State ex rel. Morrison's Adm'r v. St. Gemme's Adm'r

Decision Date31 October 1860
PartiesTHE STATE, TO USE OF MORRISON'S ADMINISTRATOR, Respondent, v. ST. GEMME'S ADMINISTRATOR, Appellant.
CourtMissouri Supreme Court

1. Under the fifth section of the act concerning marriage contracts, approved December 22, 1824, (R. C. 1825, p. 526) all contracts of marriage, as well those entered into before as after the passage of the act, had to be recorded in the county where the property to be affected was situate, in order to be of any binding effect, except as between the parties thereto and such as had actual notice thereof.

2. Marriage contracts entered into before Louisiana became a part of the United States, were within the purview of said marriage act, and had to be recorded in order to be binding upon strangers. (19 Mo. 446, affirmed.)

3. The fact that one of the parties to a marriage contract died before the passage of said act of 1824, does not dispense with the obligation to place the contract upon record to give it any binding effect as against third persons.

4. An omission to record such contract did not affect its binding force upon the parties thereto, while it might deprive them of many of its intended benefits.

5. If it should be admitted that under the Spanish law a gratuitous gift of some slaves to one of the parties to a marriage contract subsequent to the marriage would not become community property, yet it would nevertheless be carried into such community by the following provisions in the marriage contract: that the parties “take each other with the goods and rights to each belonging at present and hereafter acquired, which goods and rights shall be common between them, no matter what sum they may amount to, or in what place the same may be.”

6. A preciput which by the terms of a marriage contract was to be paid at the division of the community goods can not take effect where there is nothing to be divided; nor, where a division may be had, will it be paid to the injury of creditors, if the contract has not been recorded.

7. A provision in the contract giving dowry to the wife, and conferring on her the right of renouncing the community and taking back every thing she brought into it, will have no effect as against creditors unless it has been recorded.

8. Where a county court has jurisdiction of the subject matter, and its judgment is only erroneous, such judgment cannot be overturned in a collateral proceeding.

9. The provisions in the territorial laws, January 21, 1815 (Terr. Laws, vol. 1, p. 418), relating to the assignment of dower and the carrying out of marriage contracts, were omitted in the revision of 1825.

10. In the revision of 1825, the only provision for setting apart the widow's dower in slaves was contained in the sixty-fifth section of the administration act, relating to distribution. (R. C. 1825, p. ___.)

11. And where an order of distribution was made by the county court in 1828, under said sixty-fifth section, without first giving notice to those interested in the estate; held, to be coram non judice, and void.

12. Where a widow becomes administratrix of her husband's estate, and while officiating as such certain slaves belonging to said estate are set apart and assigned to her as her separate property under a void and irregular order of the county court, in pursuance of which she converts them to her own use; held, that the statute of limitations did not run in her favor against a claim for such conversion, while she continued administratrix. (State, to use of Menard, v. Pratte & St. Gemme, referred to.)

Appeal from Ste. Genevieve Circuit Court.

This was an action brought in 1853 by the State, to the use of Conrad C. Zeigler, administrator of William Morrison, against Eloy Lecompte, administrator of Maria Theresa St. Gemme and her securities, upon her administration bond. It is alleged in the petition that Vital St. Gemme, the husband of said Maria, died in 1824 indebted to William Morrison; that in 1829 judgment on said debt, in the sum of $2,277.85, was recovered against the said Maria, who became the administratrix of said St. Gemme, and that said judgment was allowed against her decedent's estate in 1830; that said Vital St. Gemme was possessed at his death of valuable estates in chattels and slaves, which came to the hands of said Maria as administratrix; that said Maria had assets sufficient to liquidate all debts of the estate; but that she wasted and converted to her own use nine slaves of said estate, of the value of $4,000, and died without paying this claim of plaintiff's; that said slaves came into the hands of her administrator, Lecompte, who sold them and now holds the proceeds.

The answer denies the alleged conversion, and sets out as a defence that three of the said slaves were allowed to said Maria by order of the county court in 1828 as a jointure of $450, to which she was entitled under her marriage contract with St. Gemme, dated 1798, she being at liberty according to its terms to take money or property. As to the other six, they never were the property of St. Gemme, but were given to said Maria by her father, and, under the law in operation then, they became her absolute property; and that the county court, in 1828, by order, allowed her to retain them as such. The statute of limitations is also set up as a bar.

Part of the facts of the case appear in an agreed statement, which includes the marriage contract, dated February 11, 1798. The following extracts of it may be cited as bearing upon the merits of the case: “The said future husband and wife shall have a community of all goods, movable, acquired, and immovable, according to the usage and custom of the place; according to which custom and usage the said community of goods shall be governed: notwithstanding that they shall hereafter change their residence to some other place, the laws, usages and customs of which should be different or conflicting, they having by these presents expressly renounced and abandoned any rights under the said different or conflicting laws.”

“The said future husband and wife take each other with the goods and rights to each belonging at present and hereafter acquired; which goods and rights shall be common between them, no matter what sum they may amount to, or in what place the same may be. In consideration of this marriage, the said future husband has endowed and does endow the said future wife with the sum of fifteen hundred livres fixed dowry, to be taken so soon as the marriage shall take place, of the goods movable and immovable, in present or future possession of the said future husband, who has encumbered hypothecated the same for the purpose of raising and levying the said dower, of which the said future wife shall become seized, and shall enjoy the same, according to the custom of the place, without being compelled to sue for the same before a court of justice.” “The survivor of said husband and wife shall take by preciput, and before making a distribution of the community effects, the sum of seven hundred and fifty livres from among the movable goods of the said community at the inventory and appraisement prices, or the said amount in cash, at his or her option. The said future wife and the children which may be born of the said marriage shall be permitted, if they choose, to renounce the community, to take back again whatever she may have brought into the community, and all that she may subsequently have brought into the same, in movable or immovable goods, whether derived from inheritance, gifts, legacies, or other sources; and (moreover) even the said future wife may, if she survive, take the dower and preciput aforesaid, all free from liability, for community debts and mortgages, although she should have contracted them verbally, in writing, or by judgment, for which, if it should so happen, the children aforesaid shall be paid and indemnified by the heirs; and out of the goods of the said future husband, which are for this and all other parties of this contract pledged or hypothecated from the day,” they hereby mutually, simply, and irrevocably give to each other and the survivor of them, accepting the same, each for his or her heirs and assigns, all and every the goods and chattels, effects and properties, real or personal, now in possession or hereafter acquired, which may belong to one of them who shall die first: provided, nevertheless, that there shall be no issue living or to be born of the said marriage; for in that case the said mutual gift shall become null and void.”

This contract was never recorded. There was in evidence an order of the county court, dated 1828, setting aside six slaves to said Maria, property which came to her by gift of her father; also an order of the county court of the same date allowing her three negroes as jointure, which she chose under the contract.

The court, in its verdict, found that the slaves were given to Maria and her husband, and were not the separate property of Maria, free from the contracts of her husband; that said Maria converted the slaves to her own use; that Morrison's debt was a community debt. The court also declared as conclusions of law that the said slaves, at the time of the death of said Vital St. Gemme, were subject to the payment of his debts contracted after marriage; that said slaves were not the paraphernal property of said...

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