain an action either at law or in equity to recover property acquired during the marriage relation.' Their argument is based upon two mistaken assumptions.

First it is assumed that the commonlaw fiction that husband and wife are one still persists in this state. In Whyman v. Johnston, 62 Colo. 461, 163 P. 76, we said that the fiction of one legal personality no longer exists. One has but to read the statutes of the state and the decisions of this court and of the Court of Appeals to realize that in the present state of the law the so-called unity of husband and wife is a mere figure of speech no longer having any practical significance. C. L. c. 125 (sections 5576-5586); Wells v. Caywood, 3 Colo. 487; Coon v. Rigden, 4 Colo. 275; Palmer v. Hanna, 6 Colo. 55; Colorado Central R. Co. v. Allen, 13 Colo. 229, 22 P. 605; O'Connell v. Taney, 16 Colo. 353, 27 P. 888, 25 Am.St.Rep. 275; Schuler v. Henry, 42 Colo. 367, 94 P. 360, 14 L.R.A. (N. S.) 1009; Tuttle v. Shutts, 43 Colo. 534, 96 P. 260; Dickinson v. Dickinson...

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4 cases
  • Rains v. Rains
    • United States
    • Colorado Supreme Court
    • June 10, 1935
    ... ... 22] ... fiction of unity ever existed in this state, it does not ... exist here now. Hedlund v. Hedlund, 87 Colo. 607, ... 290 P. 285, 286, and the statute and cases there cited. In ... the Hedlund Case we said: 'First, it is assumed that ... ...
  • Pacific Gamble Robinson Co. v. Lapp
    • United States
    • Washington Supreme Court
    • December 31, 1980
    ...a statutory concept designed to relieve married women of the historic disabilities of coverture under the common law. Hedlund v. Hedlund, 87 Colo. 607, 290 P. 285 (1930); Tuttle v. Shutts, 43 Colo. 534, 96 P. 260 (1908); Palmer v. Hanna, 6 Colo. 55 (1881). All other property not jointly own......
  • Montrose County School Dist. Re-1J v. Lambert
    • United States
    • Colorado Supreme Court
    • February 24, 1992
    ...unity of husband and wife is a mere figure of speech no longer having any practical significance' " (quoting Hedlund v. Hedlund, 87 Colo. 607, 609, 290 P. 285, 286 (1930))); Commercial Union Ins. Co. v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co., 546 F.Supp. 543, 546 (D.Colo.1982) (The separateness of ......
  • Tader v. Tader
    • United States
    • Wyoming Supreme Court
    • June 5, 1987
    ...may be the law elsewhere, if the common-law fiction of unity ever existed in this state, it does not exist here now. Hedlund v. Hedlund, 87 Colo. 607, 290 P. 285, 286 [1930], and the statute and cases there cited. In the Hedlund Case we said: 'First, it is assumed that the common-law fictio......

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