i. cyr) pm ^ 1 3 5 1 1 a-- § 1 '>, 1: 'W-.-H jM II' W^l ^ .-n_^.. :-:-.rj '^sIB'pwti ' Jt:^ i?*T1£ii ffj a^^«^«^' (fJnrnFll Slam irljnnl Hibraty mjM '^"iiiiiiVKiiiiiiimliKir^" '" Massachusetts / 3 1924 024 687 026 THE LAW OF MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. BY J,^' GEORGE A. O. ERNST, OF THE SUFFOLK BAR. SECOND EDITION. BOSTON: LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY. 1897. Copyright, 1897, By George A. O. Ernst. ?Intb«sttg 33kbs: John Wilson and Son, Cambridge, U. S. A. TO MY WIFE. Cornell University Library The original of tliis bool< is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924024687026 PKEFACB. This book had its origin in an address which I was invited to give before several associations of women, and which subsequently was published by them. The favor with which it was received has led to its enlargement. In its present form it is practi- cally a new book, nearly every line having been rewritten, and much that is new introduced. I trust that it now may be found a fairly complete guide to the decisions and statutes of Massachu- setts. If perchance I have misstated or over- looked something of importance, as is more than probable, I can only plead the example of an illustrious judge, formerly a member of our Supreme Judicial Court, who " by inadvertence " entered a decree " without authority and of no legal effect," under a statute which had been repealed some months before.^ The advance made in the condition of woman during the last half century is little short of the 1 Wales V. Wales, 119 Mass. 89. Vi PEEFACE. marvellous. Those women happily married, who think that they have all the rights they need, who deprecate agitation, and say unkind things about agitators, would do well to read the history of the struggle which has brought them their present rights. A taste of the law of fifty years ago would make them very grateful to those whom they now condemn. Pollock and Maitland in their brilliant History of English Law tell us that, at the end of the Middle Ages, the whole field of law upon this subject was " a perplexed mass of incongruous customs for which it is very difiicult to account." In spite of the many changes, this is the condition of parts of it to-day. I have endeavored to bring the true situation into as strong relief as I could, not in any cynical mood, but in the hope that knowledge may lead to a change- There can be little doubt that most men to-day intend to be perfectly fair as regards women, and, if they were to establish an entirely new code, would endeavor to put the two sexes in all respects upon an absolute equality ; but old prejudices die hard, and with such a shield as the " glorious com- mon law " to hide behind, it is not surprising that we have not yet reached the millennium. GEOEGE A. 0. ERNST. Boston, January, 1897. CONTENTS. Page Preface v Table of Cases Cited ix Chaptek I. Introduction 1 II. Agreements to Marry, and other Ante- Nuptial Agreements. Breach of Prom- ise OF Marriage 24 in. Marriage 43 IV. The Right of a Married Woman to her Person 62 V. The Right of a Married Woman to her Children 71 VI. The Right of a Married Woman to Sup- port from her Husband 84 VII. The Right of a Married Woman under the Pauper Laws of Settlement ... 95 VIII. The Right of a Married Woman to Property and to do Business with her Husband and Others 99 VIU CONTENTS. Chapter Page IX. Separation by Divorce 147 X. Separation by Agreement 188 XI. Separation by Death and its Effect upon Property 191 XII. Rights of Burial 235 Index 247 TABLE OF CASES. Page Abbot v. Bayley (6 Pick. 89) 10 Abbott V. Abbott (97 Mass. 136) 202 V. Winchester (105 Mass. 115) 113 Adams v. Adams (16 Pick. 254) 166 V. Adams (10 Met. 170) 206 V. Adams (100 Mass. 365) 15 V. Adams (154 Mass. 290) 58, 178 B. Barry (10 Gray, 361) 13 V. Brackett (5 Met. 280) 11 V. Butts (16 Pick. 343) 238 Albee v. Wy'man (10 Gray, 222) 189 Alexander v. Crittenden (4 Alien, 842) 17 Allen 0. Allen (100 Mass. 373) 183 V. Allen (117 Mass. 27) 204 V. Fuller (118 Mass. 402) 134 V. Kingsbury (16 Pick. 235) 13 V. Libbey (140 Mass. 82) 210 V. Wilkins (3 Allen, 321) 9 AllendorfE v. Gaugengigl (146 Mass. 542) 136 Almy V. Wilcox (110 Mass. 443) 88 V. Crapo (100 Mass. 218) 216 Ames V. Chew (5 Met. 320) 16 V. Foster (3 Allen, 541) 139, 144 Anderson ». Ames (151 Mass. 11) 133 Andrews v. Matthews (124 Mass. 109) 134 Angel V. McLellan (16 Mass. 28) 82 X TABLE OF CASES. Page Anon. (6 Mass. 147) 175 Arnold v. Spurr (130 Mass. 347) 134 Ashford v. Thoraton (1 B. & Aid. 405) 3 Atherton v. Corliss (101 Mass. 40) 229 Athol Machine Co. v. Fuller (107 Mass. 437) ... 144 Atlantic National Bank v. Tavener (130 Mass. 407) . 109 Atwood V. Atwood (22 Pick. 283) ....... 211 Austin V. Cox (118 Mass. 58) 68 Ayer v. Ayer (16 Pick. 327) 21 - — V. Spring (9 Mass. 8) ' ... 214 V. Spring (10 Mass. 80) 214 Babcock v. Smith (22 Pick. 61) 41 Bailey v. Bailey (97 Mass. 373) 158 V. Bailey (166 Mass. 226) 182 Baker v. Brown (146 Mass, 369) 232 - — V. Hathaway (5 Allen, 103) 135 V. Kilgore (145 U. S. 487) 143 Baldwin v. Baldwin (6 Gray, 341) 169 V. Foster (138 Mass. 449) 73, 86 Bancroft v. Curtis (108 Mass. 47) 110, 131 I'. Ives (3 Gray, 367) 226 Banister v. Banister (150 Mass. 280) 167 Barnes v. Hurd (11 Mass. 59) 11 Barney v. Tourtellotte (138 Mass. 106) 92 Bartlett v. Bartlett (4 Allen, 440) 135 V. Bartlett (113 Mass. 312) 166 V. Cowles (15 Gray, 445) 18, 61 Basford v. Pearson (7 Allen, 504) 139 Bassettr. Bassett (112 Mass. 99) 21,107 Batchelder, Pet'r (147 Mass. 465) 199 Bates I'. Bates (97 Mass. 392) ........ 202 V. Kempton (7 Gray, 382) 125 Baxter v. Baxter (1 Mass. 346) 155 TABLE OF CASES. XI Page Beach v. Manchester (2 Cush. 72) 140, 225 Beal V. Warren (2 Gray, 447) 139 Belchertown v. Ludlow (110 Mass. 98) 98 Bell u. Walsh (130 Mass. 163) 182 Bemis v. Call (10 Allen, 512) 126 Benjamin v. Dockham (132 Mass. 181) 87 V. Dockham (134 Mass. 418) 85, 87 Berney v. Dinsmore (141 Mass. 42) 20 Bigaouette v. Paulet (134 Mass. 123) 64, 67 Bigelow V. Bigelow (120 Mass. 320) 89 Billings V. Billings (11 Pick. 461) 155 V. Taylor (10 Pick. 460) 213 Binney v. Globe National Bank (150 Mass. 574) 112, 136 Bird V. Gardner (10 Mass. 364) 212 Blackinton v. Blackinton (110 Mass. 461) 38 V. Blackinton (141 Mass. 432) 89 Blaisdell v. Bickum (139 Mass. 250) 58 Blake v. Sawin (10 Allen, 340) 115 Blaney v. Blaney (126 Mass. 205) 163 Bliss V. Franklin (18 Allen, 244) 144 Blood V. Blood (23 Pick. 80) 212 Blossom V. Blossom (9 Allen, 254) 213 Boardman v. Silver (100 Mass. 330) 88 Bodfish V. Bodfish (105 Mass. 317) 216 Bodwell V. Bodwell (113 Mass. 314) 153 Bolton V. Ballard (18 Mass. 227) 211 Borden v. Jenks (140 Mass. 562) 229 Bowditch V. Jordan (131 Mass. 321) 39 Bowdlear v. Bowdlear (112 Mass. 184) 226 Bowen v. Hoxie (187 Mass. 527) 227 Bowker v. Bradford (140 Mass. 521) 100 Boyden v. Mass. Mutual Life Tns. Co. (153 Mass. 544) 195 Boynton v. Kellogg (8 Mass. 189) 31 Bradley u. Bradley (160 Mass. 258) 160,166 Brandenburg v. Thorridike (139 Mass. 102) .... 229 XU TABLE OF CASES. Page Bray v. Raymond (166 Mass. 146) 100 Brazer v. Dean (15 Mass. 183) 206 Brett V. Brett (5 Met. 233) 172 Brettun v. Fox (100 Mass. 234) 202 Bridgman v. Bridgman (138 Mass. 58) 143 Brigham v. Brigham (147 Mass. 159) . . . 151, 181, 182 Broadstreet v. Broadstreet (7 Mass. 474) 157 Broadway National Bank v. Adams (133 Mass. 170) . 42 Brookfield v. Warren (128 Mass. 287) 84, 97 Brooks V. Brooks (145 Mass. 574) 156 V. Everett (13 Allen, 457) 221 Brow V. Brightman (136 Mass. 187) 73 Brown v. Brown (15 Mass. 389) 168 V. Wood (121 Mass. 137) 105 Bruce v. Wood (1 Met. 542) 13, 136 Buckley v. Frasier (153 Mass. 525) 209 V. Gerard (123 Mass. 8) 227 V. 0'2Slel (113 Mass. 193) 68 Buffinton v. Fall River National Bank (118 Mass. 246) 228 Bullock V. Bullock (122 Mass. 3) 53 Burke v. Colbert (144 Mass. 160) 209 V. Cole (97 Mass. 113) 141 Burlen v. Shannon (3 Gray, 387) 87 V. Shannon (14 Gray, 433^ 87 V. Shannon (99 Mass. 200) 179 V. Shannon (115 Mass. 438) 172, 179 Burns v. Lynde (6 Allen, 305) 224 Burr V. Swan (118 Mass. 588) 112 Burroughs v. Nutting (105 Mass. 228) . . . , 232 Burrows v. Purple (107 Mass. 428) 181 Burtis V. Burtis (161 Mass. 508) 8, 172 Bush V. Clark (127 Mass. Ill) 206 Butler V. Ives (139 Mass. 202) 8, 113, 126 V. Price (110 Mass. 97) 85 V. Price (115 Mass. 578) 85 Butman v. Porter (100 Mass. 337) 36 TABLE OF CASES. XUl Page Cahill v. Campbell (105 Mass. 40) 129 Cairns v. Cairns (109 Mass. 408) 173 V. Colburn (104 Mass. 274) 116 Camerlin v. Palmer Co. (10 Allen, 539) 81 Campbell v. Bemis (16 Gray, 485) 140, 218 Carley v. Carley (7 Gray, 545) 186 V. Green (12 Allen, 104) 85, 123 Carpenter v. Page (144 Mass. 315) 192 Carter v. Carter (109 Mass. 306) 182 Cartwright v. Bate (1 Allen, 514) 86 Casey v. Wiggin (8 Gray, 231) 16 Catlin V. Ware (9 Mass. 218) 214 Chapin v. Chapin (135 Mass. 393) 185 V. Kingsbury (135 Mass. 580) 132 V. Kingsbury (138 Mass. 194) 132 Chapman v. Briggs (11 Allen, 546) 130 V. Kellogg (102 Mass. 246) 113 Chase v. Chase (6 Gray, 157) 178 V. Chase (105 Mass. 385) 182 V. Fitz (132 Mass. 359) 27, 33 V. Ingalls (97 Mass. 524) 182 V. Phillips (153 Mass. 17) 137, 189 V. Redding (13 Gray, 418) 123 Chickering v. Lovejoy (13 Mass. 51) 211 Choate v. Choate (3 Mass. 391) 154 V. Jacobs (136 Mass. 297) 207 Church V. Church (3 Mass. 157) 154 V. Crocker (3 Mass. 17) 226 Clapp V. Clapp (97 Mass. 531) 156 ■ ■ V. Green (10 Met. 439) 82 V. Stoughton (10 Pick. 463) 10, 18 Clark V. Clark (8 Cush. 385) 179 V. Clark (97 Mass. 331) 176 V. Patterson (158 Mass. 388) 105, 111 XIV TABLE OF CASES, Page Clement v. Kimball (98 Mass. 535) 156 Clough V. Clough (117 Mass. 83) 124 Cochran v. Thorndike (133 Mass. 46) ... . 209, 229 Coffin V. Dunham (8 Cush. 404) 85 Coleman y. Parker (114 Mass. 30) 124 Collins V. Stephenson (8 Gray, 438) 87 Comer v. Chamberlain (6 Allen, 166) .... 219, 222 Commonwealth v. Badlam (9 Pick. 362) 10 V. Barry (115 Mass. 146) 62 V. Blood (97 Mass. 538) 179 V. Bowers (121 Mass. 45) 156 V. Briggs (16 Pick. 203) 77 V. Brigham (147 Mass. 414) 156 I'. Burk (11 Gray, 437) 62 V. Butler (1 Allen, 4) 63 V. Caponi (155 Mass. 534) 45, 50, 51 u. Carroll (124 Mass. 30) 62 V. Cheney (114 Mass. 281) 63 V. Churchill (2 Met. 118) 5 V. Clifford (145 Mass. 97) 156 . V. Coffey (121 Mass. 66) 77 V. Coughlin (14 Gray, 389) 62 V. Daley (148 Mass. 11) 63 V. Davis (9 Cush. 283) 120 V. Dill (156 Mass. 226) 51 V. Eagan (103 Mass. 71) 62 V. Feeney (13 Allen, 560) 63 V. Flaherty (140 Mass. 454) 63 V. Funai (146 Mass. 570) 62 u. Gannon (97 Mass. 547) 62 V. Gormley (133 Mass. 580) 63 V. Graham (157 Mass. 73) 48, 57, 61, 93 V. Gray (129 Mass. 474) 156 V. Ham (156 Mass. 485) . 93 — V. Hayden (163 Mass. 453) 51, 54 TABLE OF CASES. XV Page Commonwealth u. Hayes (145 Mass. 289) 63 V. HefEron (102 Mass. 148) 63 V. Hill (145 Mass. 805) 62 • V. HoUis (140 Mass. 436) 154 V. Holt (121 Mass. 61) 51, 156 V. Hopkins (133 Mass. 381) 63 V. Horton (2 Gray, 354) 154 V. Hunt (4 Cush. 49; 56 ■ V. Hurley (14 Gray, 411) 51 V. Johnson (10 Allen, 196) 51 V. Kendall (162 Mass. 221) 178 V. Kennedy (119 Mass. 211) 62 V. Kenney (120 Mass. 387) 51 V. Knowlton (2 Mass. 530) 5 V. Lafayette (148 Mass. 130) 62 V. Lane (113 Mass. 458) 57 — r- V. Lewis (1 Met. 151) 63 V. McAfee (108 Mass. 458) 66 V. Manley (12 Pick. 173) 15 V. Mash (7 Met. 472) 54 V. Merriam (14 Pick. 518) 154 . — — V. Moore (162 Mass. 441) 64 V. Munsey (112 Mass. 287) 63 V. Munson (127 Mass. 459) 44 V. Murphy (2 Gray, 510) 63 — — V. Murphy (165 Mass. 66) 23 V. Nichols (134 Mass. 531) 154 V. Mckerson (5 Allen, 518) 78 V. Phillipsburg (10 Mass. 78) 10 V. Pratt (126 Mass. 462) 62 u. Richards (18 Pick. 434) 227 V. Roberts (132 Mass. 267) 63 u. Tarr (4 Allen, 315) 155 V. Thompson (11 Allen, 23) 149 V. Thompson (99 Mass. 444) 51 xvi TABLE OF CASES. Page Commonwealth v. Thrasher (11 Gray, 450) .... 154 V. Trefethen (157 Mass. 180) 20 V. Tryon (99 Mass. 442) 63 V. Waterman (122 Mass. 43) 52 V. Welch (97 Mass. 593) 63 V. Whalen (16 Gray, 25) 63 V. Williams (7 Gray, 337) 143 D. Wood (97 Mass. 225) 62 Conant v. Burnham (133 Mass. 503) 85 Constantinides v. Walsh (146 Mass. 281) 238 Converse v. Wales (4 Allen, 512) 226 Cook V. Cook (11 Gray, 123) 214 V. Cook (144 Mass. 163) 150 Coolidge V. Neat (129 Mass. 146) 29 V. Smith (129 Mass. 554) 136 Copeland v. Sturtevant (156 Mass. 114) 202 Corey v. Corey (19 Pick. 29) 83 Cormerais v. Wesselhoeft (114 Mass. 550) . . . 114, 223 Cowan V. Cowan (139 Mass. 377) 165 Cowdrey v. Cowdrey (131 Mass. 186) 202 Cowles V. Cowles (112 Mass. 298) 160 Coye V. Leach (8 Met. 371) 199 Crane v. Crane (17 Pick. 422) 204 u. Kelley (7 Allen, 250) 144 Crehore v. Crehore (97 Mass. 330) 61 Crittenden v. Alexander (15 Gray, 432) 10 Culver V. Dwight (6 Gray, 444) 26 Cumming v. Gumming (135 Mass. 386) . . 153, 175, 177 Cummings v. Cummings (143 Mass. 340) 143 u. Hodgdon (147 Mass, 21) 81 Cummington «. Belchertown (149 Mass. 223) ... 55 Cunningham v. Keardon (98 Mass. 538) .... 84, 238 Curtis V. Curtis (5 Gray, 535) 75 Cushing V. Adams (18 Pick. 110) 13 TABLE OF CASES. Xvii Page Dale v. Hanover National Bank (155 Mass. 141) . . 204 Daniels v. Richardson (22 Pick. 565) 9 D'Arcy u.' Blake (2 Sch. & Lef. 387) 221 Darrow v. Darrow (159 Mass. 262) 150, 151 Davenport v. Davenport (5 Allen, 464) 94 Davis V. Newton (6 Met. 537) 17 ». Ney (125 Mass. 590) 40 V. Wetherell (13 Allen, 60) 215, 222 Davlin v. Stone (4 Cush. 359) 120 Davol V. Davol (13 Mass. 264) 183 Dawes v. Howard (4 Mass. 97) 82 V. Rodier (125 Mass. 421) 129 Dean v. Richmond (5 Pick. 461) 151 u. SkifE (128 Mass. 174) 24,27 Debinson v. Emmons (158 Mass. 592) 124 Degnan v. Farr (126 Mass. 297) 114, 115 Dempsey v. Chambers (154 Mass. 330) 5 Dennis v. Clark (2 Cush. 347) 30 Denny v. Denny (8 Allen, 311) 165 Derby v. Phelps (2 N. H. 515) 28 Deshon v. Wood (148 Mass. 132) 27, 36 Dexter v. Booth (2 Allen, 559) 105 V. Codman (148 Mass. 421) 192 V. Phillips (121 Mass. 178) 20 Dodge V. Favor (15 Gray, 82) 83 Donahue v. Hubbard (154 Mass. 537) .... 101, 115 Donovan v. Donovan (9 Allen, 140) 61 Dowe V. Smith (11 Allen, 107) 88 Downs V. Flanders (150 Mass. 92) 89, 170 Draper v. Buggee (133 Mass. 258) 110 V. Jackson (16 Mass. 480) 102 Dresel v. Jordan (104 Mass. 407) 85 Drew V. Gordon (13 Allen, 120) 206 Dudley v. Sanborn (159 Mass. 185) 243 b XViii TABLE OF CASES. Page Duggan V. Wright (157 Mass. 228) 114 Dumain v. Gwynne (10 Allen, 270) 14, 71, 75 Dunham v. Dunham (128 Mass. 34) 184 Dunn V. Sargent (101 Mass. 336) 143 Durell V. Hayward (9 Gray, 248) 241 Dyer v. Clark (5 Met. 562) 213 V. Swift (154 Mass. 159) 134 Eames v. Sweetser (101 Mass. 78) 87 Eastham v. Barrett (152 Mass. 56) 211 Eaton V. Eaton (122 Mass. 276) 171 Edgerlyv. Edgerly(112Mass. 53) 149,186 V. Edgerly (112 Mass. 175) 116 V. Whalan (106 Mass. 307) 15, 143 Edson V. Edson (108 Mass. 590) 186 Edwards v. Stevens (3 Allen, 315) 110 Ela V. Edwards (16 Gray, 91) 37 Eldredge v. Forrestal (7 Mass. 253) 211 Elliot V. Elliot (137 Mass. 116) 211 Emerson v. Cutler (14 Pick. 108) 18 . V. Harris (6 Met. 475) 212 Estabrook v. Earle (97 Mass. 302) 135 Esty V. Clark (101 Mass. 36) 228 Fairbanks v. Snow (145 Mass. 153) 112 Falk V. Turner (101 Mass. 494) 39, 40 Farnham v. Pierce (141 Mass. 203) 74 Farrelly v. Ladd (10 Allen, 127) 40 Farwell v. Cotting (8 Allen, 211) 216 Faucett v. Currier (109 Mass. 79) 144 Fay w. Guynon (131 Mass. 31) 188 Fearing v. Jones (149 Mass. 12) 124 Fellows V. Smith (130 Mass. 376) 200 Fera v. Fera (98 Mass. 155) 162, 165 TABLE OF CASES. XIX Page Feran v. Eudolphsen (106 Mass. 471) 128 Field V. Gooding (106 Mass. 310) 116 Finnegan v. Lucy (157 Mass. 439) 94 Fisk V. Cushman (6 Cush. 20) 102 Fiske V. Mcintosh (101 Mass. 66) 135 Fletcher v. Evans (140 Mass. 241) 242 Ford V. Ford (104 Mass. 198) 159, 166 V. Ford (143 Mass. 577) 160, 161 Foss V. Fo.ss (12 Allen, 26) 60 Foster v. Fifield (20 Pick. 67) 208 V. Foster (130 Mass. 189) 183 V. Leach (160 Mass. 418) 112 V. Leland (141 Mass. 187) 201 V. Waterman (124 Mass. 592) 79 Fowle V. Tidd (15 Gray, 94) 127 V. Torrey (181 Mass. 289) Ill V. Torrey (135 Mass. 87) 109, 110 Fox V. Davis (113 Mass. 255) 188 Franklin v. Franklin (154 Mass. 515) . . 34, 44, 161, 17-0 Freeland v. Freeland (128 Mass. 509) 223 French v. French (4 Mass. 587) 158 V. French (14 Gray, 186) . 160, 176 Fuller V. Linzee (135 Mass. 468) 198 Gardner v. Bean (124 Mass. 347) 134 V. Gardner (2 Gray, 434) 167, 175 V. Hooper (3 Gray, 898) 17, 221 Garnett v. Garnett (114 Mass. 379) 165 Gassett v. Grout (4 Met. 486) 34 Gay V. Kingsley (11 Allen, 345) 115 Gazynski v. Colburn (11 Cush. 10) 11 George u. Gobey (128 Mass. 289) 93 Gerry v. Gerry (11 Gray, 381) 15 Gibson v. Crehore (3 Pick. 475) 215 XX TABLE OF CASES. Page Gibson V. Crehore (5 Pick. 146) 215 V. Gibson (15 Mass. 106) 35 Giles V. Moore (4 Gray, 600) 223 Glass V. Glass (114 Mass. 563) 54, 59 Gleason v. Boston (144 Mass. 25) 73, 79, 97 Goodnow V. Hill (125 Mass. 587) 112 V. Shattuck (186 Mass. 223) ....... 65 Googins u. Googins (152 Mass. 533) 53 Gordon v. Dix (106 Mass. 805) 144 Gore V. Brazier (3 Mass. 523) 214 Goshen v. Richmond (4 Allen, 458) 55 Gould V. Emerson (99 Mass. 1.54) 196 V. Gould (1 Met. 382) ......... 165 Grant v. Willey (101 Mass. 356) 30 Graves v. Graves (108 Mass. 314) 149, 181 Greene v. Greene (11 Pick. 410) 172 V. Greene (2 Gray, 361) 186 Greenwood v. Curtis (6 Mass. 358) 53 Gregory v. Paul (15 Mass. 31) 9 V. Pierce (4 Met. 478) 10 Grime v. Borden (166 Mass. 198) 188 Grover v. Grover (24 Pick. 261) 125 Haddock v. Boston & Maine R. R. (146 Mass. 155) . 192 Hadley v. Heywood (121 Mass. 236) 67 V. Houghton (7 Pick. 29) 13 Haines v. Corliss (4 Mass. 659) 10 Hale V. Hale (1 Gray, 518) 205, 206 V. Munn (4 Gray, 132) 212 Hall V. Hall (4 Allen, 89) 177 V. Weir (1 Allen, 261) . . ' 85 Hamilton w. Lane (138 Mass. 358) 84,119 Hancock v. Merrick (10 Cush. 41) 85 Handy v. Foley (121 Mass. 259) 68 TABLE OF CASES. XXI Page Handy v. Handy (124 Mass. 394) 177 Hanlon v. Thayer (Quincy, 99) 16 Hanover v. Turner (14 Mass. 227) 178 Hanson v. Hanson (111 Mass. 158) 167 Hapgood V. Houghton (10 Pick. 154) 238 Haraden «. Larrabee (113 Mass. 430) 228 Hardistey v. Barney (Comber. 356) 16 Hardy v. Smith (136 Mass. 328) 179, 231, 232 Harmon v. Old Colony R. R. Co. (165 Mass. 100) 20, 65, 68 Harnden v. Gould (126 Mass. 411) 128, 130 Harriman v. Gray (108 Mass. 229) 129 Harrington v. Connolly (116 Mass. 69) 217 V. Harrington (107 Mass. 329) 166, 167 V. Thompson (9 Gray, 65) 139 Harriott v. Plimpton (166 Mass. 585) 34 Harrison v. Swift (13 Allen, 144) 30 Hart V. Buffinton (150 Mass. 75) 132 Harteau v. Harteau (14 Pick. 181) 172 Harvard College v. Head (111 Mass. 209) 37 Haskell v. Haskell (152 Mass. 16) 76 Haskins v. Kendall (158 Mass. 224) 199 Hastings v. Mace (157 Mass. 499) 216 Hawkins v. Providence & Worcester R.R. Co. (119 Mass. 596) 117, 118, 120 Haynes v. Jones (5 Met. 292) 211 Hayward v. Cain (110 Mass. 273) lOi V. Hayward (20 Pick. 517) 9 Heath v. Withington (6 Cush. 497) 225 Heburn v. Warner (112 Mass. 271) 109 Heckle v. Lurvey (101 Mass. 344) 68 Henneger ». Lomas (32 L. R. A. 848) 8 58 Hervey v. Moseley (7 Gray, 479) 52 61 Hews V. Hews (7 Gray, 279) 162 Hill V. Davis (4 Mass. 137) 192 V. Duncan (110 Mass. 238) 69, 145 xxii TABLE OF CASES. Page Hill V. Hill (2 Mass. 150) 158 V. Hunt (9 Gray, 66) 9 V. Wright (129 Mass. 296) 132 Hills V. Bearse (9 Allen, 403) 141 Holbrook v. Comstock (16 Gray, 109) 181, 188 V. Finney (4 Mass. 566) 211 V. Holbrook (114 Mass. 568) 187 V. Waters (19 Pick. 354) 17 Holden v. James (11 Mass. 396) 148 Holland v. Holland (2 Mass. 154) 155 Hollenbeck v. Pixley (3 Gray, .521) 205 Holmes u. Hancock (158 Mass. 398). 211 V. Winchester (133 Mass. 140f 110 V. Winchester (185 Mass. 299) 110 V. Winchester (138 Mass. 542) 201 Holt V. Holt (117 Mass. 202) 160 Hood V. Hood (11 Allen, 196) 179 V. Hood (110 Mass. 463) 179 Hook V. George (108 Mass. 324) 33 Horgan v. Pacific Mills (158 Mass. 402) ... 71, 79, 82, 83 Howard v. Fessenden (14 Allen, 124) 125 V. Howard (15 Mass. 196) 183 V. Priest (5 Met. 582) 213 Howes V. Bigelow (13 Mass. 384) 9 V. Burt (130 Mass. 368) 203 Hubbard v. Hubbard (6 Met. 50) 229 Hubert v. Fera (99 Mass. 198) 85 Hunt V. Poole (139 Mass. 224) 133 Hunter v. Boucher (3 Pick. 289) 86 Hurley v. O'SuUivan (137 Mass. 86) 226 Ingalls v. Ingalls (150 Mass. 57) 148 Ingham v. White (4 Allen, 412) 35, 112, 142 TABLE OF CASES. XXUl Page Jackson v. Parks (10 Cush. 550) Ill V. Von Zedlitz (136 Mass. 342) 41 Jacobs V. Hesler (113 Mass. 157) 105 Jefferds v. Alvard (151 Mass. 94) 133 Jenkins v. Holt (109 Mass. 261) 35 Jenne v. Jenne (7 Mass. 94) 168 Jennison v. Hapgood (14 Pick. 345) 215 Jewett V. Davis (10 Allen, 68) 140, 141 V. Shattuck (124 Mass. 590) 103 Johnson v. Fay (16 Gray, 144) 201 . — - V. Sherwin (3 Gray, 374) 87 Jordan v. Middlesex E. E. Co. (138 Mass. 425) ... 68 Kavanaugh v. Kavanaugh (146 Mass. 40) .... 91 Kearns v. CunnifE (138 Mass. 434) 210 Keith V. Woombell (8 Pick. 211) 16 Kelley v. Eiley (106 Mass. 339) 30, 32, 34 Kelly V. Drew (12 Allen, 107) 117 Kendall v. Jennison (119 Mass. 251) 10 Kent w. Dunham (106 Mass. 586) 143 Kenworthy v. Sawyer (125 Mass. 28) 112 Keyes v. Carleton (141 Mass. 45) 41 Kimball v. Story (108 Mass. 382) 228 King V. King (100 Mass. 224) 215 V. Stetson (11 Allen, 407) 212 King, The, v. GreenhiU (4 Ad. & El. 624) 14 Kingsbury v. Wilmarth (2 Allen, 310) 205 Knapp V. Knapp (134 Mass. 353) 181, 183 Kneil v. Egleston (140 Mass, 202) Ill Knickerbocker Life Ins. Go. v. Weitz (99 Mass. 157) . 197 Knight V. Thayer (125 Mass. 25) 135 Knowles v. Hull (99 Mass. 562) 115 xxiv TABLE OF CASES. Page Labakee v. Colby (99 Mass. 559) 135 Lakin v. Lakin (2 Allen, 45) 185 Lanfair v. Lanfair (18 Pick. 299) 212 Lavery v. Egan (143 Mass. 389) 211 Lawrence v. Bartlett (2 Allen, 86) 38 Lazell V. Lazell (8 Allen, 575) 201 Lea V. Lea (8 Allen, 418) 161 V. Lea (99 Mass. 493) 161 Leavitt v. Leavitt (135 Mass. 191) 168 Lee V. Boston (2 Gray, 484) 47 -, — V. Miller (11 Allen, 37) 201 Legg V. Legg (8 Mass. 99) 9 Leggate v. Clark (111 Mass. 308) 141 Leonard v. Leonard (151 Mass. 151) ...... 164 Leverett v. Deerfleld (6 Allen, 431) 218 Lewis V. Lewis (106 Mass. 809) 166 Libby v. Chase (117 Mass. 105) . . 104, 116, 125, 143, 219 Lincoln v. Perry (149 Mass. 368) 211 Lindsey v. Leighton (150 Mass. 285) 133 Lisk V. Lisk (155 Mass. 153) 205 Litchfield v. Cudworth (15 Pick. 23) 18, 206 Lithgow V. Kavenagh (9 Mass. 161) 10 Little V. Little (13 Gray, 264) 165 Livingston v. Hammond (162 Mass. 375) 84 Lobdell V. Hayes (4 Allen, 187) 212 Lockwood V. Corey (150 Mass. 82) 130 Loker v. Gerald (157 Mass. 42) 172, 180 Lombard v. Morse (155 Mass. 136) 8, 39, 104 Long V. Drew (114 Mass. 77) 131 Lord V. Davison (3 Allen, 131) Ill V. Parker (3 Allen, 127) 21, 100 Loring v. Eliot (16 Gray, 568) 221 . V. Thorndike (5 Allen, 257) 50 Loud V. Loud (129 Mass. 14) 174 Lovell V. Williams (125 Mass. 439) . . . .y . 133, 134 TABLE OF CASES. XXV Page Low V. Blanchard (116 Mass. 272) 94 Lowry v. Plitt (2 Weekly Notes of Cases, 675) ... 239 Lucas V. Lucas (3 Gray, 136) 187 Luud V. Woods (11 Met. 566) 215 Luscomb V. Ballard (5 Gray, 403) 238 Lyon V. Lyon (2 Gray, 307) 179 V. Proaty (154 Mass. 488) 106 Lyster v. Lyster (111 Mass. 327) .... 158, 159, 161 McCabe v. Bellows (7 Gray, 148) 215 McCarty v. Coffin (157 Mass. 478) 31 V. De Best (120 Mass. 89) 68 McCluskey v. Provident Institution for Savings (103 Mass. 300) 103 McCowan v. Donaldson (128 Mass. 169) 117 McGrath v. Reynolds (116 Mass. 566) 124 Mclntyre v. Knowlton (6 Allen, 565) 133 McKavlin v. Bresslin (8 Gray, 177) 16 McMahon v. Gray (150 Mass. 289) 225 Maglathlin v. Maglathlin (138 Mass. 299) 175 Magrath v. Magrath (103 Mass. 577) 162 Major V. Holmes (124 Mass. 108) 112 Mansfield u. Mansfield (13 Mass. 412) 165 Marden v. Boston (155 Mass. 359) 96 Marshall v. Berry (13 Allen, 43) 40, 123 V. Jaquith (134 Mass. 138) 122 Martin v. Martin (146 Mass. 517) 126 Mason v. Bowles (117 Mass. 86) 129, 131 V. Mason (140 Mass. 63) 223 Mathews v. Mathews (141 Mass. 511) 210, 230 Mayhew v. Thayer (8 Gray, 172) 84, 85 Mayo V. Mayo (119 Mass. 290) 157, 160 Meagher v. Driscoll (99 Mass. 281) 235 Medway v. Needham (16 Mass. 157) 56 XXVI TABLE OF CASES. Page Melanefy v. O'DrisooU (164 Mass. 422) 82 Melley v. Casey (99 Mass. 241) 141 Melvin v. Proprietors of Locks & Canals (16 Pick. 161) 13 Mercier v. Chace (11 Allen, 194) 202 Merriam v. Boston, Clinton & Fitchburg R. R. Co. (117 Mass. 241) 141 Merrick v. Plumley (99 Mass. 566) 133 Merrill v. Bullock (105 Mass. 486) 140 V. Merrill (126 Mass. 228) 157 V. Parker (112 Mass. 250) 131 V. Peaslee (146 Mass. 460) 190 Messiter v. Wright (16 Pick. 151) 215 Meyers o. Pope (110 Mass. 314) 44 Miles V. Boyden (3 Pick. 213) 82 Miller v. Goodwin (8 Gray, 542) 38 V. Hyde (161 Mass. 472) 20 V. Miller (150 Mass. Ill) . 92, 161 Miuot, Pet'r (164 Mass. 38) 125, 135, 227 Mitchell V. Pease (7 Cush. 350) 123 Model Lodging House Association v. Boston (114 Mass. 133) 114 Monk V. Capen (5 Allen, 146) 202 Moore v. Valda (151 Mass. 363) 69 Moors V. Moors (121 Mass. 232) 149 Moran u. Somes (154 Mass. 200) 183, 184 Morris v. McCarty (158 Mass. 11) , 101 Morrison v. Morrison (136 Mass. 310) 167, 174 V. Morrison (142 Mass. 361) 174 Morse v. Mason (103 Mass. 560) 133 V. Thompson (4 Cush. 562) 225 V. Toppan (3 Gray, 411) 10 Morton B. Morton (4 Cush. 518) 183 Motte V. Alger (15 Gray, 322) 12, 115 Mulhern v. McDavitt (16 Gray, 404) 84 Mundo V. Shepard (166 Mass. 323) 136 Mutual Life Ins. Co. of N. Y. ;;. Allen (138 Mass. 24) 198 TABLE OF CASES. XXVU Page Nathan v. Nathan (166 Mass. 294) ... 37, 38, 229 Nelson v. Garey (114 Mass. 418) 85 Newcomb v. Newcomb (12 Gray, 28) 182 Newell V. West (149 Mass. 520) 204, 206 Newhall v. Lynn Five Cents Savings Bank (101 Mass. 428) 216 Newton D. Cook (4 Gray, 46) 215 Nichols V. Munsel (115 Mass. 567) 217 V. Nichols (136 Mass. 256) 115 V. Weaver (7 Kansas, 373) 28 Nickerson v. Thacher (146 Mass. 609) 217 Nightingale v. Withiugton (15 Mass. 272) 82 Nims V. Ford (159 Mass. 575) 195 Norcross v. Norcross (155 Mass. 425) 45, 52 Norris u. Massachusetts Ins. Co. (131 Mass. 294) . . 197 Nourse v. Henshaw (123 Mass. 96) 144 Noyes v. Stone (163 Mass. 490) 214 O'Gara v. Neylon (161 Mass. 140) 216 Oliver v. Oliver (151 Mass. 349) 76 O'Neil V. Wolffsohn (137 Mass. l34) 130 Opinion of Justices (5 Met. 587) 47 (107 Mass. 604) 126 (115 Mass. 602) 127 (150 Mass. 586) 126 Orrok v. Orrok (1 Mass. 341) 167 Osgood V. Bliss (141 Mass. 474) 37 y. Breed (12 Mass. 525) 225 V. Osgood (158 Mass. 38) 90 Pacific National Bank v. Windram (133 Mass. 175) 40, 41 Padelford v. Padelford (7 Pick. 152) 214 D. PadeHord (159 Mass. 281) 162 XXVm TABLE OF CASES. Page Page V. Estes (19 Pick. 269) 9 Page V. Trufant (2 Mass. 159) 188 Paine v. Farr (118 Mass. 74) 131 V. HoUister (139 Mass. 144) 37 Palmer v. Crook (7 Gray, 418) 67 Paris V. Strong (51 Ind. 339) 29 Parish v. Stone (14 Pick. 198) 123, 125 Parker v. Kane (4 Allen, 346) 112 V. Simonds (1 Allen, 258) 144 Parton v. Hervey (1 Gray, 118) 50 Pastene v. Bonini (166 Mass. 85) 228 Pastoret v. Pastoret (6 Mass. 276) 167 Pattee v. Harrington (11 Pick. 221) 9 Paul V. Frazier (3 Mass. 71) 30 H. Paul (136 Mass. 286) 202 Peabody v. Peabody (104 Mass. 195) 160 Pease v. Allis (110 Mass. 157) 225 Peaslee v. Peaslee (147 Mass. 171) 37, 223 Peck V. Peck (155 Mass. 479) 44 Peirce v. Peirce (160 Mass. 216) 151, 161 Pendleton v. Pomeroy (4 Allen, 510) 212 Perkins v. Hays (3 Gray, 405) 42 Peters v. Siders (126 Mass. 135) 228 Pettee v. Wilmarth (5 Allen, 144) 205 Phelps V. Simons (159 Mass. 415) 102 V. Sullivan (140 Mass. 36) 224 Phillips V. Frye (14 Allen, 36) 115 Pidge V. Pidge (3 Met. 257) 162 Pierce v. Boston Five Cents Savings Bank (129 Mass. 425) 124 V. Chace (108 Mass. 254) 101, 136 V. Kittredge (115 Mass. 374) 135 V. Pierce (3 Pick. 299) 173 V. Pierce (160 Mass. 216) 161 V. Proprietors Swan Point Cemetery (10 R. I. 227) 241 TABLE OF CASES. Xxix Page Pingrey v. National Life Ins. Co. (144 Mass. 374) . . 199 Pinkerton v. Sargent (102 Mass. 568) 230 Pitkin V. Thompson (13 Pick. 64) 9 Place V. Washburn (163 Mass. 530) 89 Plaisted v. Hair (150 Mass. 275) 132 Plumer v. Lord (5 Allen, 460) 100 u. Lord (7 Allen, 481) 100 Pollard V. Pollard (1 Allen, 490) 229 Pollock V. Learned (102 Mass. 49) 229 Pond V. Pond (132 Mass. 219) 155, 157 Porter v. Wakefield (146 Mass. 25) . . Ill, 115, 119, 185 Pratt V. Felton (4 Cu.sh. 174) 228 1). Pratt (157 Mass. 503) 150,152,173 V. Pratt (161 Mass. 276) 200, 203 Pray v. Stebbins (141 Mass. 219) 101 Prentiss v. Prentiss (11 Allen, 47) 227 Prescott Bank v. Caverly (7 Gray, 217) . . . . 111,112 Proctor V. Clark (154 Mass. 45) 208, 211, 235 Proper v. Cobb (104 Mass. 589) 130 Prout V. Pittsfield Fire District (154 Mass. 450) . . 107 Putnam v. Putnam (8 Pick. 433) 56 Pynchon v. Lester (6 Gray, 314) 213 Pyne v. Wood (145 Mass. 558) 119 Eamsdill u. Wentworth (101 Mass. 125) .... 226 V. Wentworth (106 Mass. 320) 226 Randlett v. Kice (141 Mass. 385) 53 Kawson v. Rawson (156 Mass. 578) 59 Kay V. Smith (9 Gray, 141) 27 Raymond v. Holden (2 Cush. 264) 13, 136 Raynes v. Bennett (114 Mass. 424) 84 Read v. Earle (12 Gray, 423) 133, 143 V. Stewart (129 Mass. 407) 94 , V. Whitney (7 Gray, 533) 212, 221 XXX TABLE OF CASES. Page Reemie v. Reemie (4 Mass. 586) 156 Reiman v. Hamilton (111 Mass. 245) 100 Reynolds v. Reynolds (-3 Allen, 605) 60 V. Sweetser (15 Gray, 78) 85 Rice V. Nickerson (9 Allen, 478) 78 Richards v. Chace (2 Gray, 383) 201 Richardson v. Buswell (10 Met. 506) 120 V. Hall (124 Mass. 228) 229 Ridley v. Knox (138 Mass. 83) 182 Riley v. Hampshire County Natl. Bank (164 Mass. 482) 133 Robbins v. Robbins (100 Mass. 150) 153, 176 V. Robbins (140 Mass. 528) 64, 174 Robinson's Case (131 Mass. 376) 126 Roby V. Phelon (118 Mass. 541) 112 Rockwood V. Wiggin (16 Gray, 402) 125 Rogers v. Coy (164 Mass. 391) 135 V. Rogers (122 Mass. 423) 176 V. Ward (8 Allen, 387) 109 Ross V. Ross (103 Mass. 575) 170 V. Ross (129 Mass. 243) 56, 179 Russell V. Brooks (7 Pick. 65) 16 V. Cowles (15 Gray, 582) 26 V. Russell (15 Gray, 159) 213 Sanbokn v. Flagler (9 Allen, 474) . Sargeant v. Fuller (105 Mass. 119) . Saunders v. Robinson (144 Mass. 306) Savage v. Winchester (15 Gray, 453) Sawyer v. Kendall (10 Cush. 241) Schrow V. Schrow (103 Mass. 574) Scott V. Rand (115 Mass. 104) . Sears v. Sears (121 Mass. 267) . Sessions v. Moseley (4 Cush. 87) . Sewall V. Sewall (122 Mass. 156) 29 215 197 135 225 170 21 210 123, 125 173, 176, 180 TABLE OF CASES. XXXl Page Sewall u. Sewall (130 Mass. 201) 170 Shamion v. Shannon (4 Allen, 134) 179 V. White (109 Mass. 146) 207 Shattuck V. Gragg (23 Pick. 88) 213 Shaw V. Boston & Worcester K. R. Co. (8 Gray, 45) . 68 V. Hearsey (5 Mass. 521) 101 V. Shaw (98 Mass. 158) 172 V. Thompson (16 Pick. 198) 73 Sheedy v. Roach (124 Mass. 472) ........ 124 Sherman v. Newton (6 Gray, 307) 230 V. Rawson (102 Mass. 395) 30, 31 Shores v. Carley (8 Allen, 425) .218 Shuttlesworth v. Noyes (8 Mass. 229) 17 Silloway v. Brown (12 Allen, 30) ....... 202 Silsby V. Bullock (10 Allen, 94) 223, 232 Silverman v. Silverman (140 Mass. 560) .... 91, 188 Simes v. Rockwell (156 Mass. 372) «133 Simonds v. Simonds (103 Mass. 572) 148 Skinner v. Tirrell (159 Mass. 474) 86, 120 Slack V. Slack (123 Mass. 443) . 203 Slade V. Slade (106 Mass. 499) 183 Slawson v. Loring (5 Allen, 340) 112 Smith, Pet'r (156 Mass. 408) 211 V. Allen (5 Allen, 454) 36 V. Bird (3 Allen, 34) 140, 142 V. Chandler (3 Gray, 392) 16 17. McCarty (119 Mass. 519) 211, 212 V. Shaw (150 Mass. 297) 225 V. Sherman (4 Cush. 408) 33 V. Smith (13 Gray, 209) 179 V. Smith (154 Mass. 262) 89 V. Smith (167 Mass. 87) 159, 176 u. Wells (134 Mass. 11) 231 Snow V. Paine (114 Mass. 520) 110 w. Sheldon (126 Mass. 332) 130 XXXU TABLE OF OASES. Page Sohier v. Trinity Church (109 Mass. 1) 237 Somerville v. Boston (120 Mass. 574) 96 Southwiok V. Southwick (97 Mass. 327) .... 65, 161 i Southworth v. Packard (7 Mass. 95) 67 Sparbawk v. Sparhawk (116 Mass. 315) 148 V. Sparhawk (120 Mass. 390) .... 151, 181 Spaulding v. Day (10 Allen, 96) 112 Spelman v. Aldrich (126 Mass. 113) 122 Spencer v. Leicester (140 Mass. 224) 97 Spooner v. Spooner (155 Mass. 52) 113, 114 Springfield Institution for Savings v. Copeland (160 Mass. 380) 103 Staigg V. Atkinson (144 Mass. 564) 232 Stanwood v. Stanwood (17 Mass. 57) 110 Staples V. Brown (13 Allea, 64) 224 Stearns v. Bullens (8 Allen, 581) 114 V. Stearns (1 Pick, 157) 208 V. Swift (8 Pick. 535) 214 Stebbins v. Palmer (1 Pick. 71) 33 Stetson V. O'SulIivan (8 Allen, 321) 110, 115 Stevens v. B^als (10 Cash. 291) 10 V. Reed (112 Mass. 515) 144 Stewart v. Jenkins (6 Allen, 300) 135 Stimpson v. Achorn (158 Mass. 342) 122 Stoughton V. Cambridge (165 Mass. 251) 96 Stowe V. Heywood (7 Allen, 118) 78 Stratton v. Hernon (154 Mass. 310) 115, 133 Strong V. Smith (1 Met. 476) 9 Stuart V. Stuart (123 Mass. 370) 151 Sturbridge v. Franklin (160 Mass. 149) 86, 87 V. Hunter (160 Mass. 149) 86- Sailings V. Richmond (5 Allen, 187) 38 V. Sailings (9 Allen, 234) 38 Sullivan v. Sullivan (106 Mass. 474) 225 Sutton V. Warren (10 Met. 451) 58 TABLE OF CASES. XXXlll Page Swan V. Snow (11 Allen^224) 197 V. Wiswall (15 Pick. 126) 13 Sweeney v. Boston Five Cents Savings Bank (116 Mass. ''384) 102, 116 V. Muldoon (139 Mass. 304) 239, 243 Taft v. Stevens (3 Gray, 504) 208 Talbot V. Shrewsbury (4 Mylne & C. 672) 80 Tarbell v. Tarbell (10 Allen, 278) 37 Tasker v. Stanley (153 Mass. 148) 65 Taylor v. Buttrick (165 Mass. 547) 39, 41 Terry v. Foster (1 Mass. 146) 226 Thacher v. Churchill (118 Mass. 108) 112 V. Phinney (7 Allen, 146) 10 Thayer v. Thayer (101 Mass. Ill) 154 Thomson v. O'SuUivan (6 Allen, 303) 12, 115 Thurston, Pet'r (154 Mass. 596) 41 0. Thurston (99 Mass. 39) 166 Tinker v. Beach (11 Met. 349) 37 Tobey v. Smith (15 Gray, 535) 135 Todd V. Clapp (118 Mass. 495) 100 Tomlinson ^. Bury (145 Mass. 346) 229 Toomey v. McLean (105 Mass. 122) 212 V. Sanborn (146 Mass. 28) 133 Towle V. Towle (114 Mass. 167) 122 Townsley v. Chapin (12 Allen, 476) 141 Tracy v. Keith (11 Allen, 214) 144 Troy V. Sargent (132 Mass. 408) 197 Tucker v. Fenno (110 Mass. 311) 21, 114 TuUy V. Tally (159 Mass. 91) 90 Tunnicliffe v. Bay Cities Consolidated E. K. Co. (32 L. R. A. 142) 68 Turner v. Nye (7 Allen, 176) 107 c XXxiv TABLE OF CASES. Page Tyler v. Wheeler (160 Mass. 206) 231, 232 Tyndale v. Randall (154 Mass. 103) 125 Unity Mutual Life Assurance Association v. Dugan (118 Mass. 219) 196 Upham V. Emerson (119 Mass. 509) 229 Van Buken v. Swan (4 Allen, 380) 141 Van Houten v. Morse (162 Mass. 414) 33 Vincent v. Spooner (2 Gush. 467) 223 Viney v. Abbott (109 Mass. 300) 39 W v.W (141 Mass. 495) 160 Wales V. Coffin (13 Allen, 213) 101 V. Wales (119 Mass. 89) v Walsh V. Wilson (130 Mass. 124) 215 V. Wilson (131 Mass. 535) 215 Wavdwell v. Wardwell (9 Allen, 518) 80 Wares, Pet'r (161 Mass. 70) 74 Warren v. Jennison (6 Gray, 559) 192 V. Warren (3 Mass. 321) 158 V. Williams (10 Cush. 79) 9 Washburn v. Hale (10 Pick. 429) 17 V. Sproat (16 Mass. 449) 125 V. Washburn (10 Pick. 374) 203, 204 Watkins v. Watkins (135 Mass. 83) 173 Watson V. Watson (150 Mass. 84) 211 Watts D. Watts (160 Mass. 464) 92,177 Webster v. Ellsworth (147 Mass. 602) 218 V. Potter (105 Mass. 414) 125 Weil V. Raymond (142 Mass. 206) 100, 129 TABLB 01- CASES. XXXV Page Weld V. Walker (130 Mass. 422) 238, 239 V. Walker (14 Am. Law Review, 57) .... 239 West Cambridge v. Lexington (1 Pick. 506) .... 56 Westgate v. Munroe (100 Mass. 227) 134 Weston V. Weston (143 Mass. 274) 171 Wheaton v. Trimble (145 Mass. 345) 133 Wheeler o. Bowen (20 Pick. 563) 17 V. Raymond (130 Mass. 247) 131 Whippen v. Whippen (147 Mass. 294) .... 153, 161 Whipple V. Dow (2 Mass. 415) 82 Whitaker v. Greer (129 Mass. 417) 217 White V. Bigelow (154 Mass. 593) 29, 40 V. Cutler (17 Pick. 248) 214 V. Graves (107 Mass. 325) 224 V White (105 Mass. 325) 55 Whithed v. Mallory (4 Cush. 138) 212 Whiting V. Earle (3 Pick. 201) 83 V. Whiting (114 Mass. 494) 152, 186 Whitney v. Closson (138 Mass. 49) 113, 188 V. Wheeler (116 Mass. 490) 123, 125 Wightman v. Coates (15 Mass. 1) 25, 26 Wild V. Brewer (2 Mass. 570) 226 Wilder v. Goss (14 Mass. 357) 226 u. Richie (117 Mass. 382) 112 V. Thayer (97 Mass. 439) 226 Wildes V. VanVoorhis (15 Gray, 139) 201 Wiley V. Wiley (161 Mass. 446) 166, 186 Willard v. Briggs (161 Mass. 58) 90 . -u. Eastham (15 Gray, 328) 139 V. Willard (4 Mass. 506) 165 Willey V. Beach (115 Mass. 559) 84 Williams v. Hayward (117 Mass. 532) . • 144 V. Williams (5 Gray, 24) 203 V. Williams (131 Mass. 533) 127 Wilmarth v. Bridges (113 Mass. 407) ...... 211 XXXVl TABLE OF CASES. Page Wilson V. Bryant (134 Mass. 291) 108 V. Fosket (6 Met. 400) 226 V. Wilson (154 Mass. 194) 174 V. Winslow (145 Mass. 339) 116 Winchester v. Holmes (138 Mass. 540) 110 Winn V. Sanford (145 Mass. 302) 189 V. Sanford (148 Mass. 39) ' 189, 223 Winslow V. Winslow (7 Mass. 96) 165 Wodell V. Coggeshall (2 Met. 89) 81 Wood I,. Corcoran (1 Allen, 405) 83 V. O'Kelley (8 Cush. 406) 84 Woodbury v. Freeland (16 Gray, 105) 140 Woodward v. Spurr (141 Mass. 288) 108, 110 Worthy v. Clapp (99 Mass. 561) 110 Wright V. Dresser (110 Mass. 51) 144 V. Vermont Life Ins. Co. (164 Mass. 302) ... 199 V. Wright (13 Allen, 207) 205 Wynkoop v. Wynkoop (42 Peun. St. 293) .... 239 Yale v. Wheelock (109 Mass. 502) 144 Young V. Mclntire (156 Mass. 27) 75 V. Young (4 Mass. 480) 165 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION. § 1. The people of this Commonwealth are subject to three kinds of law : — First : The National Law, consisting of the Constitution of the United States, and Statutes enacted by Congress under the provisions thereof, affecting the country at large, or the relations between the States and their respective citizens ; such, for example, as the tariff, the patent sys- tem, national banks, the post-office, interstate commerce, or the purity of the national suffrage, rarely touching upon the domestic relations. Second ; The Common Law, or such part thereof as our ancestors brought with them from Eng- land, which forms the substratum of our system of State jurisprudence. 1 2 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. Third : The Constitution of Massachusetts, and such statutes as are passed from time to time by our State legislature in modificatign of, and addition to, the Common Law; or in the intro- duction and extension of that branch of the law adopted from the Ecclesiastical Courts, known as Equity. § 2. The common law is supposed to consist of those maxims and customs found in early judicial decisions and legal treatises, which have been accepted as law from time immemorial, or, in the solemnity of our legal phrase, time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary. This it is that gives it its weight and authority.^ § 3. The common law has received much unde- served praise from panegyrists. In many respects it is, of course, a noble institution, and embodies the thought and reason of many great minds ; but it had its origin in an age of barbarism. It has passed through periods of ignorance and corrup- tion. Much of it is derived from habits and cus- toms no longer in vogue; much of it has been foisted upon us by fraud. ^ A vast amount of the reasoning is wholly false, based upon false prem- ises, and worked out with all the subtlety and sophistry that characterized the age of the so- called "schoolmen," one of whom. Duns Scotus, is immortalized in our word "dunce." 1 Blackstone's Commentaries, I., p. 67. s ^eepost, § 10. INTRODUCTION. 6 § 4. It was under this law that trial by ordeal flourished.^ The barbarous wager of battle seems to have been of Norman origin, and only intro- duced into England after the Conquest. The Anglo-Saxons, fathers of the common law, were not sufficiently self-restrained even for that form of litigation, being too fond of extra-judicial fighting to be willing to confine themselves to fighting under judicial sanction. ^ § 5. Douglas Campbell, a lawyer, in his inter- esting work upon the Puritan in Holland, Eng- land, and America, calls the common law a "system of a race of barbarians," and adds: "It must be borne in mind that the men who con- quered the Britons and founded England were pagan savages, the rudest of their race, and least tinctured with the civilization of Rome. Cut off from the Continent, where much of the old civili- zation still survived, the descendants of these men lingered on in barbarism long after some of their brethren across the Channel. They knew and cared little about legal principles. Quite early they established the doctrine common to all rude nations, that what some chief or judge had decided years before, however monstrous or un- 1 Pollock and Maitland's History of English Law, I., p. 15. 2 Id., pp. 16 and 28. As an illustration of the way we cling to the past, it may he said that wager of hattle was not abolished in England until 1819 (59 Geo. III. c. 46), after a crafty litigant had claimed its benefit. Ashford v. Thornton, 1 B & Aid. 405. 4 MAREIEU WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. just, must be followed by his successors. This made memory take the place of reason. Under this system there grew up a jurisprudence cum- brous, complicated, and unnatural, which, in many of its features, will only excite amazement and derision among our descendants a few gen- erations hence. " ' § 6. This language is somewhat intemperate; and it is doubtful if many lawyers trained in the common law would be willing to indorse it to its full extent. Although founded in barbarism, the advent of the common law was a dawning civilization.^ It is, moreover, doubtful whether the regard for precedents is not rather a charac- teristic of its later than of its earlier stages.^ § 7. That it exists to-day in a most objection- able form is clearly shown by a very learned member of our Supreme Judicial Court, who, as he says, has done "his share of quotations from the Year Books " * : " Learning is a very good 1 Puritan in Holland, England, and America, I., p. 63. 2 For an intensely interesting account of the mode in which " the \a,w has grown from barbarism to civilization," see The Com- mon Law, by 0. W. Holmes, now Mr. Justice Holmes of our Supreme Judicial Court. ^ Harvard Law Review, IX, p. 36. * For a tribute to the value of the Year Books as "the key to many a modern anomaly," and as containing " together with much that is petty and narrow," " the vigor of original thoughts, liberal ideas, and the breaking out of what we call the modern spirit," see Prof. J. B. Thayer's address in the Reports of the American Bar Association for 1895, p. 419. INTRODUCTION. thing. I should be the last to undervalue it : but it is liable to lead us astray. The law, so far as it depends on learning, is, indeed, as it has been called, a government of the living by the dead. An ideal system of law should draw all of its pos- tulates and its legislative justifications from sci- ence. As it is now we depend upon tradition, or vague sentiment, or the fact that we never thought of any other way of doing things as our only war- rant for rules which we enforce with as much con- fidence as if they embodied a recorded wisdom. " ^ § 8. Our Supreme Judicial Court, in a decision written by the author of the foregoing, has said : ^ " We are not at liberty to refuse to carry out to its consequences any principle which we believe to have been part of the common law, simply because the grounds of policy on which it must be justified seem to us to be hard to find, and prob- ably to have belonged to a different state of society." '^ In the course of the opinion, the Court ' Mr, Justice Holmes in Harvard Graduates' Magazine, Sept., 1895, p. 48. '■^ Dempsey v. Chambers, 154 Mass. 330. 8 The Court might have escaped had it followed the dictum in Commonwealth v. Knowlton, 2 Mass. 530, 534, to the effect that " our ancestors when they came into this new world claimed the common law as their birthright and brought it with them, except such parts as were judged inapplicable to their new state and condition " ; and that in Commonwealth v. Churchill, 2 Met. 118, 123, that the " Constitution has been construed as adopting the great body of the common law so far as these rules and principles were applicable to our condition and form of government." 6 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. refers, among other ancient authorities, to the treatise of one Bracton, who is said, by a leading law journal,^ to have been "little better than a literary fraud. " This literary fraud lived in the thirteenth century, but helps to decide a contro- versy arising in the nineteenth! § 9. Pollock and Maitland, on the other hand, in their History of English Law," call Bracton 's work "the crown and flower of English medieval jurisprudence," cautiously adding that we must be "careful to distinguish between his state- ment of English law, and his cosmopolitan jurisprudence. " ^ § 10. It is interesting in this connection to note the number of so-called authorities upon early English law which these learned authors pronounce to be frauds and forgeries. Thus, they speak of "the concocted charter of William I.," which "some one tampered with," and "inter- polated new matter";* of "forest laws concocted for Cnut, — the work of a forger " ; ^ of the Leges Edwardi Confessoris, as "private work of a^bad and untrustworthy kind, " whose author " it is to be feared tells lies," and which "has gone on doing its bad work down to our own time," and " should only be used with extreme caution " ; ® of 1 American Law Review, July, 1892, p. 567. 2 I., p. 185. 8 Id., p. 189. * Id., p. 76. 8 Id., p. 79. 6 Id., p. 81. INTRODUCTION. 7 "the forger who called himself Isidorus Merca- tor," whose book "was to control the history of mankind for a long time to come " ;^ of the Mirror of Justice where the "account of criminal law is so full of fables and falsehoods that as an author- ity it is worthless ";^ of "the rank forgeries that proceeded from Crowland";* and much more of the same sort. § 11. In considering the legal position of woman, we must bear in mind this origin. Its foundation is in what we have supposed to be the common law, modified by the action of the ecclesi- astical courts, whose "lamentable acquisition of the whole law of succession to movables prevents our common lawyers from having any one consis- tent theory of the relation between husband and wife."* § 12. This absence of a consistent theory is evident to any one who will examine the cases with any care, and to it is due much of the confusion which exists. § 13. Writers of eminence tell us that at common law husband and wife were theoretically one person,^ and this doctrine is approved time 1 Pollock and Maitland's History of English Law, I., p. 91. 2 Id., II., p, 476, note. » Id., p. 94, note. * Id., p. 405. See post, § 23. s Kent's Commentaries, II., p. 129; " The witty obserration is not wholly inappropriate that in the eye of the common law hus- band and wife are one person, and that one is the husband," — Schouler's Husband ^nd Wife, § 6. 8 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. and again by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, 1 whose authority is cited and fol- lowed in a recent (1896) Indiana case.^ § 14. On the other hand, Pollock and Mait- land, who are the very latest investigators into the history of English Law, say that the main idea which governs the law of husband and wife is not that of a unity of person, but that of the mund, the profitable guardianship, which the hus- band has over the wife and her property," and the authors are particular to warn us to "be on our guard against the common belief that the ruling principle is that which sees a 'unity of person' between husband and wife," — a principle which "will serve to round a paragraph, and may now and again lead us out of or into a difiSculty, " but which has never been consistently operative.* § 15. It has never been consistently operative in Massachusetts. Our Courts repeatedly announce it as a well-established and well-recognized theory, but, side by side with it, they show us not mere glimpses, but full views of well-defined individu- ality, of a guardianship of one individual over another, tacitly recognized, although never formu- lated in so many words.® Let us illustrate. 1 Lomhard v. Morse, 155 Mass. 136, 140; Bntler t. Ives, 139 Mass. 202, 203. 2 Henneger v. Lomas, 32 L. R. A. 848. " Pollock and Maitland's History of English Law, I., p. 468. " Id., II., p. 403. 6 See Burtis v. Burtis, 161 Mass. 508, 510. INTRODUCTION. 9 § 16. The common-law right of the husband to his wife's personal property was based largely upon the " correlative principle " ^ of his obliga- tion to support her as an individual,^ and to pay her individual debts, contracted before marriage. ^ He was considered in law as the purchaser for a valuable consideration.* § 17. His right to her chose in action (that is, a chose or thing like a promissory note, or legacy, requiring an action to collect, as distinguished from a thing in possession) was a limited one. If he neglected to reduce it to possession, the title remained in her, as an individual,^ and at the termination of the marriage, or if we may choose to call it, the guardianship, whether by divorce,® by his death, ^ or by hers,^ she or her representatives could sue upon it.^ Nothing short of a judgment amounted to such a reduc- tion, and if he died pending a suit, her indi- vidual right continued intact.^" If he brought suit and obtained judgment in their joint names, 1 Pitkin V. Thompson, 13 Pick. 64, 67. 2 Gregory v. Paul, 15 Mass. 31, 32. 8 Warren v. Williams, 10 Cush. 79, 80. * Howes V. Bigelow, 13 Mass. 384, 390. 6 Daniels v. Richardson, 22 Pick. 565, 570. ° Legg V. Legg, 8 Mass. 99. 7 Hayward v. Hayward, 20 Pick. 517. 8 Pattee v. Harrington, 11 Pick. 221 ; Allen v. Wilkins, 3 Allen, 321. ' Hill V. Hunt, 9 Gray, 66. M Strong V. Smith, 1 Met. 476; Page v. Estes, 19 Pick, 269. 10 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. and died without collecting the money or enforc- ing the judgment, her interest and right to the whole remained.^ § 18. Prom the earliest times a wife has been allowed to do many things in her individual capacity, if the husband in the exercise of what may very easily be interpreted as an act of guar- dianship gave his consent ; ^ or without his con- sent if he had absolutely abandoned her and was absent from the State, that is, if he had deserted or renounced his post as guardian.^ In neither aspect was there a unity of person. § 19. Very often she, as an individual distinct from her husband, was a necessary party to a suit;* and a most flagrant instance of a failure to apply the doctrine of unity of person was where a judgment was obtained against her after marriage and she was subject to arrest and imprisonment upon the execution, in case he refused to satisfy it.° She could not satisfy it, as, in the words of counsel, "the husband has all her property."^ 1 Crittenden v. Alexander, 15 Gray, 432, 2 Lithgow V. Kavenagh, 9 Mass. 161, 173 ; Stevens v. Beals, 10 Cash. 291. 8 Gregory v. Pierce, 4 Met. 478 ; Abbot », Bayley, 6 Pick. 89 ; Kendall v. Jennison, 119 Mass. 251. * Clapp 1-. Stoughton, 10 Pick. 463, 470 ; Thacber v. Phinney, 7 Allen, 146. s Haines v. Corliss, 4 Mass. 659; Commonwealth v. PhiUips- burg, 10 Mass. 78. 8 Commonwealth v. Badlam, 9 Pick. 362. But see Morse v, Toppan, 3 Gray, 411. INTKODUCTION. 11 § 20. A recognition of their separate indi- viduality appears in a refusal to permit them to sue jointly for a slander to both, the Court say- ing, " Separate actions should have been brought, one by the husband alone, for the injury to him, and one by the husband and wife for the injury to her. It has always been held that when words are spoken of two or more persons they cannot join in an action for the words, because the wrong done to one is no wrong to the other. The case of husband and wife is not an exception to this rule. "^ Could there be a more pronounced de- claration against a theory which sees only a unity of person in husband and wife? '■* § 21. So of a gift from one to the other. John buys six shares in the capital stock of a bank in his wife Mary's name, paying for them with his money, but the certificate is delivered to her. He buys other shares in his name. He collects dividends on both, uniformly requesting the cashier to give them to him in two distinct and separate sums, sometimes asking that Mary's dividend shall be in new bills, or gold pieces, saying that it would please her to have them. He has the right to keep them, but never exercises the right, and at his death the six shares are hers, while those which stood in his name go to his administrator.^ This is not unity of person; 1 Gazynski v, Colbnrn, 11 Cnsh. 10. * See also Barnes v. Hurd, 1 1 Mass. 59. 8 Adams v. Brackett, 5 Met. 280. 12 MARllIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. it is one individual under the charge or guardian- ship of another. Essential elements in the case are the delivery of the certificate to Mary, and the subsequent receipt of the dividends by John as Mary's agent. If John and Mary are one per- son, what difference does it make which takes the certificate? If they are one person, how can John be an agent for himself ? ^ § 22. The same thing is seen in the transfer of real estate between husband and wife. If John conveyed a piece of real estate directly to his wife Mary, no title passed,^ because they are said to be one person, and a deed to oneself is a nullity. If he conveyed the same estate to William, and William at the same instant conveyed it to Mary, the title passed, and Mary held the estate even as against John.^ Under any consistent theory of a unity of person, the transfer from William to Mary would be in effect a re-transfer to John; but in permitting Mary to retain the title, the law abandoned the theory of unity and recognized her as an individual separate from John, substan- tially as if she were not John's wife. John still was interested in the real estate, but in a very different way from before. She now had the title, and he had practically only a profit- 1 For further discussion of the law of husband as agent for his wife, see post, § 205 and § 279 et seq. 2 Thomson v. O'SuUivan, 6 Allen, 303. 8 Motte V. Alger, 15 Gray, 322. INTRODUCTION. 13 able 1 guardianship over it. Even if we say that they were seised jointly in fee, it was "in her right," 2 and in proceedings involving the title she was a necessary party. ^ An entry in pais by a mortgagee, with John's assent, but without her knowledge, did not foreclose her right to re- deem;* but if she and John were one person, why was not his knowledge hers ? § 23. A theory of unity of person never could be consistently operative, for it violates the law of nature. Husband and wife never were, in fact, one person, and no legal fiat nor legal fiction could make them so : not even the " authority of Holy Writ " can accomplish it. The Church abandoned the attempt long ago, when it gave to the wife equitable rights in property and equitable reme- dies against her husband. So far from the inter- ference of the Church being "lamentable,"^ it was the first dawn of light which came out of the darkness. The wail is like that of a Massachu- setts author, who called the men who passed the act of 1874 "softs. "6 1 In suits for trespass to her real estate the husband might sue alone or jointly with her, Gushing v. Adams, 18 Pick. 110; Allen V. Kingsbury, 16 Pick. 23.5 j Adams v. Barry, 10 Gray, 361. 2 Melvin u. Proprietors of Locks & Canals, 16 Pick. 161. See also Bruce v. Wood, 1 Met. 542 ; Raymond v. Holden, 2 Cush. 264. s Swan V. "Wiswall, 15 Pick. 126. * Hadley v. Houghton, 7 Pick. 29. 6 Ante, § 11. ^ Bishop on the Law of Married Women, II., p. 526. 14 MAKRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. § 24. Under the common law, woman had very few rights which man was bound to respect. As a child she was completely subject to her father, as an adult to her husband. Her person, her property, and her children seemed perpetually in the care of, and under the restraint of, some man. She had no control whatever over her child. " A mother as such," says Blackstone,^ "is entitled to no power, but only to reverence and respect." The father's right was held to be so much superior to that of the mother, that if she separated from him^ even for cause, the Court would order their infant, then at her breast, to be delivered to him, though he was an alien, and at the time actually living illegally with another woman, unless she could make it appear that he intended to abuse his right. 2 § 25. A husband might give his wife moderate correction by domestic chastisement, and could restrain her of her liberty in case of any gross misbehavior.^ In the old writ of "supplicavit," which came to be used for her protection, the Court would order that the husband " shall well and honestly treat and govern his wife, and that he shall not do, nor procure to be done, any damage or evil to her of her body, otherwise than ^ Blackstone's Commentaries, I., p. 453. 2 Damain u. Gwynne, 10 Allen, 270; The King e. Greenhill, 4 Ad. & El. 624. 8 Blackstone's Commentarifis, I., pp. 444, 445. INTRODUCTION. 15 what reasonably belongs to her husband for the purpose of the government and chastisement of his wife lawfully. " ^ § 26. In case she actually escaped from him by flight, he could apply to the Court for the restitu- tion of his conjugal rights, and she was "thrust back again to the bliss which had been too lightly prized. " ^ § 27. Her personal property, whether acquired before ^ or after marriage,* became at once his, though bought by her from her own earnings.^ The ring with which he married her became his the moment the ceremony was performed, and if sufficiently valuable, subject to the demands of his creditors.^ In 1764, a wife sued a sheriff for attaching, in an action against her husband, cer- tain articles of wearing apparel, which she owned prior to the marriage. The list included earrings, necklaces, ribbons, laces, fans, 1 Pr. Gloshoes Cgoloshes), and 1 Green Embrillo (umbrella), an article then first advertised, and doubtless con- sidered a luxury. Counsel for the sheriff cited ^ Adams v. Adams, 100 Mass. 365, 370. ^ Bishop on Marriage and Di vorce, I., § 29 ; the suit for the restitution of conjugal rights has never been adopted in any of the United States, Id. § 772. By the Canon Law the Court undertook to compel carnal copulation, but that does not seem to have been adopted by the Common Law, Id. § 778, note. ' Edgerly v. Whalan, 106 Mass. 307. * Commonwealth v. Manley, 12 Pick. 173. 5 Gerry v. Gerry, 11 Gray, 381. " Pollock and Maitland's History of English Law, II., p. 402. 16 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. an English case,^ where it was said "if the party have two Gowns, Sheriff may take one." The Court decided against tlie wife, on the ground that the articles belonged to and might be attached as the property of the husband, but the Chief Justice (Hutchinson) took exception to the case cited, saying, apologetically, "one Gown can never be supposed sufficient, — must she go naked when that is washing ? " ^ § 28. If, driven by her husband's extreme cruelty, the wife abandoned his house, and, going to work, gathered together a little money from her own earnings, and deposited it in a savings- bank in her name, it was his money, and his creditors could take it to satisfy his debts. ^ His solemn agreement, made prior to the marriage, that she should be allowed to retain her personal earnings, was invalid as in fraud of creditors.* She was not allowed to retain them, even though her husband had been living in adultery ^ or was in jail ^ while she worked. His assignee in insol- vency not infrequently gladdened the hearts of creditors with dividends paid out of property literally though legally stolen from her,^ the ' Hardistey v. Barney, Comber. 356. * Hanlon v. Thayer, Quincy, 99. 3 Ames V. Chew, 5 Met. 320; McKavIiu v. Bresslin, 8 Gray, 177. * Keith V. Woombell, 8 Pick. 211. 6 Russell V. Brooks, 7 Pick. 65. » Casey v. Wiggin, 8 Gray, 231. ' Smith V. Chandler, 3 Gray, 392, INTRODUCTION. 17 Court, as a matter of so-called equity, requiring a reasonable allowance for the support of herself and her children to be made out of the plunder. ^ § 29. If the husband wished to be honest towards her, the law " in its wise care of the rights of creditors " ^ would not permit it, but rigidly enforced its doctrine of compulsory reduction to possession of her chose in action.^ The stomach of the Court occasionally turned against this, as any decent stomach would,* but it was "the set- tled law of this Commonwealth. " ^ § 30. Even his administrator felt the shame of taking from her so petty a sum as ".f7 in specie, a part consisting of money which she had herself earned and received before her marriage, and a part of it of pieces of coin which had been given to her by her husband," but the aid of the Supreme Judicial Court was successfully invoked, no less a personage than Chief Justice Shaw delivering the opinion, at some length, that the seven dollars belonged not to her but to her husband's estate.^ The cost of litigation in this case must have far exceeded the amount involved. § 31. Under this law the husband had the exclusive right to the use, occupation and income 1 Gardner v. Hooper, 3 Gray, 398 ; Davis v. Newton, 6 Met. 537. 2 Holbrook v. Waters, 19 Pick. 354, 355. " Wheeler v. Bowen, 20 Pick. 563. * Shuttlesworth v. Noyes, 8 Mass. 229. ' Alexander v. Crittenden, 4 Allen, 342. 6 Washburn v. Hale, 10 Pick. 429. 18 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. of his wife's real estate,^ and these rights might be levied upon and taken for his debts by his creditors.^ If any part of the real estate was sold, or taken by the authorities for a public use, the entire proceeds went to him as personal property.^ § 32. Her condition, if he chose to make it so, was far worse than that of an average slave. If he killed her, it was as though he had killed a stranger. If she killed him, it was a species of treason, and she was drawn and burnt alive. " So great a favorite," according to Blackstone, "is the female sex of the laws of England."* § 33. The legislature from time to time has endeavored to soften the rigors of the law, but piecemeal, and often without any comprehensive grasp of the situation. Even in the general laws, like those of 1845,6 1855,6 1857,' and 1874,8 the relief has been partial and imperfect, while the minor acts have often worked as much harm as good. Every now and then the conscience of the community is shocked by some cruel or absurd decision, sound enough as a matter of antique 1 Clapp V. Stonghton, 10 Pick. 463 ; Bartlett v. Cowles, 15 Gray, 445. 2 Litchfield v. Cudworth, 15 Pick. 23. " Emerson u. Cutler, 14 Pick. 108, 119. The law is otherwise now. Pub. St., ch. 142, § 9, and ch. 147, § 14. * Commentaries, I., p. 445. 6 St. 1845, ch. 208. 6 St. 1855, ch. 304. ' St. 1857, ch. 249. « St. 1874, ch. 184. INTRODUCTION. 19 lore, but repugnant to the modern mind, and a rush is made to the legislature for relief, which is granted in a haphazard way. In the absence of some such special grievance nothing is done, and what are supposed to be the rules of the com- mon law, or of the ecclesiastical courts, prevail. As a result our law to-day is a conglomerate, and even the proverbial Philadelphia lawyer would find difficulty in extracting from some parts of it anything like a principle. § 34. Of course, this must some time come to an end. An intelligent community cannot continue much longer to adhere blindly to the past simply because it is the past. The law is the only science in which this is tolerated. Astronomy had its foundation in the superstitions of astrology, but what astronomer to-day would contend seriously that he ought to be bound by rules laid down by some ancient astrologer, how- ever eminent ? Medicine has worked its way through many generations of empirics and char- latans. What would be said of a modern physi- cian, who insisted upon the efficacy of pounded diamond dust because at one time that was the royal remedy for disease? Continuity with the past is no more a necessity in the law than in any other science. Every act of the legislature, every decision of the Court based upon modern author- ity, every code adopted by our sister States is evidence to the contrary. Some day Massachu- 20 MARKIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. setts will awaken to this fact, and have a code of her own, not only upon this, but upon all sub- jects. Compilations like the Revised, General, or Public Statutes, are incomplete, unscientific, and unworthy of a great Commonwealth. § 35. The Courts are powerless. They have been known to disregard ancient in favor of modern authority,^ and upon occasion to intimate that legal doctrines, like a lady's dress, may change with the "fashion;"^ but, as a rule, their duty is confined to stating what the law is, not what it ought to be, and the question of its con- tinuance is left to the legislature.^ § 36. When the legislature comes, as it must ere long, to perform its final and complete act of justice towards women, the principle of the profit- able guardianship of the husband over the wife should be borne in mind. Had this been done in the past, much confusion and tribulation would have been prevented. When the rights of mar- ried women were enlarged in 1874, the legislature practically removed her guardian, and deprived him of his rights to her profits. She should have become free, therefore, to do anything any adult might do, precisely as a minor or other ward would whose guardianship had ceased.* 1 Commonwealth v. Trefethen, 157 Mass. 180, 189; Berney v. Dinsmore, 141 Mass. 42, 44. 2 Miller v. Hyde, 161 Mass. 472, 478. s Dexter v. Phillips, 121 Mass. 178, 184. 1 See Harmon v. Old Colony E. R. Co., 165 Mass. lOtt INTRODUCTION. 21 Contracts and suits between her husband and her- self then would have stood upon the same foot- ing as between any former guardian and ward, and we should have escaped the present grotesque condition of the law in this respect. § 37. Whatever may have been the case in the past there can be no sound principle to-day which permits husband and wife to contract through a dummy and not directly, ^ to sue each other in equity and not at law. It is a farce to see one wife successfully sue her husband,^ and another turned out of court, ^ simply because of the tech- nical difference between law and equity. Both, to-day, go to the same court, sometimes to the same court-room, file their papers with the same clferk, and are heard by the same judge. If the evidence goes into his equity ear, justice is done, if into his common-law ear, injustice. § 38. Courts from time to time have pointed out certain practical difficulties which they con- ceive might surround the conduct and enforce- ment of suits between husband and wife,* while laymen have urged tho endless domestic broils which they claim must necessarily arise. It is not easy to see why the same domestic trouble, 1 Ante, § 22 ; post, § 229. 2 Aj'er V. Ayer, 16 Pick. 327 ; Scott v. Eand, 115 Mass. 104. See also St. 1886, eh. 281. 2 Bassett v. Bassett, 1 12 Mass. 99. * Lord V. Parker, 3 AUen, 127, 130 ; Tucker v. Fenno, 1 1 Mass. 311. 22 MAEfilED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. and the same difficulties of enforcement should not arise in one suit as in the other. No practi- cal difficulty is found in divorce proceedings, nor in petitions for separate maintenance, nor in suits in equity. Why should there be in suits at law ? The difference is a mere technical survival, which ought not to be longer tolerated. § 39. England already has led the way,^ and more than twenty of our sister States have fol- lowed her example, among them such enlightened communities as Wisconsin, Indiana, California, Oregon, Colorado, and Washington.^ Is it not about time for Massachusetts to get into line ? § 40. A step in the right direction has been taken in authorizing suits against the wife of a Judge of Probate upon a bond given to him or his predecessor in office.^ As the suit must be in his name, it formerly would not lie as against his wife. But why stop here ? § 41. As long as a woman remains single, her legal position is pretty much the same as that of man. She, to be sure, is not permitted to per- form either military or jury duty, and her rights both of suffrage and office-holding are restricted ; but the antiquated sneer against the " old maid " long since has lost its sting ; and having demon- strated her capacity, the opportunity of taking 1 45 & 46 Vict. u. 75. ^ Stimson's Amer. Stat. Law, I., § 6454 » St. 1896, ch. 208. INTRODUCTION. 23 care of herself is no longer either legally or practically denied her. § 42. She is no longer a defenceless prey to man's lust. Until 1886, the " age of consent " was but ten years ;^ it is now sixteen years. ^ Seduction has been made a punishable crime,* and the male " night-walker " may be (although, in practice he rarely is) arrested and punished with his female companion.* § 43. In this respect there is opportunity for a vast growth in public sentiment. It is disheart- ening to read of raids upon disorderly houses and the arrest of women alone. No woman ever erred without a man to help her, nor led a life of shame without a multitude of men. The spectacle of a woman arrested by male police, tried by a jury of males, and sentenced by a male judge, while her equally guilty male companion is allowed to go free, or even at times to make complaint and testify against her, is a disgrace. 1 Pul). St., ch. 202, § 27. 2 St. 1886, ch. 305; St. 1888, ch. 391; St. 1893, ch. 466; Com- monwealth V. Murphy, le.'i Mass. 66. 3 St. 1886, ch. 329. 4 Pub. St., ch. 207, § 29. 24 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. , CHAPTER IT. AGREEMENTS TO MARET AND OTHER ANTE-NUPTIAL AGREEMENTS. — BREACH OP PROMISE. § 44. An engagement to marry may be made verbally, the mutual promises of the parties thereto being a sufficient consideration ; ^ and an action for breach of promise of marriage may lie without any writing whatever. § 45. A mutual engagement must be proved, but this can be shown from circumstances. Evi- dence of an express promise is not necessary. If the association and conduct of a man and woman and the circumstances attending all their relations are such as naturally and ordinarily accompany a mutual understanding that they are engaged to be married, this is appropriate and competent evidence to prove a contract. ^ § 46. A very gallant Chief Justice of our Supreme Judicial Court, in its early days, gave it as his opinion that if a couple "should be obliged, before they considered themselves bound, 1 Browne on Statute of Frauds, § 215 a. 2 Dean v. Skiff, 128 Mass. 174, 183. BEEACH OF PEOMISE. 25 to call witnesses or execute instruments under hand and seal, it would be destructive of that chaste and modest intercourse which is the pride of our country ; and a boldness of manners would probably succeed by no means friendly to the character of the sex or the interests of society. " ^ § 47. The same fine spirit led him to say, " respectable counsel having suggested an opinion that the action was of a nature to be discounte- nanced rather than favored, " " we can conceive of no more suitable ground of application to the tribunals of justice for compensation than that of a violated promise to enter into a contract on the faithful performance of which the interest of all civilized countries so essentially depends. When the female is the injured party there is generally more reason for a resort to the laws than when the man is the sufferer. Both have a right of action, but the jury will discriminate and appor- tion the damages according to the injury sus- tained. A deserted female, whose prospects in life may be materially affected by the treachery of the man to whom she has plighted her vows, will always receive from a jury the attention which her situation requires ; and it is not disreputable for one who may have to mourn for years over lost prospects and broken vows, to seek such com- pensation as the laws can give her. It is also for the public interest that conduct tending to con- 1 Chief Justice Parker in Wightman v. Coates, 15 Mass. 1, 5. 26 MAREIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. sign a virtuous woman to celibacy should meet with that punishment which may prevent it from becoming common. That delicacy of the sex which, happily, in this country gives the man so much advantage over the woman in the inter- course which leads to matrimonial engagements, requires for its protection and continuance the aid of the laws. When it shall be abused by the injustice of those who would take advantage of it, moral justice, as well as public policy, dictates the propriety of a legal indemnity."^ § 48. While the conduct and deportment of the parties toward each other may furriish satis- factory evidence of a mutual promise, acts or declarations of one made or done without the knowledge of the other are not admissible, as, for example, preparations for marriage made by a woman, in the absence of the man, and in no way connected with him ; ^ but if connected with him in any way, evidence that in his absence the woman "acted as if she felt very sad," is unobjectionable.^ Evidence is admissible of their relations towards each other during a previous in- timacy, which had been broken off, and of an ex- pression of satisfaction on the man's part during the breach, that the woman had refused to walk with another man, and his statement that the lat- 1 Wightmstu V. Coateg, 15 Mass. I, 3, 4. 2 KuBSell V. Cowles, 15 Gray, 582. s Culver V, D wight, 6 Gray, 444. BREACH OF PROMISE. 27 ter could not get her away as long as he had a claim on her;i but not if the time is very remote, nor if the acts of familiarity took place while either party was married to another. If their relations then were merely friendly and proper, evidence of them vould be immaterial; if they were anything else they were contrary to law and public policy, and could not be put in evi- dence.^ § 49. All this is true of a simple promise of marriage, but there are circumstances under which a writing is essential. If the promise to marry is one of a series of stipulations and counter-stipula- tions, dependent upon each other, as, for example, if there are contracts for the payment of money, or the settlement of property, the entire agree- ment, or some memorandum or note thereof, must be in writing, signed by the party to be charged therewith or by some person thereto lawfully authorized,* otherwise the whole contract, in- cluding the promise to marry, falls to the ground, and no action for any part of it will lie.* § 50. This law applies equally to promises made by third parties, as, if a father promises to allow the couple a certain sum of money, in con- sideration of their marriage, the contract is not 1 Ray V. Smith, 9 Gray, 141. 2 Dean v. Skife, 128 Mass. 174, 182. = Pub. St., ch. 78, § 1 ; Deshon v. Wood, 148 Mass. 132. * Chase v. Fitz, 132 Mass. 359. 28 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. binding, unless there is a memorandum thereof in writing.^ The question of consideration for such a promise at first gave the Judges some trouble. Some were inclined to hold that getting rid of his daughter was a suflScient consideration to the father, and there was even some hint that marrying the lady was such a detriment to the husband as of itself to constitute a consideration for the father's promise. ^ § 51. If the agreement is to marry at or after the expiration of a year, a writing is necessary, because, under our statutes, no action will lie upon any verbal agreement that is not to be performed within one year from the making thereof;^ but it is otherwise if the time is optional, and the marriage may occur within the year.* Thus where a man " being about to commence the study of his profession," engaged to marry a woman " at the end of about five years, when he expected to be settled in business," and, subsequently changing his mind, married another, there was no binding contract, and no redress.^ Had he agreed to marry her whenever within the five years he should be settled in business, he would 1 Browne on Statute of 'Frauds, ch. xi. ; as to specific perform- ance in equity, see Id., § 459. ' Holmes's Common Law, p. 268. 8 Put. St., ch. 78, § 1 ; Nichols v. Weaver, 7 Kansas, 373. * Browne on Statute of Frauds, ch. xiii. 6 Derby v. Phelps, 2 N. H. 515. BEEACH OF PEOMISE. 29 be bound, for, however improbable, it was possible that this might happen within a year.^ § 52. No formal document is essential to sat- isfy the statute. Letters, telegrams, or other memoranda in ink or pencil, printed or stamped, often are suificient,^ but by their own terms, or by reference to some other writing, they must express with reasonable certainty all the condi- tions and essential elements of the bargain.^ There must be a signature, but it may consist of one's mark or of initials, and, presumably, of any pet name or other designation adopted by the party as a signature.* § 53. If a party to an agreement to marry refuses to carry it out, there is no power in any court to compel its performance by actual mar- riage. If a man or woman feels that it is more for his or her interest, or for the happiness of either or both to break the engagement, he or she is at liberty to do so. It possibly may be a wise thing, or even a moral duty, under the circum- stances, to break it, but no considerations of that kind would be a defence to an action by the party aggrieved. So far as the contract is broken by one, without the fault or the consent of the other, response must be made in damages.^ 1 Paris ». Strong, 51 Ind. 339. 2 Browne on Statute of Frauds, § 352. 8 White V. Bigelow, 154 Mass. 593, 595. * Sanborn v. Klagler, 9 Allen, 474 ; Browne on Statute of Frauds, §§ 355, 362. 6 Coolidge V. Neat, 129 Mass. 146. 30 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. § 54. Prom the nature of the case, damages are peculiarly -within the province of the jury, who are to form their judgment in the light of all the circumstances, whether of aggravation or exten- uation, that properly belong to the cage. The plaintiff is entitled to recover not merely an indemnity for a pecuniary loss and the disappoint- ment of the reasonable expectations of material and worldly advantage resulting from a marriage which would have given a permanent home and an advantageous establishment, but also a com- pensation for wounded feelings and the mortifica- tion and pain or distress of mind which has been wrongfully undergone, on the principle of indem- nity and reasonable compensation, but In no event of vindictive damages. The length of time of the engagement may be taken into considera- tion, and the pecuniary means and ability of the defendant. ^ § 55. Evidence of seduction under the promise, and of the birth of a child is admitted in aggrava- tion of the damages,^ although, if there were no promise of marriage an action for the seduction alone would not lie.^ § 56. Let us see what this leads to. If John 1 Grant o. Willey, 101 Mass. 356; Harrison v. Swift, 13 Allen, 144. ^ Sherman v. Eawson, 102 Mass. 395 ; Kelley v. Eiley, 106 Mass 339. 3 Paul I'. Frazier, 3 Mass. 71 ; Dennis v. Clark, 2 Cush. 347, 350 BREACH OP PEOMISE. 31 asks Mary to marry him, and she accepts, no writ- ing is essential,! jj,j(j jf under their mutual promises he seduces her, she may recover damages. If he asks her to name the wedding-day, and they agree upon a day more than a year off, a writing is es- sential,^ and if, in the interim, lie seduces her, she is in the absence of a writing without remedy. If when he asks her to marry him, he also points out the worldly advantages of the marriage, promis- ing that he will settle a sum of money upon her, adroitly connecting the two, so that she accepts both the man and the money, she can hold neither man nor money without a writing,^ and if under the promise of marriage he seduces her, she can- not recover. An unscrupulous person, by making his offer of marriage too attractive, if he chooses, may escape unscathed. § 57. If, under a valid promise of marriage, seduction is accomplished and the woman is de- serted by her lover, her subsequent bad charac- ter cannot be set up in mitigation of damages,* but evidence of her prior bad character may be.^ Evidence of the bad character of a brother, whose evil acts are in no way connected with her, is not admissible in mitigation of damages." § 58. If a married man becomes engaged to a 1 Ante, § 44. « Ante, § 51. s _4„;e, § 49. * Boynton v. Kellogg, 3 Mass. 189. 6 McCarty v. Coffin, 157 Mass. 478. 8 Sherman v. Rawson, 102 Mass. 395. 32 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. single woman, she having no knowledge of his marriage, he cannot escape responsibility on the ground of his inability to keep his promise.^ Indeed, the damages well might be increased because of the disgrace. § 59. It is no part of a person's duty before making or accepting an offer of marriage to com- municate all the previous circumstances of his or her life, and a marriage engagement is binding which is entered into without investigation and without the receipt of assurances or representa- tions leading thereto, although matters are dis- covered subsequently,, which, if known at the time, would have prevented the engagement. Want of chastity, upon discovery, will give a right to terminate the contract ; but the fact that a woman has negro blood in her veins, or that her motives are mercenary, or that she is wanting in affection, or that there is an incompatibility resulting from disparity of age, difference in character and disposition, or other causes, will not justify the breaking of the contract. If, how- ever, the engagement is effected by fraudulent rep- resentations, or fraudulent concealment of facts inquired about, or which a party by universal con- sent has the right to know, the contract cannot be enforced. Mere silence as to facts not inquired about does not constitute fraud; but if a person undertakes, without inquiry, to state material 1 KeUey o. RUey, 106 Mass. 339. BREACH OF PROMISE. 33 facts relating to any circumstances in her history or life, or to her parentage or family, or to her former or present position, not only is she bound to state truly the facts narrated, but she is bound not to suppress or conceal any facts which are necessary to a correct understanding of those stated ; and if there is a wilful concealment and suppression of such facts, leading to a belief that matters stated are different from what they actu- ally are, she is guilty of a fraudulent conceal- ment, which will warrant a breaking of the engagement. 1 § 60. To sustain an action, the burden of proof is throughout upon the plaintiff to show not merely a contract and a breach thereof by the defendant, but constant, unconditional, and absolute readi- ness on her part to fulfil its terms. She cannot add new and unreasonable conditions, and then sue her lover if he refuses to accept them.^ § 61. An action for breach of promise of mar- riage (where there is no " special damage, whatever that phrase may be imderstood to mean ") ^ does not survive in favor of the estate of a deceased prom- isee nor against the estate of a deceased promisor ; * but if a verdict was rendered prior to the death, judgment will be entered as of the day of the ver- 1 Van Houten v. Morse, 162 Mass. 414. '■i Hook V. George, 108 Mass. 324. 3 Chase v. Fitz, 132 Mass. 359, 361. * Stebbina v. Palmer, 1 Pick. 71 ; Smith v. Sherman, 4 Cush. 408. 34 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. diet, SO that the rights of the successful party may be preserved.^ § 62. Conduct and false statements of third per- sons which cause a marriage engagement to be broken may be actionable under some circum- stances ; but a joint suit will not lie where there is no evidence of a conspiracy and none that the par- ties joined with each other in doing the acts com- plained of.^ § 63. Persons about to enter upon marriage may make contracts and agreements as to their respective property rights, the female, if a minor who has attained the age of eighteen, acting with her guardian, 3 and property may be settled upon her even if the prospective husband is then in debt;* but the marriage status itself cannot be modified or affected in any way ; that is fixed by law so soon as the marriage is solemnized, and it is against public policy to permit it to be affected by the preliminary or collateral agreements of the parties. An ante-nuptial agreement never to live together as husband and wife has been held, there- fore, to have no effect upon the marriage contract.^ § 64. Prior to the legislation enlarging the property rights of a married woman, ante-nuptial 1 Kelley v. Riley, 106 Mass. 339. " Harriott v. Plimpton, 166 Mass. 585. 8 Pub. St., ch. 147, § 15 & §§ 26-28. * Gassett i:. Grout, 4 Met. 486, 488. ' Franklin v. Franklin, 154 Mass. 515. ANTE-NUPTIAL AGREEMENTS. 35 agreements were frequently resorted to as a means for her protection, and they are used to some extent to-day. They may apply to the property of either spouse. If the agreement applies only to rights which either may claim in the estate of the other at the termination of the marriage, it need not be recorded ; ^ but if it applies to rights at or during marriage, it must be recorded before or within ninety days after the marriage in the registry of deeds for the county or district in which the husband resides at the time of the mar- riage, or if he is not a resident within the Com- monwealth, in the registry of deeds for the county or district in which the wife resides at the time of the record, if it is made before the marriage, or in which she last resided, if made after the marriage, and must also be recorded in the regis- try of deeds for every county or district in which there are lands to which it relates. There must be annexed to such contract a schedule, which must be recorded, of the property intended to be affected thereby, containing a sufficiently clear description of the property to enable a creditor to distinguish it from all other property. If not so recorded the contract is void, except as between the parties and their heirs and personal representatives.^ If the 1 Jenkins v. Holt, 109 Mass. 261 ; Gibson c/. Gibson, 15 Mass. 106, m. 2 Pub. St., ch. 147, § 27 ; until St. 1867, ch. 248, the contract was wholly void unless recorded. Ingham v. White, 4 Allen, 412. 36 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. agreement contains provisions as to rights both during and after marriage, as counterparts of one mutual arrangement, a failure to record it will so affect the whole that equity will not enforce any part thereof. ^ § 65. At common law, ante-nuptial agreements to take effect upon, or to be performed during, marriage, were extinguished by the marriage, and this statute, when passed, was intended to be an enabling statute, to keep such contracts alive. It has no practical value to-day, except as a means of entrapping the unwary. Thus, a man delivered certain bonds to his betrothed, as a marriage set- tlement, to become her property at the moment of marriage. It was held that the gift was void upon the marriage, because, not being in writing, it violated the provisions of the Statute of Frauds,^ and, not being recorded, it violated the provisions of the statute as to ante-nuptial agreements.^ Had the gift been of real estate, and had the title passed to her at the time of delivery, without wait- ing until the moment of marriage, it would have been valid, notwithstanding the statute.* § 66. Where property is assigned to an in- tended wife, in contemplation of marriage, to hold "during the continuance of the marriage," and after the marriage the parties are divorced, 1 Butman v. Porter, 100 Mass. 337. ^ Ante, § 49. ' Deshon v. Wood, 148 Mass. 132. * Smith V. Allen, 5 Allen, 454. ANTE-NUPTIAL AGREEMENTS. 37 her interest ceases upon the divorce, even where it is granted to her for his fault, because, through the divorce, there is no longer a continuance of the marriage.^ § 67. An ante-nuptial agreement may be made directly between the parties, and does not require the intervention of a trustee or third party. ^ § 68. If power is given in such an agreement to dispose of property by will, it may be exercised by a will immediately executed, although prior to the marriage.^ § 69. If a woman is induced to enter into an ante-nuptial agreement by the fraudulent repre- sentations of her intended husband as to its con- tents, no x'atification thereof during her marriage will prevent her from thereafter repudiating it;* but if she entered into it with a full understand- ing of its force and effect, without fraud or mis- representation, and it is a reasonable one under all the circumstances, supported by an adequate consideration, and has been performed fully on the husband's side, it is the rule and the duty of a court of equity to enforce its performance.^ If she has accepted its benefits, she cannot repudiate its conditions.^ 1 Harvard College v. Head, 111 Mass. 209. 2 Ela V. Edwards, 16 Gray, 91 ; Tinker r. Beach, 11 Met. 349. » Osgood V. Bliss, 141 Mass. 474. * Peaslee v. Peaslee, 147 Mass. 171; Nathan u. Nathan, 166 Mass. 294. 6 Tarbell v. Tarbell, 10 Allen, 278. 8 Paine v. HoUister, 139 Mass. 144. 38 MARRIED -WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. § 70. If, in the agreement, property of the wife is reserved to her during her life and to her hus- band after her death, she cannot deprive him of it, and if in her last sickness she transfers it to a third person, the husband may recover it.^ It would be otherwise if the husband has not punc- tually carried out his part of the agreement, no sufficient reason or excuse for his failure being shown. ^ § 71. If a man, prior to marriage, agrees that certain of his real estate shall be transferred to his wife at his death, a court of equity will com- pel its transfer by his legal representatives.^ § 72. Cases appear in the reports which seem to decide that a wife by her ante-nuptial agreement cannot bar her rights to share in her husband's personal property after his death;* but these turned solely upon a question of jurisdiction, the Court holding that the agreement could be set up only in a court of equity, and not in the Probate Court, which had no general equity jurisdiction. This difficulty may have been removed, at least in part, by recent statutes conferring equity juris- diction upon the Probate Court in certain cases, ^ 1 Lawrence v. Bartlett, 2 Allen, 36. 2 Sullings V. SuUings, 9 Allen, 234. ' Miller v. Goodwin, 8 Gray, 542. * Sullings V. Richmond, 5 Allen, 187 ; Blackiuton v. Blackinton, HO Mass. 461. 5 St. 1891, ch. 415; St. 1892, ch. 116; St. 1895, ch. 215. See also Nathan u. Nathan, 166 Mass. 294, 295. ANTE-NUPTIAL AGEEEMENTS. 39 § 73. In construing trust estates created by marriage settlements, regard is to be had to the intention to be deduced from the whole instru- ment of conveyance to a greater extent than in the construction of the like limitations in legal estates. ^ § 74. If either party to a marriage, prior thereto, conveys property to a trustee for his or her benefit to the exclusion of the other, the trust will stand, although the other does not join in the instrument.^ If a person with full knowledge chooses to marry one who has conveyed away his property, there is no law against it; but there should be no concealment. § 75. Formerly at least, if either party in con- templation of marriage, conveyed property to a trustee, without the knowledge of the other, the conveyance was deemed a fraud upon marital rights, and might be set aside in equity during the marriage.* § 76. Substantially the same doctrine is stated as a dictum in a recent case, where the Court says, "Transactions by which the property of a woman, while marriage is in contemplation, is put away in fraud of the settlement are clearly remediable in equity during the" marriage.* On 1 Bowditch V. Jordan, 131 Mass. 321. " Viney v. Abbott, 109 Mass. 300 ; Taylor v. Buttrick, 165 Mass. 547 ; Falk v. Turner, 101 Mass. 494. 3 Bishop's Law of Married Women, IL, § 338. * Lombard v. Morse, 155 Mass. 136, 139. 40 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. the other hand, Chief Justice Chapman has said in a dictum in an earlier case,^ "As her husband had no right to the property, it is difficult to per- ceive how he is wronged by an act which she had the right to do. " § 77. It is possible that under existing statutes which have so enlarged the property rights of women the old doctrine may be somewhat modi- fied. There is no doubt that after marriage a wife may apply to the Supreme Judicial Court to appoint a trustee to hold her separate property in trust for her, upon such trusts and to such uses as she may declare,^ nor that she herself may establish a trust and convey away her personal property, 2 or give it away.* Such a conveyance is valid against her husband, although he was not a party to it, knew nothing of it, and thereby was deprived of all interest in property which, prior ■ to marriage, she* had promised verbally should be his, and upon the strength of which he had been induced to marry her. ^ With such rights of con- veyance after marriage, it is not easy to see any good reason against allowing her to do the same thing before marriage. § 78. If the object of the trust is merely to 1 Palk V. Turner, 101 Mass. 494. " Pub. St., ch. 147, § 13. " Pacific National Bank v. Windram, 133 Mass. 175; Parrelly V. Ladd, 10 Allen, 127 ; Davis v. Ney, 125 Mass. 590. * Marshall v. Berry, 13 Allen, 43. 6 White V. Bigelow, 154 Mass. 593. ANTE-NUPTIAL AGEEEMENTS. 41 protect her from the threats, importunities or in- fluence of her husband, a power of revocation in her favor upon his death, ^ or divorce, ^ sliould be inserted, as otherwise tlie trust may continue, against her wishes, and when there is no longer need for it. The rule in this Commonwealth is that a voluntary settlement which is completely executed, with no power of revocation reserved, cannot be revoked or set aside except upon proof of mental incapacity, mistake, fraud, or undue influence. The burden of proof is upon her to establish this, and the mere fact that at the time she did not think of a contingency which has happened since or did not understand the legal effect of the instrument, if she understood its contents, is not sufficient cause for setting it aside. ^ § 79. A provision in the trust, whether the same is made by her in contemplation of* or during^ marriage, which undertakes to restrain the alienation of income by anticipation, and thus to prevent her creditors from reaching it, is in- valid as against public policy. She may protect herself against her husband's creditors, but not her own. It manifestly would be unfair to per- ' Keyes v. Carleton, 141 Mass. 45. 2 Thurston, petr. 154 Mass. 596 ; Babcock v. Smith, 22 Pick. 61. » Taylor v. Buttrick, 165 Mass. 547. * Jackson v. Von Zedlitz, 136 Mass. 342. 6 Pacific National Bank v. Windram, 133 Mass. 175. 42 MAERIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. mit any person, man or woman, to convey his or her property to trustees, and then, while enjoying the income, contract debts, and defy the creditors to reach either principal or income. Such a pro- vision, however, would be valid if the trust were established by some one other than herself for her benefit. In such a case, the founder of the trust, being the absolute owner, may put such restric- tions upon it as he pleases. Creditors are not injured, for they have no right to rely upon some- body else's property for their pay. They may reach all the debtor's property not exempted by law, but cannot enlarge the gift of the founder of a trust and take more than he has given. ^ 1 Broadway National Bank v. Adams, 133 Mass. 170; Perkins u. Hays, 3 Gray, 405. MARRIAGE. 43 CHAPTER III. MARRIAGE. § 80. At common law, any agreement of mar- riage in words of the present tense, or, in case of cohabitation, words of the future, made between persons able to contract, is deemed a valid mar- riage for many purposes.^ § 81. In Massachusetts, certain formalities are prescribed by statute.^ 1. A notice of intention of marriage must be filed with the clerk or registrar of the city or town in which the contracting parties respectively dwell, or, if both are non-residents, in which the marriage is to be solemnized, or, if there is no such clerk or registrar, in an adjoining city or town. 2. The clerk or registrar must issue a certifi- cate, which sometimes is known popularly as a license. ^ Blackstone's Commentaries, I., p. 439; Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, I., §§ 227, 279 ; PoUock and Maitland's History of English Law, II., p. 366. 2 Pub. St., ch. 145, §§ 16 et seg. 44 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. 3. This certificate must be delivered to the person who is to solemnize the marriage, who is forbidden to perform the ceremony without it. § 82. The ceremony is forbidden, without the consent of parent or guardian, where the offi- cial has reasonable ground to believe that the male is under twenty-one, and the female under eighteen.^ § 83. The consummation of a marriage is not essential to its validity. ^ § 84. No form of ceremony, and no particular words are necessary to constitute a marriage ; ^ but it is essential (except among Quakers) that it should take place in the presence of some one believed, by at least one of the parties, to be acting in an official capacity. The parties can- not take each other as husband and wife by their own contract, even in good faith; and such a ceremony, without any one officiating, except among Quakers, does not constitute a valid mar- riage.* No length of time and no public recogni- tion of each other as husband and wife can make the marriage valid. In one case the parties lived together for more than twenty years, the marriage was recorded in the family Bible, and they held ' Pub. St., ch. 145, § 6. 2 Franklin v. Franklin, 154 Mass. 515. 3 Meyers v. Pope, 110 Mass. 314. * Commonwealtli v, Munson, 127 Mass. 459 ; Peck v. Peck, 155 Mass. 479. MAEEIAGE. 45 themselves out, and were treated and received by their friends and relatives, as husband and wife, but our Supreme Judicial Court declared them not to be.^ § 85. A marriage among the people called Friends or Quakers may be solemnized according to the usual forms of their societies.^ § 86. The only persons authorized to solemnize marriages in this Commonwealth are justices of the peace, ministers of the gospel, ordained accord- ing to the usage of their denominations, residing within the Commonwealth, and continuing to per- from the functions of their office,'* or any rabbi of the Israelitish faith duly licensed to act by a congregation of said faith, established in the Commonwealth,* who has filed with the clerk or registrar of the city or town where he resides, a certificate of its establishment, the date of his appointment, and term of his engagement. No person can officiate who is unable to read and write the English language.^ § 87. The marriage should be celebrated in the city or town where one or both of the parties reside, or, if they are non-residents, where the person solemnizing it resides;'' but this is not essential to its validity.^ 1 Norcross v. Norcross, 155 Mass. 425. 2 Pub. St., ch. 145, § 23. » Id., ch. 145, § 22. * St. 1893, ch. 461. 5 St. 1896, ch. 306. 6 Pub. St., ch. 145, § 22. ' Commonwealth v. Caponi, 155 Mass. 534. 46 MAERIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. § 88. Any magistrate, clergyman, or rabbi, authorized to celebrate a marriage, may perform the ceremony anywhere within the State. ^ § 89. There are many statute provisions in regard to the statements to be made, and the mode in which the notice of intention of marriage shall be given and received, and those for cities^ differ essentially from those for towns. ^ It would serve no good purpose to give these pro- visions here in detail, as there is a yearly attempt to secure new legislation upon the subject, and what is law this year may not be next. In cities, especially in Boston, it has been found difficult to restrain foreigners from contracting very youth- ful marriages, and the authorities frequently have been imposed upon by false statements as to age, parentage, and other requirements. A law was passed in 1894* to meet this difficulty, which gives city clerks or registrars ampler powers, and makes them petty despots in matrimonial affairs. It goes so far as to authorize a city clerk or reg- istrar "to refuse to issue a certificate in case he has reasonable grounds to believe that any of the statements contained in the notice of intention are incorrect." § 90. The same difficulty caused the enact- 1 Pub. St., ch. 155, § 5 ; St. 1894, ch. 409, § 5. 2 St. 1894, ch. 409. « Pub. St., ch. 145, §§ 16-20. * St. 1894, ch. 409. MAERIAGE. 47 ment in the same year of a law ^ forbidding a town or city clerk or registrar from receiving a notice of the intention of marriage of any male under eighteen, or female under sixteen, unless it is accompanied by an order from a judge of the Probate Court allowing the marriage. This order can be issued only to a minor residing in a city or town within the county wherein the judge holds court, with the consent of the father if alive, otherwise of the mother of the minor, or, if neither parent is alive and resident in the Com- monwealth, of a duly appointed legal guardian. § 91. This law would seem to prohibit the marriage in this Commonwealth of a non-resident male under eighteen, or female under sixteen, even with the consent of parents. It is probable that the word " resides " is used in the statute in its ordinary legal sense of "inhabitancy," and not merely as equivaleiit to " commorant. " ^ Un- less, therefore, the minor has a legal residence within the Commonwealth, no judge would seem to have jurisdiction to issue the necessary order. § 92. Suppose the entirely possible case of a young man of seventeen, a resident of New York, who, visiting Massachusetts, meets and seduces a young girl under sixteen. He is anxious to right the wrong, and his parents assent. No mar- riage can be performed here because no Judge of 1 St. 1894, ch. 401. 2 Lee V. Boston, 2 Gray, 484 ; Opinion of Justices, 5 Met. 587. 48 MAKEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. Probate can issue a permissive order to a resident of New York. No order from a New York judge would answer the statute requirement. If it is said that the parties might go to another State and get married there, ^ the answer would seem to be twofold ; first, it is a poor argument in favor of any law to show that it may be violated with impunity, and second, if the law is a good one, it may be copied in other States. If so, the girl, being a resident of Massachusetts, could not obtain leave of any court elsewhere, and thus she wQuld find herself publicly disgraced, and her child a bastard, although everybody interested might be anxious to prevent it. § 93. It would seem to be equally objectionable as to residents. Assume the facts as above, except that both are residents of Massachusetts. It is for the interest of all parties that such a misfortune should be kept as secret as possible, and yet the young people are required to go before the Court, and publicly acknowledge their indis- cretion as a ground for obtaining leave to marry. This often of itself would serve the seducer as a bulwark against doing justice to his victim. § 94. The only ground upon which the law can be defended is that already indicated, that among our population there are very many sons and daughters of sunny Italy or Spain, or other warm countries, who at home are accustomed to marry 1 Commonwealth v. Graham, 157 Mass. 73. MAEEIAGE. 49 young, and are anxious to do so here, and in no other way can they be prevented. In other words, the entire population of Massachusetts is subjected to a law aimed solely against foreigners. It did not seem to occur to the framers of this law that if these foreigners are so anxious to marry, and are forbidden, their sense of morality is not likely to deter them from living together illegally. Indeed, a judge of one of our Probate Courts told the writer that it not infrequently happened that the young couple deliberately cohabited, so that the plea might be urged that the marriage was necessary as the young woman was already with child. The law well may be entitled an act against marriage and in favor of fornication among minors. § 95. This law is aimed against the ignorant foreigner ; but, strangely enough, it does not apply if the ignorance is sufficiently deep. The Public Statutes ^ provide that no marriage solemnized before a person professing to be a justice of the peace, minister, or rabbi, or solemnized in the society of Friends, according to the usages of the society, shall be void, nor the validity thereof in any way affected by want of jurisdiction or authority in such person or society, or by an omission or by informality in the manner of entering the intention of marriage if the marriage is in other respects lawful, and is consummated 1 Pub. St., ch. 145, § 27 ; St. 1893, ch. 461, § 2. 4 50 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. with a full belief on the part of either of the contracting parties that they have been lawfully joined in marriage. ^ As the penalty for perform- ing a marriage ceremony without a certificate is merely a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars for an official, or a year's imprisonment for a pre- tender," it probably would not be very difficult to find some one of easy conscience who, for a con- sideration, would unite the anxious couple. This ruse, however, is open only where there is igno- rance. It would be easy enough to keep the law from a young Italian ; it would not be so easy to keep it from an intelligent American. In this case, ignorance is indeed bliss, and wisdom folly. § 96. Marriages solemnized in a foreign coun- try by a consul or diplomatic agent of the United States are valid in this Commonwealth.^ § 97. A record should be kept by the person officiating of all marriages solemnized before him or in Quaker meeting, and of all facts required by law to be recorded, and a copy thereof sent for record to the clerk or registrar of the city or town in which the marriage was solemnized, and also to the clerk or registrar of the city or town in which each party to the marriage resided, and the clerk or registrar is required to keep a record thereof. Failure to comply with the statute does 1 Parton v. Herrey, 1 Gray, 119, 120; Commonwealth v. Caponi, 155 Mass. 534. '^ St. 1896, ch. 306. 8 Pub. St., ch. 145, § 28 ; Loring «. Thorndike, 5 AUen, 257. MAKKIAGE. 51 not affect the validity of the marriage, but merely subjects the offending person to a fine. ^ § 98. If a marriage is solemnized in another State between parties living in this Common- wealth, and they return to dwell here, it is their duty, within seven days after their return, to file with the clerk or registrar of the city or town where either of them lived at the time a certifi- cate or declaration of their marriage.^ Failure to do so merely STi^bjeots them to a fine of ten dollars, if any one chooses to prosecute them, but in no way affects the validity of the marriage. § 99. The record of a marriage made and kept, as prescribed by law, or a duly-certified copy thereof, is received in all coui'ts and places as presumptive evidence of such marriage,^ but it is not the only competent evidence.* Admissions by the party against whom process is instituted^ or evidence of general repute or of cohabitation as married persons, or any other circumstantial or presumptive evidence from which the fact may be inferred, are competent;^ but all these are open 1 Fnb. St., ch. 145, § 24; St. 1887, ch. 202; St. 1892, ch. 300. 2 Pub. St., ch. 145, § 21. 3 Id., ch. 145, §§ 29, 30. * Commonwealth v. Dill, 156 Mass. 226. 5 Commonwealth u. Caponi, 155 Mass. 534; Commonwealth v. Hayden, 163 Mass. 453; Commonwealth k. Holt, 121 Mass. 61; Commonwealth v. Thompson, 99 Mass. 444. 6 Pub. St., ch. 145, § 31 ; Commonwealth ./. Hurley, 14 Gray, 411 ; Commonwealth v, Kenney, 120 Mass. 387 ; Commonwealth v. Johnson, 10 Allen, 196. 52 MAKRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. to explanation and will not prevail against posi- tive proof that there was no legal marriage. ^ § 100. Whoever fraudulently and deceitfully entices or takes away an unmarried female under the age of sixteen years from her father's house, or wherever she may be, without the consent of the parent, guardian, or master, if any, under whose care and custody she is living, for the purpose of effecting a clandestine marriage of such female without such consent is liable to be punished by imprisonment in the State prison not exceeding one year, or by fine not exceeding one thousand dollars, or by both fine and imprisonment ;2 but in case of marriage, the parent cannot maintain a civil action for damages.^ § 101. -Our legislature has provided that no man shall marry his mother, grandmother, daughter, grand-daughter, stepmother, sister, grandfather's wife, son's wife, grandson's wife, wife's mother, wife's grandmother, wife's daughter, wife's grand- daughter, brother's daughter, sister's daughter, father's sister, or mother's sister.* § 102. No woman shall marry her father, grandfather, son, grandson, stepfather, brother, grandmother's husband, daughter's husband, 1 Norcross v. Norcross, 155 Mass. 425 ; Commonwealth e. Waterman, 122 Mass. 43, 59. 2 Pub. St., ch. 207, § 1. ° Hervey v. Moseley, 7 Gray, 479. 4 Pub. St., ch. 145, § 1. MARRIAGE. 53 grand-daughter's husband, husband's father, hus- band's grandfather, husband's son, husband's grandson, brother's son, sister's son, father's brother, or mother's brother. ^ § 103. Where the relationship is founded on marriage, the prohibition continues, notwithstand- ing the dissolution by death or divorce of the marriage on which such relationship is founded, unless the divorce is for a cause which shows such marriage to have been originally unlawful or void.^ Marriages between relations other than those above prohibited, as with a sister-in-law,^ are valid. § 104. All marriages contracted while either party has a former wife or husband living are void,* unless there is a valid divorce, in which case the innocent party may marry at once, but the guilty party must wait two years from the time of the entry of the final decree of divorce.^ § 105. A mistaken belief in the death of a hus- band or wife does not justify remarriage. Thus, a woman, whose husband had started on a whal- ing voyage and remained absent more than seven years, contracted a second man-iage in good faith 1 Pub. St., ch. 145, § 2. ■' Id., ch. 145, § 3. ' Greenwood v. Curtis, 6 Mass. 358, 379. * Pub. St., ch. 145, § 4 ; Raudlett v. Rice, 141 Mass. 385. * Pub. St., ch. 146, § 22 ; Googins v. Googins, 152 Ma.. Paine, 114 Mass. 520; Worthy v. Clapp, 99 Mass. 561. 2 Stauwood !>. Stanwood, 17 Mass. 57, 60. 3 Stetson V. O'SuUivan, 8 Allen, 321. * Holmes v. Winchester, 135 Mass. 299; Winchester v. Holmes, 138 Mass. 540. ^ Holmes v. Winchester, 133 Mass. 140. 8 Edwards v. Stevens, 3 Allen, 315. 7 Fowle V. Torrey, 135 Mass. 87. 8 Woodward v. Spurr, 141 Mass. 283. EIGHT TO HER PEOPEETY AND TO DO BUSINESS. Ill firm.i Unable to contract with or sue him, she cannot contract with or sue others jointly with him. § 224. If the others have assumed a several liability, as if they individually as well as part- ners agree to pay for her services, or indorse the note, the fact that they cannot be sued as partners would not exempt them from this independent liability. 2 § 225. If a third person buys her interest in or claim against the firm, her assignment thereof may or may not prove of value, but it affords a valuable consideration, as between herself and the purchaser, for the purchase price. ^ § 226. This disability of husband and wife to sue one another upon their attempted contracts extends to the representatives of their respec- tive estates after death. The fact that either sur- vives the other cannot make that a good contract which was originally a nullity ; * nor does divorce legalize such a contract.^ § 227. It also extends to third persons to whom the claim may be assigned. Thus, the holder of a promissory note, originally void because made 1 Clark V. Patterson, 158 Mass. 388. 2 Prescott Bank v. Caverly, 7 Gray, 217; Fowle v. Torrey, 131 Mass. 289. 8 Lord V. Davison, 3 Allen, 131. " Kneil u. Egleston, 140 Mass. 202; Jackson v. Parks, 10 Cnsh. 550. 6 Porter v. Wakefield, 146 Mass. 25. 112 MAEEIED "WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. by husband to wife,^ or by wife to husband,^ cannot sue the maker. He, however, may sue the indorser, who is estopped from setting up the illegality.^ § 228. If the form of the note is slightly changed, if instead of being made payable to the wife or husband it is made payable to bearer, or to the order of a third person, all parties may be sued, whether they sign jointly* or severally,^ as makers^ or as indorsers.' If in the hands of an innocent holder for value, such a note may be enforced against the wife, even though her signa- ture is obtained without consideration,^ or is extorted from her by her husband's threats, but not if her hand is taken forcibly and compelled to hold the pen and write her name.^ § 229. This difference of result hinges upon the character of the note or other contract in its inception. If in its origin it is a contract directly 1 Ingham v. White, 4 Allen, 412. 2 Roby V. Phelon, 118 Mass. 541, commenting on Slawson v. Loring, 5 Allen, 340. ' Kenworthy v. Sawyer, 125 Mass. 28 ; Prescott Bank v. Caverly, 7 Gray, 217. « Parker v. Kane, 4 Allen, 346 ; Spaulding v. Day, 10 Allen, 96, 100; Thacher v. Churchill, 118 Mass. 108; Goodnow v. Hill, 125 Mass. 587. 6 Wilder v. Richie, 117 Mass. 382 ; Burr v. Swan, 118 Mass. 588. <" Major V. Holmes, 124 Mass. 108. ' roster V. Leach, 160 Mass. 418. 8 Binney v. Globe National Bank, 1 50 Mass. 574. 8 Fairbanks v. Snow, 145 Mass. 153. EIGHT TO HER PROPERTY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 113 between husband and wife, it is void and cannot be enforced, 1 no matter into whose hands it may fall. If in its origin it is a contract with a third person, it is valid, and remains valid, no matter what becomes of it. Even if the third person is introduced for the avowed purpose of avoiding the marital disability, and though it may be assigned thereafter to husband^ or wife, it is and remains valid.* § 230. The distinction, though slight, is funda- mental. As a trap it has proved a great success, but it is now a trifle worn, and the legislature might well dispense with it. § 231. Let us illustrate further. A wife loaned money to her husband, who gave a note and mort- gage to a third person for her benefit. This third person on the same day assigned the mortgage note and claim to the wife, but did not indorse the note. The Court said that if the note had been indorsed to the wife so as to pass both the legal and equitable title to her, it might in law at least have been extinguished, because of her incapacity to be a party to a contract with or to an action against her husband ; * but as the note was shown to have been assigned only and not 1 Whitney v. Closson, 138 Mass. 49. 2 Butler V. Ives, 139 Mass. 202. ' Spooner v. Spooner, 155 Mass. 52. * Citing Chapman u. Kellogg, 102 Mass. 246 ; Abbott v. Win- chester, 105 Mass. 115. But see as to these Butler v. Ives, 139 Mass. 202. 8 114 MAREIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. indorsed, it remained in full force, and might have been sued against her husband in the name of the payee for her benefit. ^ This distinction between indorsement and assignment is too "per- plexingly subtle," however, and no longer is recognized by our Courts.^ § 232. By the assignment, the legal as well as equitable title to the mortgaged property vests in the wife, and she can give a good title by trans- fer to a third person,^ but cannot herself sue on the note or foreclose the mortgage while her hus- band continues to own the equity of redemption ; * and the same is true of the husband as against the wife.* § 233. She may maintain any action necessary to protect her title or possession against any one except her husband, as, for example, against an officer who attaches the mortgaged property on a writ against her husband.^ The note itself may be enforced by any person to whom she assigns it, may be proved for her benefit against his estate in insolvency,^ or by her personally against his estate at his death,** and a divorce obtained by 1 Degnan v. Farr, 126 Mass. 297. 2 Spooner v. Spooner, 155 Mass. 52. 8 Model Lodging House Association v. Boston, 114 Mass. 133. ' Tucker v. Fenno, 110 Mass. 311. ^ Cormerais v. Wesselhoeft, 114 Mass. 550. 6 Duggan V. Wright, 157 Mass. 228. '• Stearns v. BuUens, 8 Allen, 581. s Spooner v. Spooner, 155 Mass. 52. RIGHT TO HER PROPERTY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 115 him for her adultery will not prevent a re- covery.^ § 234. So, although ordinarily neither husband nor wife can transfer property directly to the other, 2 if either conveys it to a third person, who in turn conveys it to the other, the transaction is valid 3 unless it is in fraud of creditors.* A mere promise, like a pi-omissory note, without consideration, even if secured by mortgage, can- not be so conveyed." § 235. This is the common mode of conveying real estate from husband to wife, or vice versa.^ It can be done without difficulty, but requires two deeds instead of one, — a good thing at least for the lawyer, whose fees are thereby fattened. § 236. This necessity for the intervention of a third party extends even to the case of a purchase by a wife of her husband's property at sheriff's sale. A direct deed to her from the officer con- veys no title, because he has himself no title, and if his deed were valid it would operate as a con- veyance of the husband's title directly from the husband to the wife.' 1 Nichols V. Nichols, 1 36 Mass. 256. 2 Thomson v. O'Sullivan, 6 Allen, 303; Gay v. Kingsley, 11 Allen, 345 ; Knowles v. Hull, 99 Mass. 562. " Motte V. Alger, 15 Gray, 322; Porter v. Wakefield, 146 Mass. 25, 27. * Blake w.Sawin, 10 Allen, 340; Strattonu.Hemon, 154 Mass. 310. 5 Phillips 17. Frye, 14 Allen, 36. See the comments upon this ease in Degnan v. Parr, 126 Mass. 297, 299. " Donahue v. Huhbard, 154 Mass. 537. ' Stetson V. O'Sullivan, 8 Allen, 321. 116 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. § 237. A wife, however, may purchase her hus- band's real estate at foreclosure under a power of sale mortgage. The title having been conveyed by the husband to the mortgagee at the time of the mortgage, the mortgagee conveys to the wife the title thus acquired, and the transaction thus becomes a transfer to her from a third party. ^ § 238. So, also, a wife may purchase from her husband's assignees in insolvency, for the legal title is in them under the assignment.^ § 239. If a husband buys real estate, and has the deed made directly from the seller to his wife, he cannot reclaim it subsequently. The legal presumption is that it was intended by him as a provision for her, and the mere fact that his money paid for it does not establish a resulting trust in his favor. ^ Neither payment of part of the consideration, nor his improvements upon the land, give him any lien or claim.* § 240. The same is largely true of personal property, as to which there are some nice dis- tinctions.^ § 241. If a husband, as his wife's agent, buys an article, taking the bill of sale in her name, the article is hers, although partly paid for with 1 Field V. Gooding, 106 Mass. 310. 2 Wilson V. Winslow, 145 Mass. 339. 8 Edgerly v. Edgerly, 112 Mass. 175; Cairns v. Colburn, 104 Mass. 274. * Libby v. Chase, 117 Mass. 105. 5 Sweeney v. Boston riye Cents Savings Bank, 116 Mass. 384. EIGHT TO HER PEOPEETY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 117 his money. The Court says : " In this Common- wealth a married woman, though she cannot ac- quire property by contract or gift directly from her husband, may acquire it either by purchase or by gift from a third person, and may assert her rights therein by a suit in her own name against any person but her husband. She may make such purchase either by her own act or through her husband, or any other person as her agent. If the purchase is made in her behalf, and the property is transferred by the seller to her," it is hers, and "the fact that the husband himself pays part of the price to the seller does not" affect the case.^ § 242. On the other hand, if the article is pur- chased by the wife, with money which the hus- band gives her, though part of it is from her own earnings, the article is his.^ In one case the Court held that a married woman could not sue a railroad company for the loss of a trunk contain- ing her clothes, on the ground that they belonged not to her, but to her husband. The clothes were purchased by her with money from a fund formed by the joint earnings of herself and her husband. The Court said: "If the articles of clothing and personal ornament appropriate for her are pur- chased with his money, or upon his credit, the 1 McCowan v. Donaldson, 128 Mass. 169. 2 Hawkins v. Providence & Worcester R. E. Co., 119 Mass. 596; KeUy V. Drew, 12 Allen, 107. 118 MAERIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. fact that they are selected and purchased by her and are intended for her personal and exclusive use does not render them any the less his prop- erty. The money with which she purchased the clothing appears to have been given to her by her husband from a fund made up of her and his earn- ings. We see no ground on which we can say that this joint fund or any part of it was her separate property. The money given to her from that fund was her husband's money and not hers. There can be no valid gift of money or property by the husband to the wife. It would remain his property, notwithstanding such gift. " ^ § 243. This case was decided in 1876, and it required three years to right the wrong. Not until 1879 ^ was a statute passed authorizing a wife to acquire by gift from her husband, as her separate property, wearing apparel, articles of personal ornament and articles necessary for her personal use, and then it was limited to a value of not more than two thousand dollars, and it was provided that the gift should not be in fraud of his creditors. § 244. Sensitive husbands have been heard to complain that the legislature did not at the same time authorize gifts from wife to husband ; but in view of the decisions, such legislation would seem to be superfluous. 1 Hawkins «. Providence & Worcester R. R. Co., 119 Mass. 596, 597. 2 St. 1879, ch. 133; Pub. St., ch. 147, § 3. EIGHT TO HER PROPERTY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 119 § 245. The exact force of the statute of 1879 has not yet been determined judicially. It is worth the while of a married woman to consider whether under this law the articles she is now wearing are or are not actually her property. Although bought with her money, were they bought in her husband's name? If bought with his money or in his name, has he actually given them to her ? The statute says " may acquire by gift." Has she acquired them? If she is wear- ing a valuable ring or watch or other ornament as his gift, has it come to her since 1879 ? ^ If she had it before 1879, has her husband since pre- sented it to her ? Since 1879, has she received from him more than 12,000 worth of wearing apparel, articles of personal ornament, and arti- cles necessary for personal use ? What articles are necessary ? Is the piano, or guitar, the dia- mond brooch, the sapphire ring, the India shawl, the easy chair, the oil painting, the bit of Dresden china, or the bicycle^ which he has given her, necessary for her personal use? § 246. On the meaning of the word "neces- sary," the Court has said:^ "Articles are to be considered necessary which are suitable to the degree and condition of life of the person to whom they are furnished, having regard to the 1 Porter v. "Wakefield, 146 Mass. 25, 27. " Pyne v. Wood, 145 Mass. 558. " Hamilton v. Lane, 138 Mass. 358. 120 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. husband's estate, and are not to be confined to those which are required to sustain life or to preserve decency ; " ^ but if the question ever arises, it will have to be passed upon by a jury, which, however it may be cautioned by the Court, will be apt to view the matter in the light, not of their prosperity, but of their misfortunes. What both to-day may regard as reasonable and neces- sary, may seem then to his creditors and to a jury aii extravagant luxury. § 247. Money, in the view of a majority of the members of our Supreme Judicial Court is, hap- pily, not a necessary,^ and as the statute does not expressly authorize gifts of money between hus- band and wife, it would seem that if the wife buys articles, however necessary, with money which her husband gives her, the law still is that the articles belong to him,^ unless after they are bought he gives them to her. § 248. The statute limits the amount in value which a wife may acquire by gift from her hus- band to 12,000. Does this mean $2,000 at one time, or -12,000 in the aggregate? Probably the latter. A woman who receives from her husband a year in value, would require but five years 1 See also Davlin v. Stone, 4 Cush. 359 ; Richardson v. Buswell, 10 Met. 506. Ante, § 27. 2 Skinner v. Tirrell, 159 Mass. 474. ' Hawkins v. Providence & Worcester E. R. Co., 119 Mass. 596 j Commonwealth v. Davis, 9 Cush. 283. EIGHT TO HEE PEOPEETY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 121 within which to reach the statute limit ; and she who started with the statute in 1879 has already long passed it, if she has received but tl50 a year. § 249. To understand some of the dangers more clearly, let us take an illustration. A young man marries a rich girl. She prefers that he should have at least the appearance of taking care of his family, and with her consent, he receives her income and deposits it to his credit in his bank. She buys her dresses, her jewels, her furniture, her horses, and her carriages, but all in his name, and he pays the bills as they come in. Having been purchased "upon his credit," they are "his property," although paid for with her money. He may of course formally " give " them to her, but she would very likely resent any such pretence of generosity on his part. Unless he does, all, except her " necessary wearing apparel," are subject to his debts; and even if, for the sake of protecting her, he goes through the form of giving, she can hold them only to the extent of -$2,000. A fashionable equipage of horses, harness, carriages, robes, and livery will oftentimes alone reach that sum. Many a rich young matron unconsciously dances in her hus- band's ball-dress, sparkles with her husband's diamonds, rides home in her husband's carriage, not one penny of which was paid for by her hus- band's money, but any of which, except the dress, may be seized at any time by his creditors. 122 MAERIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. § 250. There is but one lesson to be drawn from this. So long as the law is as it is, every married woman of means should keep her own bank account, her own box in the deposit vaults, buy in her own name, and pay with her own checks. If she does this she is reasonably secure.^ § 251. There are still further exceptions to the rule forbidding direct transfers between husband and wife. Thus, by statute, a husband may assign or transfer a life-insurance policy to his wife.^ § 252. So gifts of personal property actually delivered by the husband to the wife, retained by her and unrevoked, become at his death her abso- lute property unless needed to pay his debts. During his life her right in them is conditional and precarious; he may revoke the gift, and resume possession, or his creditors may seize them. The wife can maintain no action at law in relation to them in her name ; they do not become her sole and separate property, like gifts from other persons; but, after his death, his legal represen- tatives cannot disturb her right to them save for the purpose of paying his debts. ^ Mere delivery 1 Pub. St., ch. 147, § 8. 2 St. 1894, ch. 522, § 73. 8 Marshall u. Jaquith, 134 Mass. 138; Spelman v. Aldrich, 126 Mass. 113, 117; Towle v. Towle, 114 Mass. 167; Stimpson v. Achorn, 158 Mass. 342, 348. EIGHT TO HER PROPEETY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 123 to her is not enough, for the ordinary rule is that the wife's jjossession is her husband's.^ § 253. There also may be gifts in contemplation of death, called in the law gifts causa mortis.^ These gifts and the wife's rights therein are sub- stantially like those already described, with this important addition, that they must be made in expectation of death. ^ If the husband recovers, the gift is void.* § 254. The husband also may make such a gift to any one other than his wife, and it is valid against her, for she is only interested in such per- sonalty as he may possess at his death. The law is more merciful as to creditors, against whom it is not valid. ^ The wife also may make such a gift to her husband, and with or without his consent to any one else.^ § 255. The gift can apply only to specific arti- cles, capable of passing by delivery. If it pur- ports to be a disposition of the donor's entire estate, that is, if it assumes the province of a will, it is void.^ § 256. The fact that it is given in trust, the terms and limitations of which are prescribed by 1 Carley v. Green, 12 Allen, 104. 2 Whitney v. Wheeler, 116 Mass. 490. 8 Sessions v. Moselej, 4 Cush. 87. * Parish v. Stone, 14 Pick. 198, 204. 6 Chase v. Kedding, 13 Gray, 418; Mitchell v. Pease, 7 Cush. 350. 6 Marshall v. Berry, 13 Allen, 43. 124 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. the giver and may vary according to subsequent events, does not affect its validity.^ In deter- mining this, it must be subject to the same tests which are applied to other trusts, the essentials of which are that the precise nature of the trust intended, the particular persons to be benefited, and the proportion each is to take, must appear, or the trust fails. If it does not meet these tests the trustee to whom it is given does not benefit thereby, but the entire gift falls. If, however, the distribution is left to the trustee's discretion, no trust is established, and so he takes it personally as an absolute gift.^ § 257. There must be an actual delivery, or its equivalent, what is commonly spoken of as sym- bolical or constructive delivery not being suffi- cient.^ If the gift is of a trunk and its contents, a delivery and retention of the keys is sufficient,* but the mere taking of the keys, opening, packing, and locking the trunk, and returning the keys to their place is not.® The delivery of a bank book, though it is not formally assigned, entitles the donee to the money on deposit in the bank;^ and the delivery of coupons for collection may 1 Clough V. Clougli, 117 Mass. 83. 2 Sheedy v. Roach, 124 Mass. 472. •■' McGrath u. Reynolds, 116 Mass. 566, 568; bearing v. Jones, 149 Mass. 12. * Debinson v. Emmons, 158 Mass. 592. * Coleman v. Parker, 114 Mass. 30. ^ Pierce v. Boston Piye Cents Savings Bank, 129 Mass. 425. EIGHT TO HER PROPERTY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 125 pass the title. ^ The title to a note may pass by delivery without indorsement,^ and may be sued after the donor's death in the name of his administrator for the benefit of the donee. ^ § 258. The donor's own note, payable to the donee, is not the subject of such a gift. It is a mere promise, without consideration, and could not be enforced against the donor during life, nor after death against his estate.* § 259. Declarations of the donor subsequent to the alleged gift, tending to show the existence of a state of mind and purpose consistent or incon- sistent therewith, are admissible to overthrow,* but not to establish^ the gift. § 260. If a husband builds upon his wife's real estate, the buildings are gifts to her, no agreement between them that they shall remain his being binding,^ and a joint note given by them secured by mortgage upon the real estate must be paid, not by her but by his representatives after his death. ^ § 261. Formerly the union of two persons in marriage extinguished all debts which either 1 Tyndale v. Randall, 154 Masa. 103. 2 Bates V. Kempton, 7 Gray, 382 ; Grover v. Grover, 24 Pick. 261. ' Sessions v. Moseley, 4 Gush. 87. * Parish v. Stone, 14 Pick. 198. 6 Whitney v. Wheeler, 116 Mass. 490. 6 Eockwood V. Wiggin, 16 Gray, 402. ' Washbnm i;. Sproat, 16 Mass. 449 ; Howard v. Fesseuden, 14 Allen, 124, 128; Webster v. Potter, 105 Mass. 414; Libby v. Chase, 117 Mass. 105. 8 Minot, Pet'r, 164 Mass. 38, 41. Post, § 285. 126 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. owed the other, hut a more liheral and equitable rule now probably would be adopted. Neither can enforce a claim during the marriage ; but the right is suspended merely and may be asserted at the termination of the marriage. The reason for the old rule having ceased to exist, the rule itself ought not to remain in force.-' § 262. A married woman may occupy any posi- tion of trust, 'whether as executrix, administra- trix, guardian, or trustee, and may bind herself and the estate she represents without any act or assent on her husband's part.^ § 263. She cannot', under the Massachusetts Constitution, occupy any judicial office, and can be neither a notary public ^ nor a justice of the peace ; * although by statute she may be appointed a special commissioner, with substantially all the powers of a justice of the peace. If her name is changed by marriage or otherwise, the commis- sion terminates, but she may be reappointed under her new name.° The Supreme Judicial Court at first decided that she could not be an attorney-at- law,^ but the legislature gave her the right. ^ 1 Martin u. Martin, 146 Mass. 517, 518. See also Bemjs i;. Call, 10 Allen, 512; Butler v. Ives, 139 Mass. 202, 204. 2 Pub. St., ch. 147, § 5. See, as to the rights of sureties on bond. Pub. St., ch. 143, § 9, ' Opinion of Justices, 150 Mass. 586. 4 Id., 107 Mass. 604. 6 St. 1883, ch. 252; St. 1889, ch. 197 ; St. 1896, ch. 476. ^ Robinson's Case, 131 Mass. 376. ' St. 1882. ch. 139. EIGHT TO HEE PROPEKTY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 127 § 264. By express statute she may be an agent to aid discharged convicts,i an overseer of the poor, 2 a police matron,^ an assistant probation officer in the Municipal Court for the City of Boston,* a prison commissioner,^ assistant phy- sician at the State hospital,^ assistant register of deeds,' assistant town or city clerk, ^ member of the school committee,^ court stenographer, i" school teacher, 11 and trustee of various public institutions; the Supreme Judicial Court having given its opinion that at common law, which is our law upon the subject, a woman may be author- ized to fill any local office of an administrative character, the duties of which she is competent to perform. ^'^ § 265. All work and labor performed by a mar- ried woman, except for her husband and children, is, in the absence of an express agreement to the contrary, presumed to be on her separate account, and she alone is entitled to the proceeds. ^^ Her wages for personal labor or services cannot be attached by trustee process in any suit against her J Pub. St., ch. 219, § 27. 2 St. 1886, ch. 150. 8 St. 1887, ch. 234 J St. 1888, ch. 181. 4 St. 1892, ch. 276. 6 pui,. gt,, ch. 219, § 1. 6 St. 1884, ch. 116. ' St. 188.5, ch. 7. » St. 1895, ch. 142. 9 Pub. St., ch. 44, § 21. 10 St. 1885, ch. 291, § 4. " Pub. St., ch. 44, § 14. ^ Opinion of Justices, 115 Mass. 602. " Pub. St., ch. 147, § 4 ; Williams v. Williams, 131 Mass. 533 ; Fowle V. Tidd, 15 Gray, 94. 128 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. husband ; ^ and if, notwithstanding, any person wilfully causes, or aids and abets in causing them to be so attached, for the purpose of unlawfully hindering or delaying their payment, such person is liable to a fine not exceeding fifty dollars, to be paid to her.^ § 266. She may carry on business on her sepa- rate account for her sole benefit, or may join any firm of which her husband is not a member;* the only requirement being that she or her hus- band shall record in the clerk's office of the city or town in which she does or proposes to do busi- ness, a certificate setting forth her name, and that of her husband, the nature of the business, and the place where it is, or is proposed to be carried on, giving, if practicable, the street and number. If such certificate is not so recorded by either husband or wife, the property therein employed is liable to be attached or taken on execution, as the property of the husband, and he is liable upon all contracts lawfully made in the prosecution of such business in the same manner and to the same extent as if the contracts had been made by himself.* § 267. The business may be carried on under any lawful name, and the name of the wife > Pub. St., ch. 183, § 29. » Pub. St., ch. 183, § 32. 8 Ante, § 205. * Pub. St., ch. 147, § 11 ; Feran v. Eudolphsen, 106 Mass. 471 ; Harnden v. Gould, 126 Mass. 411. EIGHT TO HEE PEOPEETY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 129 need not appear anywhere except in the certifi- cate. 1 § 268. Care should be taken in describing the place where the business is to be carried on. Thus, if the certificate sets forth that the business is to be done at a certain number of a certain street, " and in such other rooms as may be neces- sarily connected therewith," it will not protect property employed in a business carried on in a separate and distinct building, unless it is shown that the same is necessarily connected therewith, at least by the nature of the business carried on.^ In case of change in the nature of the business, or in case of removal, a new certificate should be at once filed, whether the rem&val is from one building to another, or from one town to another, as otherwise neither the property in the new nor the debts due at the old place are protected.^ § 269. So, care should be taken in describing the nature of the business to be done. "The keeping of a variety and fruit store " seems to be sufficiently definite,* or the words grocer, inn- keeper, storekeeper, and the like, or, in a country town or village, "the general business of saloon keeper. " ^ If the business is to be wholesale as 1 Weil V. Raymond, 142 Mass. 206, 214. '^ Harriman v. Gray, 108 Mass. 229. 3 Dawes v. Rodier, 125 Mass. 421. " Mason v. Bowles, 117 Mass. 86. 5 Cahill V. Campbell, 105 Mass. 40. 130 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. well as retail, a description of it as retail is in- sufficient, although, if the business is principally at retail, the fact that an occasional transaction is made at wholesale will not invalidate the certificate.^ § 270. Carrying on a farm ^ or a boarding house '^ is business requiring a certificate, but pur- chasing food and stabling for a horse which a married woman owns, or the purchase of provi • sions for herself and family, or of materials for a house on her own land are not uses of property which require a certificate.* § 271. When the act done by the wife is in the nature of an investment of property, even if it be made with a view to profit, it cannot be con- sidered as doing business within the meaning of the statute. Thus, where a married woman who kept a few boarders bought a sow with a view to its natural increase, and fed it and its litter of pigs from the waste of the table, it was held to be in the nature of an investment from her sav- ings, and not subject to attachment for her hus- band's debts. Had she raised pigs as a business, it would have been different.^ § 272. The mere fact that a woman permits her 1 O'Neil V. Wolfisohn, 137 Mass. 134. 2 Snow V. Sheldon, 126 Mass. 332. 8 Chapman u. Briggs, 11 Allen, 546; Harnden v. Gould, 126 Mass. 411. * Proper v. Cobb, 104 Mass. 589. ^ Lockwood V. Corey, 150 Mass. 82. EIGHT TO HER PEOPERTY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 131 husband to use her property in his business is not such a carrying on of business by her as to require the record of a certificate. Thus, if she allows her husband to use a number of her horses and carriages in his livery stable business, a certifi- cate is not necessary for their protection. ^ § 273. A description of the property to be used in the business is not necessary. If it is in- serted, and is made to include property of the hus- band, the false statement does not invalidate the certificate; nor does the fact that there was an intermingling of the property of husband and wife defeat the protection afforded.^ If the goods are attached in a suit against her husband, she may show by parol evidence that they are hers,^ and may recover damages therefor.* § 274. The certificate is only necessary for the protection of personal property, and not of real estate.^ § 275. Failui-e to record the certificate does not enlarge the husband's rights in his wife's prop- erty, nor of itself give him authority to dispose of it; and no mortgage, pledge, or sale by him is valid, unless it is shown to have been made with her consent and by her authority, or to have been subsequently ratified and sanctioned by her.® ^ Wheeler v. Raymond, 130 Mass. 247. 2 Long V. Drew, 114 Mass. 77. s Mason v. Bowles, 117 Mass. 86. ' Paine v. Farr, 118 Mass. 74. '' Bancroft v. Curtis, 108 Mass. 47. ^ Merrill v. Parker, 112 Mass. 250. 132 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. § 276. If the husband's domicil is without the State, the law does not apply, and no certificate is necessary ;i but if his domicil is within the State, and there is no certificate, he is liable, whether the debt is contracted within or without the State. The wife also is liable, but the lia- bility of each is several, and they cannot be joined in the same suit.^ § 277. Formerly, the statute required that the certificate should be filed and left with the clerk,3 but this has been changed, and now it is simply to be recorded, the document itself being returned.* It may be recorded in any book kept for the purpose, even though the same book may also be used for other records. The certificate of the clerk indorsed thereon is sufficient evidence that it has been recorded.^ § 278. If a husband carries on his wife's farm at his expense, and for his benefit, but with her consent, no certificate is required, for he is not her agent, and she is not liable for the debts ; but the produce grown thereon belongs to him and may be taken for his debts. ^ So, too, he may render himself liable by his conduct for injuries 1 Hill V. Wright, 129 Mass. 296. 2 Ridley v. Knox, 138 Mass. 83. 8 St. 1862, ch. 198; Chapiu v. Kiugsbnry, 135 Mass. 580; s. c, 138 Mass. 194. * St. 1881, ch. 64; Pub. St., ch. 147, §§ 11, 12. 5 Hart V. Buffinton, 150 Mass. 75. 8 Plajsted I). Hair, 150 Mass. 275. EIGHT TO HEE PEOPEETY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 133 to third parties caused by defects, as, for example, an unsafe flight of stairs, or an unguarded hole, in real estate, the record title of which is in her.^ § 279. There is no presumption that he is the principal.^ The question whether he is principal or agent is in this, as in every case, one of fact.^ § 280. If the debt was in fact her husband's, and she subsequently has given her promissory note for it, she may refuse to pay the note while in the hands of the original payee, as without consideration.* § 281. If he is held out by his employment as a special agent with limited authority, the person with whom he deals must ascertain the extent of the authority at his peril. ^ Parol evidence is admitted to show that he had no express authority to act;^ but this may be controlled by evidence of the circumstances surrounding the contract.'^ § 282. Thus, if a husband contracts with a painter for the painting of his wife's house, and 1 Liudsey v. Leighton, 150 Mass. 285 ; Toomey v. Sanborn, 146 Mass. 28. 2 LoTeU V. Williams, 125 Mass. 439 ; Mclntyre u. Knowlton, 6 Allen, 565. 8 Jefferds u. Alvard, 151 Mass. 94; Wheaton v. Trimble, 145 Mass. 345 ; Stratton v. Hemon, 154 Mass. 310. * Morse v. Mason, 103 Mass. 560. 5 Hunt V. Poole, 139 Mass. 224, 230. 6 Riley v. Hampshire County Natl. Bank, 164 Mass. 482; Read V. Earle, 12 Gray, 423 ; Merrick v. Plumley, 99 Mass. 566. ' Anderson v. Ames, 151 Mass. 11 ; Simes v. Rockwell, 156 Mass. 372. 134 MAKEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. both husband and wife testify that he was not her agent, and that he expected to pay for it with his money, as a gratuity to her, this testimony is not conclusive, and if the jury believe from the other testimony that he was her agent, they may so find.^ § 283. If the creditor charges the bill origin- ally to the husband, in the belief that he was the principal, this does not necessarily preclude him from holding the wife liable when he discovers that she is the true principal.^ Such a charge is strong evidence that the debt is due from the husband, and not the wife, but it is not conclu- sive.^ So of an acceptance of part payment from the husband in cash.* Even if the husband's promissory note is accepted in payment, yet if at the time the creditor was ignorant of the fact that the husband was a mere agent, he may repudiate the note, and sue the wife on the original contract as undisclosed principal.^ So if suit is brought first against her husband and then discontinued it may be shown that it was begun by mistake of an attorney.^ § 284. Even where a husband is or may be lia- 1 Dyer v. Swift, 154 Mass. 159. 2 Allen V. Fuller, 118 Mass. 402 ; Arnold v. Spurr, 130 Mass. 347. 3 Gardner v. Bean, 124 Mass. 347. * Westgate v. Munroe, 100 Mass. 227, 228. s Lovell V. "Williams, 125 Mass. 439. 8 Andrews v. Matthews, 124 Mass. 109. EIGHT TO HER PROPERTY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 135 ble, the wife by her own contract may assume a liability alone or jointly with him.^ We have seen this already as to promissory notes,^ but it extends to any form of contract. Thus, by con- tract, express or implied, she may become liable for her clothes,^ or for rent of a tenement in which she and her husband are living together,* or in which she lives alone,^ or for the purchase^ or sale ^ of real estate. § 285. A wife may mortgage her separate estate to secure her husband's debt,* but she is entitled to have it exonerated out of his estate upon his death. ^ § 286. She is bound by covenants in her deed precisely as if she were unmarried, and if she warrants the title, she is estopped from setting up a subsequently acquired title, i" To bind her, how- ever, it is not enough that she signs the deed, if her name appears only in a clause purporting to 1 Pierce v. Kittredge, 115 Mass. 374. The statement to the contrary in Tobey ;;. Smith, 15 Gray, 535, ig not law to-day. 2 Ante, § 228. 8 Labaree v. Colby, 99 Mass. 559. * Rogers v. Coy, 164 Mass. 391. " Fiske V. Mcintosh, 101 Mass. 66. ^ Estabrook v. Earle, 97 Mass. 302 ; Stewart v. Jenkins, 6 Allen, 300. ' Baker v. Hathaway, 5 Allen, 103. 8 Bartlett v. Bartlett, 4 Allen, 440. 9 Savage v. Winchester, 15 Gray, 453; Minot, Pet'r, 164 Mass. 38. Ante, § 260. l" Knight V. Thayer, 125 Mass. 25. 136 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. release her interest in the property; she must join in the efiBcient and operative words of the conveyance.^ § 287. If land is bought by her husband in her name, but without her authority, and in the deed there is an agreement that she is to assume and pay a mortgage, her subsequent ratification of the purchase renders her liable under the agreement, although she was ignorant of its terms. ^ § 288. Suits against a married woman are con- ducted substantially as against men, except in the matter of arrest.^ Her property is subject to attachment and execution, and she may be put or go voluntarily into insolvency, subject to the same provisions of law that govern insolvent men.* § 289. If a married woman comes into this State from another State or country without her husband, he never having lived with her in this Commonwealth, she acquires all the rights and powers given to our own married women by our statutes, and may transact business, make con- tracts, sue and be sued, in her own name, and dis- pose of her property here precisely as if she were 1 Alleudorff v. Gaugengigl, 146 Mass. 542; Pierce v. Chace, 108 Mass. 254 ; Bruce v. Wood, 1 Met. 542 ; Raymond c. Holden, 2 Cush. 264. 2 Coolidge ti. Smith, 129 Mass. 554. 8 Ante, § 140. ' Binney v. Globe National Bank, 150 Mass. 574 ; Mundo a. Shepard, 166 Mass. 323. EIGHT TO HER PEOPEETY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 137 unmarried.^ If husband and wife, married else- where, come into this Commonwealth at the same or different times, and reside here as husband and wife, she retains all property which she had acquired by law or marriage contract or settle- ment, and their subsequent rights and liabilities are the same as if they had married at the time of their first residing together in this Common- wealth.^ A married woman whose husband has absented himself from the Commonwealth, aban- doning and not sufficiently maintaining her, or whose husband has been sentenced to confinement in the state prison may be authorized by the Probate Court, upon her petition, to dispose of her property, both real and personal, or such property as he acquired by the marriage, and which remains within the Commonwealth undis- posed of by him or to which he is entitled in her right ; and to use and dispose of the same or the proceeds during his absence or imprisonment as if she were unmarried, and such authority con- tinues until the husband returns and claims his marital rights, or is discharged from prison.^ § 290. Most married women are governed by the law of to-day, but as there are couples still living who have "celebrated their silver, if not yet their golden weddings, " * and as property 1 Pub. St., ch. 147, § 29. 2 Pub. St., ch. 147, § 30. 3 Pub. St., ch. 147, § 31 ; St. 1887, ch. 332, § 2. * Chase v. Phillips, 153 Mass. 17, 20. 138 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. rights are affected sometimes by the early stat- utes, a brief review of their provisions may not be valueless. A mere reference to the very early statutes up to and including the Revised Statutes of 1836 will be sufficient. ^ § 291. In 1837,^ it was provided that marriage operated to extinguish the authority of a married ■woman who had been a guardian. In 1842 ^ a limited power to make a will was given her. § 292. In 1845* the first step towards the full recognition of a married woman's rights was taken. It was a halting step in the light of to- day, but was a great stride then. It authorized certain ante-nuptial agreements as to her separate property ; the conveyance to her of property to be held without the intervention of a trustee to her sole and separate use free from the interference or control of her husband ; with the right in her to manage it, and to sue and be sued in her own name at law or in equity upon any contract made or wrong done by her in regard to it, or before marriage ; and the property might be attached or taken on execution in such suit, the real estate being subject to curtesy, and the personalty to be taken by the husband in case she died intestate, unless there was a contrary provision in the con- 1 St. 1787, ch. 32; St. 1823, ch. 146; St. 1830, ch. 54; St. 1833, ch. 127 ; St. 1835, ch. 146 ; Kev. St. ch. 59, § 2 ; ch. 77 ; ch. 135, § 20. 2 St. 1837, ch. 171. 8 St. 1842, ch. 74. 4 St. 1845, ch. 208. EIGHT TO HER PROPERTY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 139 tract or conveyance to her. She was authorized to petition the Supreme Judicial Court for the appointment of a trustee to whom she might con- vey the property upon such trusts and uses as she might declare. The act did not authorize a direct conveyance from husband to wife, and ex- pressly forbade her to use any of the property, for purposes of trade or commerce, requiring that it should be invested in real estate, stocks of the United States, State stocks, corporation stocks, personal securities, or in furniture in her actual use and occupation. § 293. Notwithstanding this statute, it was held that she could not be sued on a note given, even with her husband's consent, for a chattel sold not to her, but to him,i nor was she liable either at law or in equity upon any contract, made for the accommodation of another, without consider- ation received by her, unless she had expressly charged the debt upon her separate estate;^ but she was liable upon all contracts which were necessary or reasonably proper or convenient for the protection, management, or use of the prop- erty, or to render it available, ^ even though situ- ated without the State,* and might convey it by deed subject only to her husband's curtesy.^ 1 Harrington v. Thompson, 9 Gray, 65. ' WiUard v. Eastham, 15 Gray, 328. 3 Ames V. Foster, 3 Allen, 541. * Basford v. Pearson, 7 Allen, 504. ^ Beal V. Warren, 2 Gray, 447. 140 MA.REIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. § 294. To bring the property within the terms of the statute, great care was required, the use of the exact statutory words in the conveyance being oftentimes an essential. ^ It was held, also, that the statute did not enlarge her right to make a will beyond the limits provided in the statute of 1842.2 § 295. In 1846 ^ it was provided that her wages thereafter earned might be paid to her; and her receipt for money deposited by her before or after marriage in a savings bank should be a valid dis- charge for the same, the rights of her husband's creditors to attach it being expressly reserved. In 1852 * her receipt for the income of a trust estate was made a sufficient discharge to the trus- tee, though her husband did not join therein. § 296. In 1855 ^ another stride was taken, the legislature declaring that the property, real and personal, which any woman thereafter married in the Commonwealth^ might own at marriage, or subsequently acquire by descent, devise, bequest, or gift from any one except her husband, should remain her sole and separate property, not subject to her husband's disposal,'^ nor liable for his 1 Jewett V. Davis, 10 Allen, 68; Smith v. Bird, 3 AUen, 34; Merrill v. Bullock, 105 Mass. 486. 2 Beach v. Manchester, 2 Cush. 72. ' St. 1846, ch. 209. 4 St. 1852, ch. 292. s St. 1855, ch. 304. 5 Woodbury v. Freeland, 16 Gray, 105. ' Campbell v. Bemis, 16 Gray, 485. EIGHT TO HEE PEOPEETY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 141 debts ; that she might carry on any trade or busi- ness, and perform any labor or services on her sole and separate account ;i that her earnings should be her sole and separate property, and might be used and invested in her name ; that she and not her husband should be liable to suit upon a cause of action originating against her before marriage; that she might sue and be sued in the same man- ner as if she were unmarried,^ as to matters re- lating to her property, business, and earnings, all of which or the proceeds might be attached and taken on execution in any such suit; that she might dispose of or enter into any contract as to her property, except that no conveyance of her real estate other than a lease not exceeding one year,^ or of any share in a corporation, should be valid without her husband's written consent, or if he were sick, insane, or without the Common- wealth, or for other good cause the consent of a judge of certain courts ; * that whether married before or after the passage of the act, her real estate and shares of stock standing in her name, which were hers at the time of marriage, or which thereafter had or might become hers by devise, 1 Burke v. Cole, 97 Mass. 113. 2 Van Buren v. Swan, 4 Allen, 380. 8 Melley v. Casey, 99 Mass. 241 * Leggate v. Clark, 111 Mass. 308; Townsley v. Chapin, 12 Allen, 476; Jewett v. Davis, 10 Allen, 68; Hills v. Bearse, 9 Allen, 403 ; Merriam v. Boston, Clinton, & Fitcliburg R. K. Co., 117 Mass. 241. 142 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. bequest, or gift from any person except her hus- band, should not be liable to be taken on execu- tion against him for any debt thereafter contracted or cause of action thereafter arising ; that if she were married out of the State, and her husband subsequently became a resident here, she should retain all her rights of property ; and that nothing in the act should invalidate any marriage settle- ment or contract. § 297. In the same year ^ provision was made for the sale of the real estate of a married woman who might become insane, and the protection of the proceeds ; also for the support of a wife of an insane person under guardianship. ^ This was repealed, and a new provision made the following year,3 and further provision was made as to the release of dower by the guardian of an insane wife and the disposition of the proceeds.* § 298. In 1857, husband and wife were made competent witnesses in suits for and against each other, except as to private conversations between them;^ and provision was made as to homestead rights, and the release thereof by a guardian.^ § 299. The act of 1855, ch. 304, related in most part to women thereafter married,'^ and left those married prior thereto in an anomalous condition.^ 1 St. 1855, ch. 233. 2 gt. 1855, ch. 458. 8 St. 1856, ch. 99. * St. 1856, ch. 169. 6 St. 1857, ch. 305. « St. 1857, ch. 298. ' iDgham V. White, 4 Allen, 412, 413. 8 Smith V. Bird, 3 AUen, 34. EIGHT TO HER PKOPEETY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 143 Accordingly, in 1857,^ similar privileges were extended to all married women. § 300. Neither of these acts could affect rights of a husband which had already vested,'* and in case of a woman married prior to the act of 1855, the husband would still have the same in- terest in personal property which had come to her prior to the act of 1857,^ and his direct promise to pay her for the same could not be enforced.* He, however, would be entitled no longer to the enjoyment of her real estate during her life.^ § 301. The courts as usual were conservative. They decided that money in the hands of a mar- ried woman must be presumed still to belong to the husband,^ although if her money was paid wrongfully to him, his receipt was no longer suffi- cient to forfeit her rights.'' The statutory words were construed strictly, and it was not easy to tell in advance what rights a married woman had, or what obligations she might or might not assume, many nice distinctions being drawn, sometimes 1 St. 1857, ch. 249. 2 Dunn V. Sargent, 101 Mass. 336 ; Edgerly v. Whalan, 106 Mass. 307 ; Cummings u. Cummings, 143 Mass. 340, 342. ' Kent V. Dunham, 106 Mass .586, 591. * Bridgman v. Bridgman, 138 Mass. 58. 6 Baker «. Kilgore; 145 U. S. 487, 491 ; Libby v. Chase, 117 Mass. 105. 6 Commonwealth v, Williams, 7 Gray, 337. ' Read v. Earle, 12 Gray, 423. 144 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. against her,^ sometimes to her advantage and to the discomfiture of a creditor,^ the burden of proof being in all instances upon him to bring her within the terms of the statute.^ § 302. These various provisions were re-enacted in substance in the General Statutes of I860.* § 303. In 1862,5 ^-^q filing of a certificate in case a married woman did business on her own account was required, which in 1881 ^ was changed to recording instead of filing. Provision was made also for her examination as a judgment debtor. ^ If her husband was insane, it was provided that an allowance might be made her out of his estate.^ § 304. In 1863,^ she was forbidden from enter- ing into partnership with any one. § 305. In 1864, a married woman was author- ized to dispose of any accumulation of income under a trust, ^^ and to devise the same, and the investment thereof, if any. ^^ § 306. In 1865 ^^ provision was made as to her ^ Ames V. Foster, 3 AUen, 541 ; Gordon v. Dix, 106 Mass. 305; Faucett v. Currier, 109 Mass. 79 ; Stevens v. Eeed, 112 Mass. 515. 2 Parker v. Simonds, 1 Allen, 258 ; Crane n. Kelley, 7 Allen, 250 ; Athol Machine Co. a. Fuller, 107 Mass. 437 ; Yale v. Wheelock, 109 Mass. 502; "Wright v. Dresser, 110 Mass. 51 ; Williams V. Hayward, 117 Mass. 532; Nonrse i^. Henshaw, 123 Mass. 96. ' Tracy v. Keith, 11 Allen, 214. * Gen. St., ch. 108. « St. 1862, ch. 198. • St. 1881, ch. 64. T St. 1862, ch. 162. s St. 1862, ch. 116. 9 St. 1863, ch. 165. If St. 1864, ch. 198. 11 St. 1864, ch. 276. 12 St. 1865, ch. 207 ; Bliss v. FranMiu, 13 Allen, 244. EIGHT TO HER PROPERTY AND TO DO BUSINESS. 145 being a witness, in certain cases, but the act was repealed, and the subject more fully covered in 1870.1 In 1867,^ unrecorded marriage contracts were declared valid as between the parties thereto and their heirs and personal representatives. § 307. In 1868,^ the wages of a married woman were made exempt from attachment on trustee process against her husband. § 308. In 1869,* she was authorized to contract for necessaries to be furnished to herself and family, and might sue or be sued thereon, but the husband was not to be exempt thereby from lia- bility to support her and his family. She also was authorized to act as executrix, administratrix, guardian, or trustee, but only with the written consent of her husband, if he was of sound mind.* Marriage contracts and settlements of female minors over eighteen were authorized.^ § 309. In 1871,^ suits by and against her in tort were authorized, she and not her husband to be liable upon a judgment against her, and enti- tled to the benefit of a judgment in her favor. § 310. In 1874 the time had coiue for a more radical change, and then was passed what may be called fairly an Act of Emancipation. ^ This, 1 St. 1870, oh. 393. " St. 1867, ch. 248. 8 St. 1868, ch. 95. < St. 1869, ch. 304. s St. 1869, ch. 409. 6 St. 1869, ch. 292. ' St. 1871, ch. 312; Hill v. Duncan, 110 Mass. 238. 8 St. 1874, cb. 184, and eh. 205. 10 146 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. as subsequently added to and amended, forms the basis of our present law, as outlined in this chapter. § 311. References to many of the early statutes upon other branches of the law will be found in their appropriate chapters so far as the author has deemed them of value in determining existing rights. SEPARATION BY DIVORCE. 147 CHAPTER IX. SEPARATION BY DIVORCE. § 312. OuB ancestors had a very high idea of the sanctity of the marriage tie, and felt that its dissolution should be decreed only by a high tribunal. 1 § 313. "All causes of marriage, divorce, and alimony . . . shall be heard and determined by the Governor and Council until the legislature shall, by law, make other provision," are the words of the Constitution of Massachusetts.^ § 314. Very early, because of the " great ex- pense " of coming to Boston, and because " the truth might be better discerned " where the par- ties live, it was provided by the legislature that all questions of divorce and alimony should be heard and tried by the Supreme Judicial Court holden for the county where the parties live, and the decree of that Court was made final. ^ § 315. For more than one hundred years the legislature, although constantly urged, refused to 1 St. 4 W. & M. (Ano. Chart. 243). 2 Part 2, ch. 3, art. 5. » St. 1785, ch. 69, § 7. 148 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. make any change. The highest Court in the land was none too high for such a subject. In 1887, a new policy was adopted, and sole original jui'is- diction was given to the Superior Court.^ Now any one of the eighteen judges of that Court has power to unravel the snarls or cut the knots in the tangled matrimonial skein. § 316. Formerly either party might demand a trial by jury,^ but now all proceedings for divorce are heard by a judge, sitting without a jury.^ The Legislature has no power to grant a divorce,* nor to authorize the Court to grant one to a particular individual.^ " , § 317. There is at present but one form of divorce authorized in this Commonwealth, a divorce from the bonds of matrimony. All decrees are in the first instance decrees nisi, which become absolute, without further action by anybody, at the expiration of six months from the date of the original decree nisi, unless (and this is the meaning of the word nisi) in the meanwhile the Court for suflScient cause, on application of any party interested, has otherwise ordered.^ This law went into effect, May 2, 1898, and expressly 1 St. 1887, ch. 332; Ingalls v. Ingalls, 150 Mass. 57. 2 St. 1855, ch. 56 ; St. 1857, ch. 255 ; Gen. St. ch. 107, § 15. s St. 1877, ch. 178, § 4. * Sparhawk v. Sparhawk, 116 Mass. 315. 5 Simonds v. Simonds, 103 Mass. 572; Holdeu v. James, 11 Mass. 396. 6 St. 1893, eh. 280. SEPARATION BY DIVORCE. 149 provides that it shall not apply to decrees nisi entered prior to May 1, 1893, as to which the law existing at the time of the granting of the same still applies.^ § 318. Under these earlier laws, the divorce nisi became absolute after the six months only through the positive action of the Court, and not from the mere lapse of time. A divorce nisi did not, and does not, dissolve the marriage. Not until it becomes absolute are the chains actually and permanently broken. ^ The parties, therefore, not infrequently were, and still may be, entrapped through sheer ignorance. Thus, in one case, a man to whom a divorce nisi was granted in April married again in June, believing that he had obtained a divorce and might legally marry. The second marriage was in law an act of adultei-y,^ and was sufficient ground for refusal to make the divorce absolute.* The fact that both parties entered into the marriage and cohabited in full belief that it was valid would make no difference. Thus, a woman who had obtained a divorce nisi from her husband on May 18, which was not made absolute until November 21, married again 1 St. 1867, ch. 222 ; St. 1870, ch. 404, § 3 ; St. 1873, ch. 371, § 2 ; St. 1881, ch. 234, § 2; Pub. St., ch. 146, § 19 ; St. 1882, ch. 223; St. 1893, ch. 194. 2 Edgerly v. Edgerly, 112 Mass. 53; Graves u. Grares, 108 Mass. 314, 320. 8 Commonwealth v. Thompson, 11 Allen, 23. * Moors V. Moors, 121 Mass. 232. 150 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. on November 20, the day prior to the entry of the decree absolute. She wanted to have the marriage postponed, but was over-persuaded by her too ardent lover, who assured her that her divorce was abso- lute without entry of a decree, and that she could marry him lawfully at that time. Both parties then, and, during subsequent cohabitation, believed their marriage to be valid. With possession came satiety, and, the affections of her spouse cooling, he got rid of her by raising this technical point, and the Court declared their marriage void.^ It will be noticed that in each case the re-marriage took place under a mistake not of fact, but of law. If one re-marries before the decree nisi becomes absolute, in the belief that the decree nisi is in itself an absolute divorce, this is a mis- take of law, and there is no redress. If, however, the re-marriage is contracted in the mistaken belief that the first spouse is dead, or that the proper steps have been taken by an attorney to make the divorce absolute, these are mistakes of fact, and a decree absolute may be entered, although the marriage itself is void.'* § 319. This distinction between a mistake of law and a mistake of fact cannot always be easily explained to a layman, particularly if he is also told that, where a judge makes the same mistake, the result is exactly reversed. Everybody except 1 Cook V. Cook, 144 Mass, 163. 2 Darrow v. Darrow, 159 Mass. 262 ; Pratt v. Pratt, 157 Mass. 503. SEPARATION BY DIVORCE. 151 a judge is presumed to know the law; nobody except a judge is deemed infallible upon a ques- tion of fact. If a layman makes a mistake of fact, it often can be rectified;^ if he makes a mistake of law, he is hopelessly lost.^ If a judge makes a mistake of law, he can be set straight by a higher tribunal ; ^ if he makes a mistake of fact, there is no redress, whether upon exception, appeal, or report.* § 320. Formerly what was known as a divorce from bed and board, a mongrel, half divorce,^ was authorized. It is provided now that, where such a divorce has been granted under laws here- tofore in force, or in case of a divorce nisi, if the parties have lived separately for three consecutive years next after the decree, a divorce from the bonds of matrimony may be decreed upon the petition of the party in whose favor the previous decree was granted; or if they have lived sepa- rately for five consecutive years next after such decree, a divorce from the bond of matrimony may be decreed in favor of either party.® Upon the hearing to make the decree absolute, evidence upon the merits of the original libel will not be 1 Darrowa. Dartow, 159 Mass. 262. 2 Peirce v. Peirce, 160 Mass. 216. 8 Pub. St., ch. 146, § 34 ; Brigham v. Brigham, 147 Mass. 1.59. * Sparhawk v. Sparhawk, 120 Mass. 390; Stuart v. Stuart, 123 Mass. 370. * Dean v, Richmond, 5 Pick. 461. 6 St. 1875, ch. 226 ; Pub. St., ch. 146, § 3. 152 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. admitted ordinarily,^ but anything that has oc- curred subsequently may be considered by the Judge. ^ § 321. A divorce may be decreed for any of the following causes : ^ — 1. Adultery. 2. Impotency. 3. Extreme cruelty, cruel and abusive treat- ment, or on the libel of the wife when the hus- band, being of sufficient ability, grossly or wan- tonly and cruelly refuses or neglects to provide suitable maintenance for her. 4. Utter desertion continued for three consecu- tive years next prior to the filing of the libel. 5. Gross and confirmed habits of intoxication, caused by drink, or by the voluntary and exces- sive use of opium or other drugs.* 6. When either party has separated from the other without his or her consent, and has united with a religious sect or society that professes to believe the relation of husband and wife void or unlawful, and has continued united with such sect or society for three years, refusing during that time to cohabit with the other party. 7. When either party has been sentenced to confinement at hard labor, for life or for five years 1 Whiting V. Whiting, 114 Mass. 494. '■^ Pratt V. Pratt, 157 Mass. 503, 505. s Pub. St , ch. 146, §§ 1, 2. « St. 1889, ch. 447. SEPARATION BY DIVORCE. 153 or more, in the state prison, or in a jail or house of correction. § 322. A divorce may be decreed for any of these causes, notwithstanding that the libellee has been absent continuously for such a period of time, and under such circumstances, as would raise a legal presumption of death. ^ § 323. No distinction is recognized between husband and wife in respect to the gravity of marital offences, when considered as grounds of divorce; both parties stand alike before the law.^ § 324. Ordinarily a divorce is not granted upon the uncorroborated testimony of the libellant, but this is merely a general rule of practice and not an inflexible rule of law. ^ § 325. When adultery is charged and the libellee does not appear, or is defaulted, the per- son alleged to be particeps eriminis with the libel- lee may be allowed, in the discretion of the Court, to appear and contest the libel.* § 326. It is difficult to see why the alleged particeps eriminis should not have the absolute right independently of the Court's discretion, or of the libellee's default, to appear and defend at any time and in any event. Gross injustice may be 1 St. 1884, ch. 219, to oTercome the decision in Bodwell v. Bod- well, 113 Mass. 314. See Whippen v. Wliippen, 147 Mass. 294. 2 Gumming v. Gumming, 135 Mass. 386, 388. 8 Robbins !>. Bobbins, 100 Mass. 150. < St. 1890, ch. 370. 154 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. done to one falsely accused, even though the libel- lee appears, and contests. A half-hearted, insin- cere defence may be worse than none at all. In all cases, the name of the person charged with being a parapiour must appear in the libel, if known, ^ and thus one may be held up to public disgrace with no absolute right to appear and prove innocence. § 327. Upon a divorce for adultery, or other crime, if committed within the Commonwealth and not barred by the statute of limitations, the Court, in its discretion, may cause notice to be given to the district attorney, whose duty it then becomes to institute criminal proceedings against the guilty party. ^ § 328. It is rarely possible, or necessary, to prove the act of adultery by direct testimony of an eyewitness. Indeed, this sometimes is the least to be relied upon, for it may be the result of perjury^ or conspiracy.* The question is one of fact which may be inferred from circumstances. Evidence of improper familiarity, whether pre- vious^ or subsequent ^ to the date of the libel, is admissible. When an adulterous disposition is shown to exist between the parties at the time of 1 Church V. Church, 3 Mass. 157 ; Choate v. Choate, 3 Mass. 391. 2 Pub. St., ch. 146, § 44. 8 Commonwealth v. HoUis, 140 Mass. 436. * Commonwealth v. Nichols, 134 Mass. 531. 5 Commonwealth v. Merriam, 14 Pick. 518. 8 Thayer w. Thayer, 101 Mass. Ill, overruling Commonwealth i'. Horton, 2 Gray, 354, and Commonwealth «. Thrasher, 1 1 Gray, 450. SEPAEA.TION BY DIVOECE. 155 the alleged act, the mere opportunity with com- paratively slight circumstances showing guilt will be sufficient to justify the inference that the act has taken place. Evidence of the adulterous dis- position of the alleged paramour, however, is not admissible, unless it is shown to have been shared by the libellee.^ § 329.' Confessions are not always to be relied upon, for they may have been made falsely for the purpose of facilitating divorce;^ but if corrob- orated,^ or if there is no reason to suspect collu- sion, confession is sufficient proof. In one case a divorce was granted to a wife, whose husband had been separated from her and without the Com- monwealth fourteen years, upon his confession, contained in a letter in which he expressed his penitence and desired a reconciliation, that he had been living with another woman, by whom he had had children.* § 330. While marriage ordinarily operates as an oblivion of all that is passed, and acts of adul- tery committed prior thereto are no ground in themselves for divorce, yet such acts, especially if they occur about the time of the marriage (as, in one case, on the very morning of and before the marriage), are admissible to explain the char- ^ Pond V. Pond, 132 Mass. 219. 2 Baxter v. Baxter, 1 Mass. 346 ; Holland v. Holland, 2 Mass. 154. ' Commonwealth v. Tarr, 4 Allen, 315. * Billings V. Billings, II Pick. 461. 156 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. acter of doubtful conduct between the same parties after marriage.^ § 331. Evidence of the reputation for chastity of the woman with whom the offence is charged to have been committed may be admissible in defence, 2 and evidence of the bad reputation in that respect of men calling upon a woman espe- cially if notorious and known to her, may be shown, not as evidence of the act, but as a cir- cumstance to be considered when connected with other evidence of an equivocal character. ^ Evi- dence of an attempt to avoid or escape arrest bears upon the question of guilt.* § 332. Proof of a second marriage without proof of cohabitation thereunder is insufficient," but such cohabitation may be shown from the fact that the parties occupied the same house or room, and spoke of each other as husband and wife.® Evi- dence will not be received that, although they oc- cupied the same bed, they did not and physically could not have had carnal connection. The Court will not, from motives of decency and good morals, enter into any such investigation.'^ 1 Brooks V. Brooks, 145 Mass. 574. * Commonwealth v. Gray, 129 Mass. 474. 8 Clement v. Kimball, 98 Mass. 535. * Commonwealth v. Brigham, 147 Mass. 414. ^ Keemle v. Reemie, 4 Mass. 586. ^ Commonwealth v. Bowers, 121 Mass. 45 ; Commonwealth v. Holt, 121 Mass. 61 ; Commonwealth v. Clifford, 145 Mass. 97. ' Clapp V. Clapp, 97 Mass. 531. SEPARATION BY DIVOECE. 157 § 333. If a person charged with adultery testi- fies in denial, but fails to call the alleged particeps criminis in confirmation of the denial, such failure would afford just ground for distrust. It is com- petent and desirable, therefore, to show that it was impossible to secure the attendance, or the testimony, of the witness.^ But, if summoned, the alleged particeps criminis is not obliged to testify. 2 § 334. If at the time of the act the guilty party was insane, a divorce will not be granted.^ § 335. A divorce for adultery committed by the wife does not of itself affect the legitimacy of the children of the marriage, but such legitimacy, if questioned, must be tried and determined by independent proceedings at common law.* § 336. But one case seems to have reached our Supreme Court based upon impotency as a ground for divorce, and although a technical legal point was decided at first in favor of the libellant, the divorce finally was refused.^ § 337. Bishop, in his work upon Marriage and Divorce, says thab mere barrenness is not impo- tence;^ that the defect may exist in man or ' Pond V. Pond, 132 Mass. 219. 2 Mayo V. Mayo, 119 Mass. 290. 3 Broadstreet o. Broadstreet, 7 Mass. 474. * Pub. St., ch. 146, § 23. 6 Merrill v. Merrill, 126 Mass. 228. 6 I., § 322. 158 MAEKIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. woman ;^ that it must exist at the time of mar- riage, and not have since arisen; that it must be incurable ; ^ and that a long delay in bringing a libel is open to suspicion. ^ § 338. The distinction between the statute of- fence of " extreme cruelty " and that of " cruel and abusive treatment " seems to be this : extreme cruelty requires proof of personal violence inten- tionally inflicted, while cruel and abusive treat- ment covers any acts or conduct which injure or endanger life, limb, or health, or create reason- able apprehension of such injury or danger from a continuance of the cohabitation.* Thus, under the former, nothing but the scevitia of the civil law is sufficient.^ Threatening and abusive lan- guage does not constitute the offence,^ unless it causes such misery and wretchedness as to affect the health, or create a danger of such injury, or a reasonable apprehension of such danger, from further cohabitation.'' Some of the cases which seem irreconcilable are only so because this dis- tinction was lost sight of in the pleading. Thus, in one case a divorce was refused because the evidence did not show personal violence ; the Court holding that this was necessary under a charge of 1 Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, I., § 331. 2 Id., § 332. s Id., II., § 582. ' Lyster v. Lyster, HI Mass. 327, 328, 329. ^ Warren v. Warren, 3 Mass. 321. 6 Hill u. Hill, 2 Mass. 150 ; French v. French, 4 Mass. 587. ' Bailey v. Bailey, 97 Mass. 373, SEPAEATION BY DIVORCE. 159 extreme cruelty.^ Had the charge in the libel been that of cruel and abusive treatment, there would have been a sufficient cause of divorce.^ § 339. In each case it is largely a question of fact, and it is for the presiding judge to say how far striking a wife in the eye with the fist, knock- ing her down, throwing an egg or a chair or a book or a lighted lamp at her, pouring cold water upon her while she is in bed, thus causing her to take cold, kicking her in the bowels, slapping her face, pulling her out of bed and dragging her around the floor by the hair, are acts of cruelty or " mere bucolic pleasantries. " * § 340. Mere neglect on the part of a husband to provide for the maintenance of his family is not enough. It must be gross or wanton and cruel on his part, he being of sufficient ability to pro- vide. Even if the neglect of the husband con- tinues for many years, yet if neither the wife nor her children have in fact suffered, or been in dan- ger of suffering, from want of support, a divorce will not be granted. If the wife relies on her earnings, or her income, or is supported by her friends or family, she is not within the words of the statute. There of course may be instances where, from previous habits, or mode of life, or state of health, or incapacity to labor from any 1 Ford V. Ford, 104 Mass. 198. " Lyster v. Lyster, 111 Mass. 327, 330. « Smith V. Smith, 167 Mass. 87. 160 MARllIBD WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. cause, a neglect by the husband to furnish suita- ble support would cause injury to health, or danger of such injury, or reasonable apprehension thereof; but anything short of this will not satisfy the statute. 1 § 341. Neither utter denial of sexual inter- course by a wife,'' nor habitual self-abuse hy a husband in his wife's presence,^ amounts to cruel and abusive treatment. § 342. Evidence that a wife opened a letter addressed to her husband, that she had charged him with infidelity, had followed him in the evening in disguise, and had opened a trunk be- longing to him and taken from it miniatures of other women, would not constitute a defence to her libel for his cruelly neglecting to support her,* nor would statements made to him in an anonymous letter.^ § 343. Where one party terminates the cohabi- tation by desertion, the other is not bound to take any steps to restore it.^ The desertion must be continuous for three years, down to the time of filing the libel, and it must be against the will and consent of the party deserted.'^ An absence 1 Peabody v. Peabody, 104 Mass. 195 ; Holt v. Holt, 117 Mass. 202. 2 Cowles V. Cowles, 112 Mass. 298. 8 W V. W , 141 Mass. 495. * French v. French, 14 Gray, 186. 6 Mayo V. Mayo, 119 Mass. 290. " Ford V. Ford, 143 Mass. 577, 579. ' Bradley v. Bradley, 160 Mass. 258. SEPARATION BY DIVORCE. 161 by consent,^ or caused by the other's miscon- duct,^ or if there is an existing decree of the Pro- bate Court for sajjarate maintenance,^ or if the complaining party does anything to make a return impossible, such as himself bringing a libel,* or contracting a second marriage,^ is no desertion. § 344. Consent means manifested consent, and the undisclosed emotions of the deserted party do not affect his rights. Thus, if a wife leaves her husband, he may be glad in his heart to be rid of her, but if he does not express the feeling either by conduct or words, and is willing to give her a home as long as she will accept it, he will not lose his right to a divorce. A contrary doctrine would make a divorce for desertion almost always unattainable without perjury, for except in unu- sual circumstances it is not to be supposed that a person deserted would be willing to receive the deserter back up to the very moment of filing the libel. 6 § 34.5. Mere refusal of sexual intercourse is not desertion,^ but the wilful denial of companionship and the protection of home, with the intentional ^ Lea ;;. Lea, 8 Allen, 418 ; Franklin v. Franklin, 154 Mass. 515. 2 Lea y. Lea, 99 Mass. 493 ; Lyster v. Lyster, 111 Mass. 327. 8 Miller v. Miller, 150 Mass. 111. 4 Ford V. Ford, 143 Mass. 577. 5 Whippen u. Whippen, 147 Mass. 294; Pierce v. Pierce, 160 Mass. 216. 6 Ford V. Ford, 143 Mass. 577, 579. ' Southwick 0. Southwick, 97 Mass. 327. 11 162 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. permanent a,bandonment of all matrimonial inter- course, even if accompanied from time to time by some contribution towards a wife's support, may constitute desertion. ^ § 346. Formerly either party under some cir- cumstances might obtain a divorce for desertion, but the law now is changed, and only the party deserted can avail himself of the desertion.^ § 347. No libel for divorce on the ground of desertion can be defeated by a temporary return, or other act done by the deserting party, if it appears that such return or other act was not made or done in good faith, but was with the intent to defeat the obtaining of a divorce.* § 348. The time of desertion continues to run even though the deserter for a large part of the time is in prison, under successive sentences, i£ during the intervals between his several commit- ments he neither returns to the society of his wife nor contributes to her support.* § 349. The statute which makes gross and con- firmed habits of intoxication a ground of divorce does not undertake to define those terms, and they probably do not admit of precise definition. It does not point out how long continued or how 1 Magrath v. Magrath, 103 Mass. 577. 2 Padelford a. Padelford, 159 Mass. 281. See Pidge v. Pidge, 3 Met. 257, and Fera u. Fera, 98 Mass. 155, decided under early statutes. 8 Pub. St., ch. 146, § 20. « Hews v. Hews, 7 Gray. 279. SEPAEATION BY DIVORCE. 163 frequent the intoxication must be to be pronounced habitual, or to what extreme it must be carried to be described properly as gross. Where the evi- dence shows that the libellee for a period of twelve or fifteen years had yielded as often as three or four times a year to an impulse to drink to excess ; that on such occasions he became grossly intoxi- cated, continuing in that condition a week or ten days together, and that at such times he went or was sent to an asylum for inebriates ; that when the desire for drink came upon him he could not resist, and that a single glass would bring on excessive drinking, and a renewal of gross intox- ication ; that there had been no apparent improve- ment in his habits in this respect, and that any undue excitement would make him drink, — it was held that the Judge who tried the case was justi- fied in granting a divorce. ^ § 350. This of course was an extreme case; divorces are granted at every term of Court upon much less evidence; but as it is in each case largely a question of fact, upon which there is no appeal,^ very few cases ever reach the upper Court. § 351. Formerly the habit must have been con- tracted after the marriage,^ but now it makes no difference when it was contracted if it exists.* 1 Blaney v. Blaney, 126 Mass. 205. ^ Ante, § 319. » St. 1870, ch. 404, § 2. « St. 1873, ch. 371, § 6; Pub. St., ch, 146, § 1. 164 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. § 352. No case charging as an offence the union with a religious sect or society has reached the Supreme Judicial Court. The requirements of the statute are very nearly equivalent to deser- tion for three years, which, as we have seen, is an independent cause of divorce. ^ § 353. Sentence to confinement at hard labor has been interpreted to mean in the State prison or other place of imprisonment within the Common- wealth, and a sentence to imprisonment elsewhere is not a sufficient cause for divorce. This does not mean necessarily that our prisons are worse than those elsewhere; but the essence of the offence lies in the crime which leads to the pun- ishment. It is not every crime which warrants a divorce, but such only as under our laws, inter- preted by our courts and tried by our juries, result in imprisonment for five years. Imprisonment elsewhere might be for a cause punishable here much more lightly, or perhaps not punishable here at all.^ § 354. After a divorce for this cause, no pardon to the offending party can restore his conjugal rights.^ § 355. Divorce proceedings must be commenced by a written statement or petition called a libel, signed by the libellant personally if of sound mind and legal age to consent to marriage, otherwise 1 Ante, § 321. 2 Leonard v. Leonard, 151 Mass. 151. 1 Pub. St., eh. 146, § 2. SEPAEATION BY DIVORCE. 165 by a guardian or person admitted by the Court to prosecute the libel as next friend. ^ § 356. The party bringing the libel is called the libellant, the one against whom it is brought is called the libellee. § 357. A signature by attorney is not sufficient, even though the libellant is without the State ;^ nor is the signature of a guardian of a spendthrift.^ A guardian of one under age or insane may sign a libel. It may happen that a divorce is desira- ble even for an insane person, qp account of prop- erty or other interests, and the Court will grant it for cause upon petition of a guardian, although the ward's mind is in such condition that there is no rational wish or opinion upon the subject.* If during the pendency of a libel either party be- comes insane, the Court will appoint a guardian.^ If both parties are insane, the Court, guardians having been appointed, will hear all the evidence and dispose of the case as public policy and the interests of the parties require.* § 358. More than one offence may be charged in the same libel. ^ Indeed, it is not safe to omit 1 Pnb. St., ch. 146, § 7. 2 Gould V. Gould, 1 Met. 382 ; WiUard v. WiUard, 4 Mass. 506. " Wiuslow w. Winslow, 7 Mass. 96. » Cowan V. Cowan, 139 Mass. 377. 6 Pub. St., ch. 146, § 14; ch. 165, § 25; Mansfield v. Mansfield, 13 Mass. 412; Little v. Little, 13 Gray, 264; Denny v. Denny, 8 Allen, 311. 6 Garnett v. Garnett, 114 Mass. 379. ' Young V. Young, 4 Mass. 430 ; Fera v. Fera, 98 Mass. 1 55, 1 57. 166 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. any known cause of divorce, for if there is a fail- ure of proof, on tlie ground alleged, and the libel is dismissed on that account, a new libel will not lie ordinarily for another cause which was known to the party at the time of bringing the first libel. ^ It is true that amendments may be made or the Court may dismiss a libel, expressly stating that it is without prejudice to the right to bring another ; but all this is a matter of discretion with the judge who hears the case, and it is not wise to rely too confidently upon his favorable action. ^ § 359. If the libel is dismissed for lack of proof, the same matter cannot be tried again in subsequent proceedings.^ The entry "libel dis- missed," without the addition of the words "with- out prejudice," implies final judgment upon the merits;* and when there are several grounds upon which a libel may be dismissed, the parties have not the right to select for the Court the particular ground on which it must act.^ § 360. If the libel is not sufficiently definite, the Court, in its discretion, may order a bill of particulars or further specifications,^ but no ex- 1 Bartlett v. Bartlett, 113 Mass. 312 ; Thurston v. Thurston, 99 Mass. 39. 2 Ford V. Ford, 104 Mass. 198 ; Harrington v. Harrington, 107 Mass. 329. 8 Lewis V. Lewis, 106 Mass. 309. * Bradley v. Bradley, 160 Mass. 258. 6 Wiley V. Wiley, 161 Mass. 446. ° Adams v. Adams, 16 Pick. 254. SEPARATION BY DIVOKOE. 167 ception lies to a refusal to make such an order. ^ Ordinarily, a written answer should be filed, ^ and in practice is required by the Court, and the defence at the trial is to be confined to the charges made therein;^ but if the libellant sees fit to go to trial without an answer, it is too late after trial to make the objection.* § 361. The libel must be filed, heard, and deter- mined in the Superior Court held for a county in which one of the parties lives, except that, when the libellant has left the county in which the parties have last^ lived together, the adverse party still living therein, the libel is to be heard and determined in that county.^ A man living in one county was sentenced to the State prison in another county. It was held that he was " still living " in the first county, and that his wife must bring her libel for divorce there. ^ § 362. Where the libellee is described as resid- ing within the Commonwealth, personal service is required. In all other cases service may be made by publication, the last publication to be at least fourteen days before the return day, and in addi- tion an attested copy of the libel, with the order 1 Gardner v. Gardner, 2 Gray, 434 ; Harrington v. Harrington, 107 Mass. 329. '^ Orrok v. Orrok, 1 Ma.ss. 341. 8 Pastoret v. Pastoret, 6 Mass. 276. * Morrison v. Morrison, 136 Mass. 310. ' Banister v. Banister, 150 Mass. 280. « Pub. St., ch. 146, § 6. ' Hanson v. Hangon, 111 Mass. 158. 168 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. thereon, must be sent by letter, registered when practicable, to the residence of the libellee, as set out in the libel, or, where none is thus set out, to the last known residence. Proof of the identity of the party served, and, if personal service is not made, of actual notice where practicable, is re- quired.' Service is usually made by a deputy sheriff, accompanied by some one who personally knows and identifies the libellee. Service by a constable or private individual is not enough unless by special order of Court. ^ A mistake in the name may invalidate the service. Thus, where the name of Launders was by mistake printed as Saunders, the Court ordered further notice to be given. ^ § 363. Where personal service is made, the libellee has ten days, from the return day within which to appear,* and where service is by pub- lication, if described as in any part of the United States east of the Mississippi River, or in the States of Louisiana, Missouri, Iowa or Minnesota, one month; if described as in any other of the United States, or New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, or Canada, two months ; if described as elsewhere in the United States, or in Great Britain, Ireland, or France, three months; and if described as in 1 Divorce Rules of Superior Court, Rule I. ' Learitt v. Leavitt, 135 Mass. 191 ; Brown i». Brown, 15 Mass. 389. 2 Jenne v. Jenne, 7 Mass. 94. * Divorce Eules of Superior Court, Rule II. SEPARATION BY DIVORCE. 169 other foreign parts or residence unknown, six months. If no appearance is entered, a case must be made out in evidence nevertheless, as no divorces are decreed on default alone. In practice, the libellee is allowed to appear up to the moment of trial, and until the decree nisi is entered, provided it is intended in good faith to contest the libel. § 364. Upon the libel of a wife for a cause accruing after marriage, an attachment may be made of the husband's real or personal property, by trustee process or otherwise, in substantially the same manner as in any action at law to secure a suitable support and maintenance to her and such children as may be committed to her cus- tody,^ and the Court may require the husband to pay for the use of his wife during the pendency of the libel such reasonable sum of money as may enable her to maintain or defend the libel, ^ in- cluding counsel fees, although the Court will not, enter into the question as between counsel and client as to what charges may properly be made by the counsel actually employed.^ The allow- ance made by the Court rarely is sufficient for the full payment of counsel fees. § 365. In libels for divorce, or petitions for separate maintenance,* there is no final judgment which closes the proceeding as ordinary actions 1 Vah. St., ch. 146, §§ 11-13. ' Pub. St., ch. 146, § 15. « Baldwin v. Baldwin, 6 Gray, 341. * Ante, § 177. 170 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. are terminated, and the libellant is entitled to successive executions until the attached property is exhausted, and the attachment continues until that time.^ § 366. No divorce can be granted by our Courts if the parties have never lived together as hus- band and wife in this Commonwealth, nor for a cause occurring elsewhere, unless before such cause occurred they had lived together here as husband and wife, and one of them lived here at the time it occurred;^ except that when the libel- lant has lived here for five years next preceding the filing of the libel, or three years if they were inhabitants of the Commonwealth at the time of marriage, a divorce may be decreed for any cause allowed by law, whether it occurred here or else- where, unless the libellant came here for the pur- pose of obtaining a divorce. ^ § 367. Living together as husband and wife means having a domicil or legal residence here, as well as cohabitation. It is not enough that the parties may have been at some time tempora- rily within the Commonwealth;* nor that they have lived here contemporaneously, if they lived apart.® If they were married here, actual 1 Sewall V. Sewall, 130 Mass. 201; Downs v. Flanders, 150 Mass. 92. " Pub. St., ch. 146, § 4. « Pub. St., ch. 146, § 5 ; Pranklin v. Franklin, 154 Mass. 515. * Eoss V. Koss, 103 Mass. 575. ' Schrow V. Schrow, 103 Mass. 574. SEPAEATION BY DIVORCE. 171 cohabitation does not seem to be necessary,^ although doubt has been expressed as to this, the Court in a subsequent case implying that the de- cision, if upheld at all, could only be upon its spe- cial facts.* If married elsewhere, there is no doubt about the law. In the case last cited, although both parties lived in Massachusetts prior to their marriage, yet the marriage took place in New Hampshire, where they subsequently lived, and the husband did business for about five months. The wife then left him and came to Massachusetts, where he subsequently came, and they continued to live here, but apart, having no communication whatever with each other. The wife committed adultery here, but our Court held that it had no jurisdiction, and could not grant a divorce, for the parties had never lived together here as husband and wife.* § 368. In case the parties have a domicil, and have lived here as husband and wife, full protec- tion is given to a married woman who continues to reside here, and whose husband commits an offence without the State. § 369. The ordinary rule of law is that the domicil or legal residence of a wife follows that of her husband, and if he leaves the State, and establishes his legal home elsewhere, hers legally changes at the same time, whether she goes per- 1 Eaton V. Eaton, 122 Mass. 276. 2 Weston V. Weston, 143 Mass. 274. 172 MAREIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. sonally or not.^ This rule of law, however, is not ordinarily allowed to oust our Courts of their jurisdiction where an innocent wife seeks a di- vorce for a wrong inflicted upon her.^ Thus, if a husband whose domicil is Boston goes to New York, and here, acquiring a new domicil, commits adultery, his wife, who intends to follow him, but refuses upon hearing of his crime, does not lose her domicil here, and our Courts will take juris- diction and grant her a divorce. ^ § 370. If a husband whose domicil is in Massa- chusetts determines to go to another State to re- side, and starts with his wife upon the journey, but, stopping temporarily at an intermediate point, there treats her with such extreme cruelty that she leaves him and returns to Massachusetts, she may bring a libel and obtain a divorce here, be- cause his legal domicil is still here. A man must have a domicil somewhere, and cannot lose one until he actually, both in intent and fact, has acquired another. Not having reached his desti- nation, and his stay at the intermediate point being temporary, he had not acquired a domicil in either place, and so had not lost that in Massachusetts.* 1 Greene v. Greene, 11 Pick. 410; Bnrlen v. Shannon, 115 Mass. 438; Loker v. Gerald, 157 Mass. 42. 2 Harteau v. Harteau, 14 Pick. 181 ; Brett v. Brett, 5 Met. 233, 235. 3 Burtis V. Bnrtis, 161 Mass. 508. * Shaw V. Shaw, 98 Mass. 158. SEPARATION BY DIVORCE. 173 § 371. If the parties have their domicil here when the cause occurs, and the innocent party removes from the State, the other still residing here, our Courts have jurisdiction of a libel brought by the non-resident.^ If the husband removes from the State, he may also resort to the Courts of his new domicil, even though his wife does not follow him. It is doubtful whether the same rule would apply to a wife who leaves her husband here and goes into another State to live.* § 372. Various defences to a libel for divorce are open, besides a mere denial. Our statutes contain no provisions relating to collusion, con- nivance, condonation, or recrimination, but all of them have been adopted into our procedure from the canon and ecclesiastical law of England.^ § 378. Connivance is a good defence to a libel for adultery.* Connivance implies consent, a desire and intent, or at least a willingness, that the act should be committed. There is a mani- fest distinction, however, between a corrupt desire and intent that the act should be committed here- after by one believed to be chaste, and the mere desire and intent to obtain evidence of existing 1 Watkina v. Watkins, 135 Mass. 83; SewaU v. Sewall, 122 Mass. 156. 2 Post, § 388. 8 Pratt V. Pratt, 157 Mass. 503, 506. * Pierce v. Pierce, 3 Pick. 299; Cairns v. Cairns, 109 Mass. 408, 174 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. guilt. 1 Where, therefore, a man who suspects his wife watches her, hoping that he may obtain proof, but not actually making opportunities for her, he is not guilty of connivance. As the Court says, although in a majority decision, " He is not obliged to throw obstacles in her way, but he must not smooth her path to the adulterous bed. " ^ § 374. If one acquiesces in and recognizes the validity of a divorce illegally obtained against him in another State, he cannot obtain a divorce here subsequently for adultery founded on a second marriage ; such acquiescence being deemed equiv- alent to connivance.^ § 375. Connivance at one act is not necessarily a bar to a divorce for another act with the same or another particeps criminis. If the act is subse- quent to the one connived at, the connivance is generally a bar; but if it is prior, all the circum- stances are to be taken into consideration, and the divorce granted or not, as may seem to the Court wise.* § 376. Condonation or forgiveness by the in- jured party is a sufficient defence to a libel. There is in law no such thing as an unpardonable offence against the marital relation. An offence ^ Compare Robbins v. Eobbius, 140 Mass. 528, with Morrison V. Morrison, 136 Mass. 310. 2 Wilson V. Wilson, 154 Mass. 194, 196. 8 Loud V. Loud, 129 Mass. 14. * Morrison v. Morrison, 142 Mass. 361. SEPARATION BY DIVORCE. 175 at the option of the injured party, may serve as ground for divorce, or it may be overlooked and forgiven. The question presents itself when the facts become known. There may be various motives for forgiveness ; but whatever the motive, if one who is under no stress of circumstances, but is free to act either way, and who has a full under- standing of all the facts, deliberately and freely elects to forgive, the day for legal complaint has passed, the mouth of the injured person ought to be sealed thereafter as to that particular offence, unless a similar offence is repeated in the future.^ § 377. Cohabitation after knowledge of the offence justifies a finding of forgiveness.^ This, however, is inferred more easily against a hus- band^ than against a wife, because she is more under marital authority and more destitute of advice and assistance. She may find a difficulty in immediately quitting his house.* § 378. Condonation, when relied on as a bar to an application for a divorce, implies some knowl- edge of the offence committed, and some degree of belief in its existence. If the libellant had no knowledge of the offence, mere lapse of time will not prevent a divorce. Thus, a woman committed 1 Cnmming v. Cummin^, 135 Mass. 386. ■■^ Maglathlin v. Maglathlin, 138 Mass. 299. 8 Anon., 6 Mass. 147. * Camming v. Camming, 135 Mass. 386, 388 ; Gardner v. Gard- ner, 2 Gray, 434. 176 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. adultery in 1844, but her husband remained in entire ignorance of the fact until eighteen years after, when upon his petition a decree was entered in his favor. ^ When, however, sufficient grounds for the inference are presented in the facts proved in their ordinary effect upon the mind, such knowledge is presumed. If the knowledge is gen- eral and the forgiveness general, it applies to all acts, whether actually known or not.^ § 379. Forgiveness always is held to be condi- tional, and dependent upon the future faithful per- formance of marital duty," and a subsequent violation thereof revives the former as a cause of divorce.* The subsequent act need not be of itself a cause for divorce. Thus, if a husband is guilty of extreme cruelty to his wife and she for- gives him, subsequent harshness or rudeness, short of positive legal cruelty but such as would war- rant the Court in inferring that his smothered anger may break out again into acts of cruelty, taken in connection with the early acts, will be ground for divorce.^ § 380. The subsequent need not be of the same nature as the early offence. The condition of forgiveness is violated, and the original offence 1 Clark V. Clark, 97 Mass. 331. 2 Rogers v. Rogers, 122 Mass. 423. s French v. French, 14 Gray, 186, 188. * Sewall V. Sewall, 122 Mass. 156. 5 Robbins f. Robbins, 100 Mass. 150; Smith v. Smith, 167 Mass. 87. SEPARATION BY DITOECE. 177 revived, if the party forgiven does not abstain from the commission of a like offence, and more- over treat the forgiving party in all other respects with conjugal kindness. Cruelty, desertion, or other improper conduct, is sufficient to revive a condoned act of adultery. ^ § 381. The forgiving party, by his clemency, does not obtain a license to himself to violate his marital duty. Thus, a husband who forgives an act of adultery in his wife, cannot himself commit the act subsequently with impunity. ^ § 382. A suitor for divorce cannot prevail if open to a valid charge by way of recrimination of any matrimonial offence whatever of equal grade under the statutes.' Thus, prior desertion for the statute term is a good defence to a charge of adultery; but if the desertion has not continued long enough to ripen into a legal cause of divorce, it is no defence.* So, if a husband is sentenced to imprisonment at hard labor in the State prison for five years,^ or if he is guilty of extreme cru- elty towards his wife,^ he cannot get a divorce for her subsequent adultery. § 383. If an inhabitant of this Commonwealth 1 Bishop on Marriage and DiTorce, 11., §§ 53-56. 2 Gumming v. Gumming, 135 Mass. 386. 8 Id., 135 Mass. 386, 389. * HaU V. Hall, 4 Allen, 39. 5 Handy v. Handy, 124 Mass. 394. 6 Watts V. Watts, 160 Mass. 464, 467. 12 178 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. goes into another State or country to obtain a divorce for a cause which occurred here while the parties resided here,^ or for a cause which would not authorize a divorce by our laws, a divorce so obtained has no force or effect here,^ even though it was granted after a contest.^ § 384. Although the Constitution of the United States provides that full faith and credit shall be given in each State to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other State, this only applies as to judgments where the Court has jurisdiction of the cause and the parties. "When for any reason it has no jurisdiction, its judgment is void, and the recital in its records of the facts necessary to give jurisdiction is not conclusive. It is competent, therefore, to show that a decree of divorce granted in another State, although appearing on its face to be valid, is void in fact.* § 385. A married woman, by agreement with her husband, both residing here, signed and sent to Utah a libel for divorce, which was filed there, and a decree in her favor entered upon fabricated evidence furnished by the husband. Aside from the question of fraud, it was held that the divorce had no validity here because it was obtained by 1 Commonwealth v. Kendall, 162 Mass. 221. 2 Pub. St., ch. 146, § 41 ; Hanover v. Turner, 14 Mass. 227. ' Chase v. Chase, 6 Gray, 157. * Adams v. Adams, 154 Mass. 290, 294. SEPARATION BY DIVORCE. 179 an inhabitant of this Cohimonwealth for a cause occurring here while tlie parties resided here, from a Court which had no jurisdiction of the parties, both being inhabitants of this Commonwealth, and neither having ever been in Utah.^ § 386. There is no presumption that the foreign Court had jurisdiction. Its powers in the case must be shown, and appear to have been strictly pursued.^ A foreign divorce granted to one party, if invalid for lack of jurisdiction, is no bar to divorce proceedings brought here by the other. ^ § 387. If the foreign Court had jurisdiction of the cause and the parties, and the divorce is de- creed according to the laws of the foreign State or country, it is valid and effectual here, although the cause for which it was decreed would not be sufficient under our law in proceedings here.* Such a decree cannot be attacked here, even upon the ground of fraud, ^ much less where it was granted in good faith.® § 388. A husband living in Massachusetts, whose wife had deserted him here, went to Col- orado, intending in good faith to make that State 1 Hardy v. Smith, 136 Mass. 328. 2 Commonwealth v. Blood, 97 Mass. 538. - Lyon V. Lyon, 2 Gray, 367 ; Smith v. Smith, 13 Gray, 209 ; Shannon v. Shannon, 4 Allen, 134 ; Burlen v. Shannon, 99 Mass. 200. * Clark V. Clark, 8 Cush. 385 ; Ross v. Ross, 129 Mass. 243, 248. 6 Hood V. Hood, 11 Allen, 196 ; Hood v. Hood, 110 Mass. 463. ^ Burlen v. Shannon, 115 Mass. 438. 180 MAKRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. bis future home. After he had been there a year, he obtained a divorce from her for the desertion. She was served with notice, and the divorce was granted in accordance with the laws of Colorado. It was held here that, although the wife had never been in Colorado, yet her domicil followed that of her husbana, and so the Colorado Court had jurisdiction of both the parties within the mean- ing of the statute, and the validity of the divorce should be recognized here. The Court adds: " We are not now required to consider whether the rule of law would not be the same indepen- dently of the legal fiction that the domicil of the wife follows that of the husband. " ^ Unless it is the same, a wife going to Colorado under reversed circumstances could not have obtained a divorce there which would have been valid here. Our Courts would still retain jurisdiction, the hus- band's domicil, and therefore hers, remaining here. 2 § 389. Pending a divorce, the Court may pro- hibit the husband from imposing any restraint upon his wife's personal liberty ^ and may de- cree alimony to the wife,* and upon a divorce, or at any time after a divorce, it may decree alimony to the wife, or a part of her estate in the nature 1 Loker v. Gerald, 157 Mass. 42, 45. 2 Sewall V. Sewall, 122 Masa. 156, 162. s Pub. St., ch. 146, § 16. < Pub. St., ch. 146, § 15. SEPAEATION BY DIVORCE. 181 of alimony to the husband, ^ and may enforce the decree in the same manner as decrees are enforced in equity,^ requiring sufficient security to be given for payment,^ and may from time to time revise and alter its decree, or make a new decree,^ awarding costs to either party. ^ § 390. The allowance may be either in instal- ments or in gross,^ and an additional allowance or any other modification may be made later, if from change of circumstances of either party the Court deems it wise.'^ It may be made even to the guilty party. ^ § 391. Alimony, like pin money, is not consid- ered to be the separate property of the wife, but is that portion of her husband's estate which is allowed her for her present subsistence and live- lihood. It is unlike property held for her sole and separate use. She ought to apply it exclu- sively for her support, and upon her death the arrears belong to her husband, subject only to the payment of her debts. ^ It is, however, her property 1 Pal). St., ch. 146, § 36. 2 Pub. St., ch. 146, § 37. 8 Pnb. St., ch. 146, § 38. 1 Pub. St., ch. 146, § 39. » Id., § 40. 8 Burrows v. Purple, 107 Mass. 428. ^ Graves !'. Grares, 108 Mass. 314 ; Sparhawk v. Sparhawk, 120 Mass. 390. 8 Brigham u. Brigham, 147 Mass. 159; Graves v. Graves, 108 Mass. 314. ' Holbrook v. Comstock, 16 Gray, 109, 110. See also Knapp v. Knapp, 134 Mass. 353, 355, 357. 182 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. in the sense that after a decree she is regarded as a creditor, and may impeach a conveyance made by him of his property with intent to defraud her.i § 392. Questions relating to alimony may be, although in practice they rarely are, submitted to an arbitrator by agreement filed in Court, and his decision is final both upon law and fact, unless otherwise provided in the submission, or in his award, and can be set aside only for exceeding the terms of the submission, for fraud or corrup- tion, or for such mistake as shows that he did not apply to the decision the rules which he intended to apply. 2 § 393. Execution may issue to enforce a decree for alimony, with ^ or without * notice to the re- spondent, in the discretion of the Court; but no execution can issue until there has been a decree. This would seem to be elementary, but a justice of the Supreme Judicial Court failed to act upon it.^ Upon the execution, the husband may be arrested ^ without the annexation of an affidavit or certificate of any Court or magistrate authorizing the arrest;^ and if he applies to take the poor debtor's oath, 1 Chase v. Chase, 105 Mass. 38.5. 8 Carter v. Carter, 109 Mass. 306. * Newcomb v. Newcomb, 12 Gray, 28. * Bell V. VFalsh, 130 Mass. 163, 166. * Brigham v. Brigham, 147 Mass. 159. * Chase v. Ingalls, 97 Mass. 524. ' Bailey v. Bailey, 166 Mass. 226. SEPARATION BY DIVORCE. 183 charges of fraud may be filed against him.^ An action of contract will not lie,^ but payment may be enforced by process for contempt, ^ or scire facias may be brought against him * or his estate.^ § 394. A decree for alimony made in the Courts of one State may be enforced in another State by proper process, at least in the Courts of the United States,^ but it is doubtful whether in the absence of such a decree an original application for ali- mony based upon the foreign divorce would be entertained in this State. ^ § 395. Upon granting a divorce to a woman, the Court may allow her to resume her maiden name, or the name of any former husband.^ This some- times is not desirable, especially if she has chil- dren, for a difference in name between mother and child may prove embarrassing. The name of both mother and child may be changed in the Probate Court. 9 § 396. Upon a divorce for any cause except her 1 Foster i>. Foster, 130 Mass. 189. 2 Allen u. Allen, 100 Mass. 373, commenting upon Davol v. Davol, 13 Mass. 264, and Howard v. Howard, 15 Mass. 196. 3 Slade V. Slade, 106 Mass. 499. * Morton v. Morton, 4 Cush. 518. ' Knapp V. Knapp, 134 Mass. 353. « Allen V. Allen, 100 Mass. 373. ' Moran v. Somes, 154 Mass. 200, 202. " Pub. St., ch. 146, § 21. e Pub. St., ch. 148, § 12. 184 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. adultery, the wife is entitled to the immediate possession of all her real estate, as if her husband were dead, and may give title to the same without his signature,^ and if he is in possession may oust him by writ of entry. ^ The Court may require him to restore the whole or any part of her per- sonal estate which has come to him by the mar- riage, or pay her the value thereof in money, appointing a trustee in its discretion, and may require the husband to disclose upon oath just what of her personal estate came to him, how it has been disposed of, and how much remains. If the divorce is for her adultery, her title to her separate real and personal estate is not affected, except that the Court may decree to the husband so much thereof as it may deem necessary for the support of such minor children of the marriage as may have been placed in his custody. If she sub- sequently contracts a lawful marriage, his inter- est in her estate after her death ceases, except in so much thereof as may have been thus decreed to him.^ § 397. After a divorce, a wife is not entitled to dower in her husband's lands, unless the cause of divorce was his adultery or imprisonment, in which case she is entitled to dower as if he were 1 Moran v. Somes, 154 Mass. 200. 2 Dunham v. Dunham, 128 Mass. 34. 8 Pub. St., ch. 146, §§ 24-27 ; Moran . Lucas, 3 Gray, 136. MAEKIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. CHAPTER X. SEPAEATION BY AGREEMENT. § 404. Strictly speaking, an agreement to sep- arate is against public policy, but legal hairs are easily split ; and while an agreement to separate is illegal, an agreement based upon separation may not be. Where an agreement is made in contem- plation of future separation, the current of author- ity is against its validity, but it may be valid if the separation has taken place, or is to take place immediately. 1 § 405. The agreement, if directly between hus- band and wife, has no validity ; ^ but if made through a third person, it will be upheld by the Courts.^ § 406. Thus, in a very early case, a bond from the husband to his wife's father for her mainte- nance after a voluntary separation, "for their mutual comfort to avoid the effect of jealousies and animosities that existed between them," was held legal and meritorious.* 1 Grime v. Borden, 166 Mass. 198; Fox v. Davis, 113 Mass. 255, 25"; Fay v. Guynon, 131 Mass. 31. 2 Silverman v. Silverman, 140 Mass. 560 ; Whitney v. Closson, 138 Mass. 49, 52. * Hoi brook v. Comstock, 16 Gray, 109. « Page V. Trufant, 2 Mass. 159, 163. SEPAEATION BY AGREEMENT. 189 § 407. In another case the agreement was as- sumed, but not decided by the Court to be valid, "although obnoxious certainly to very grave objections, from the impolicy of furnishing fa- cilities for a continued separation of those whose solemn obligations and duties have united them as members of one family." In this case it was held that while the wife's subsequent divorce from her husband, on her petition, might not of itself terminate his agreement to pay money for her sup- port, yet her application for and receipt of alimony was an acceptance thereof in lieu of the provi- sions in the articles of separation. ^ § 408. A bond with sureties, given by a wife to her husband, from whom she had separated, to make no claim upon him for support, or for any cause whatever, is not void as against public policy,^ but may be enforced against the sureties, notwithstanding that no suit would lie against the wife.^ § 409. Where the settlement is made by the wife for the benefit of her husband, in view of separation, it will not be set aside because of the husband's subsequent adultery. The Court says : " The deed expresses no condition that he should continue chaste, and we see no reason for reading one into the instrument. " * It certainly would be 1 Albee v. Wyman, 10 Gray, 222, 227. 2 Winn V. Sanford, 148 Mass. 39. ' Winn V. Sanford, 145 Mass. 302. * Chase v. Phillips, 153 Mass. 17, 18. 190 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. an extraordinary document which contained an express condition as to chastity. It remains to be seen whether cautious wives will take the hint, and hereafter insert a copy of the decalogue in their agreements with their husbands. § 410. While a pecuniary obligation based upon separation is legal, if based upon a reconciliation it would seem to be illegal ! Thus, where a hus- band had treated his wife with extreme cruelty, entitling her to a divorce, and she agreed not to proceed against him legally, but to return to him and live with him as his wife, and in considera- tion thereof he gave a note for $5, 000 to a trustee for her benefit, the Court, by a bare majority, decided that tlie note was invalid, and could not be collected. A vigorous dissenting opinion declares that " reason as well as authority is opposed to the decision," adding: "The arrangement tended to restore peace and harmony between husband and wife, and renew their conjugal relations. It would be a curious policy which should forbid husband and wife to compromise their differences, or preclude either from forgiving a wrong com- mitted by the other, " ^ § 411. Had an agreement under seal been given instead of a note, the decision possibly might have been different. 1 Merrill v. Peaslee, 146 Mass. 460, 464. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PROPERTY. 191 CHAPTER XI. SEPARATION BY DEATH, AND ITS EFFECT UPON PROPERTY. § 412. Whenever a death occurs, somebody must be appointed administrator, or, in case there is a will, executor, to settle the estate of the de- ceased. If the death is of an inhabitant or resi- dent of this Commonwealth, proceedings must be commenced in the Probate Court for the county in which the deceased was last an inhabitant or resident; if the death occurs out of the Com- monwealth, in the Probate Court for the county in which there is property to be administered. Should there be property in more than one county, the Court first taking cognizance of the case has thereafter exclusive jurisdiction.^ § 413. After the lapse of twenty years from the death, original administration cannot be taken out, unless property thereafter accrues to the estate, or for the first time comes to the knowl- edge of a person interested, in which case an addi- tional five years from the date when it accrues or 1 Pub. St., ch. 156, §§ 2, 3, 4. 192 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. becomes known is allowed.^ There seems to be no limitation of time for the probate of a will,^ but it is the duty of any one having the custody of a will to deliver it to the executors named therein, or to the Court, within thirty days from notice of the death. If he fails to do so, he may be com- mitted to jail, and is liable in damages to any- body aggrieved.^ In the early days, executors were subject to a penalty of five pounds for each month's delay.* § 414. A person aggrieved by an order, sen- tence, decree, or denial of a Probate Court or judge, may appeal, except in cases in which the law otherwise provides, to the Supreme Judicial Court as a Supreme Court of Probate within thirty days after the act appealed from.^ A widow, under this precision, is entitled to an appeal. ^ § 415. Neither husband nor wife is under a personal obligation to pay the debts of the de- ceased, but either may assume the obligation,^ or may pay the debts with the assets of the estate, if officially appointed by the Court. 1 Pub. St., ch. 130, §§ 3, 4. s Haddock v. Boston & Maine R. R., 146 Mass. 155. 8 Pub. St., ch. 127, § 13. 4 St. 1783, ch. 24, § 16 ; Hill v. Davis, 4 Mass. 137. 6 Pub. St., ch. 156, §§ 5 et seq. ; St. 1888, ch. 290. 8 Dexter v. Codman, 148 Mass. 421. ' Carpenter v. Page, 144 Mass. 315 ; Warren v. Jenuison, 6 Gray, 559. 193 § 416. A husband, if competent and willing, is entitled in all cases to the administration of his wife's estate, unless her will prevents. A wife is entitled to the administration of her husband's estate only in case "the Probate Court may deem fit," or the husband so provides by will. The Probate Court, if it chooses, may appoint the widow alone, or the next of kin, or the widow jointly with the next of kin.^ § 417. In some jurisdictions, such as Middle- sex, Bristol, and Hampden, the Judges of Pro- bate have adopted a rule, more or less arbitrary, of refusing to appoint a husband or wife adminis- trator of the other's estate and at the same time guardian of their minor children, the two offices being held usually to be incompatible. The con- trary and better rule governs in all other coun- ties, where either husband or wife may occupy both offices, a guardian ad litem being appointed to examine the administrator's account in cases of any importance. This lack of uniformity within the Commonwealth is unfortunate. § 418. At common law, death was not an injury for which damages might be recovered. If a per- son, although himself in the exercise of due care, was killed instantly by another's negligence, or died without conscious suffering, no action for damages survived to his legal representatives. By statute, it is provided now that, under certain 1 Pub. St., ch. 130, § I. 13 194 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. circumstances, the legal representatives of such a person may recover by suit or indictment from the person or corporation whose negligence caused the death not less than five hundred nor more than five thousand dollars, in the case of common carriers, and not more than one thousand dollars in the case of cities or towns, for the use in equal moieties of the widow and children of the de- ceased, or if there are no children, the use of the widow, and if no widow the use of the next of kin.^ § 419. It is hardly within the scope of this work to go further into the details of these statutes, or the decisions arising from them; but it may be asked in passing whether this law is not in its essence the old blood feud with compulsory com- position, revived and dressed in modern garb ? Damages are assessed not as compensation, but with reference to the degree of culpability, and thus have some of the elements of old-fashioned vengeance paid for in cash.^ § 420. Life assurance is another form of pay- ment for death. Provision for either spouse may thus be made. How far specific enabling legisla- tion is essential is not quite clear, since in the absence of a statutory provision a policy on a hus- band's life expressed to be for the benefit of his 1 Pub. St., ch. 52, § 17 ; ch. 73, § 6 ; ch. 112, § 212; St. 1886, ch. 140; St. 1894, ch. 499. 2 Holmes's Common Law, p. 3 ; Pollock & Maitland's History of English Law, II., p. 448 et seq. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PROPERTY. 195 wife would be in the nature of an executory trust for her benefit of which she could not be deprived without her consent. ^ § 421. In 1844,2 provision was made enabling a wife to hold to her separate use and benefit and that of her children the proceeds of a policy expressed to be for her benefit, and this law amended and perfected has continued ever since. ^ In the codification of insurance laws made in 1887,* the prior phraseology was changed, per- haps intentionally, and it became doubtful whether under this statute a policy could be transferred by husband to wife. This was made clear in 1894 ^ by express words, and now every policy of life insurance made payable to or for the benefit of a married woman, or after its issue assigned, transferred, or in any way made payable to her, or to any person in trust for her or for her benefit, whether procured by herself, her husband, or by any other person, and whether the assignment or transfer is made by her husband or by any other person, inures to her separate use and benefit and to that of her children ; provided that, subject to 1 Boyden v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Co., 153 Mass. 544, 546. See also Nims v. Ford, 159 Mass. 575. 2 St. 1844, eh. 82. 3 St. 1854, ch. 453, § 28 ; St. 1856, eh. 252, § 42 ; Gen. St,, cli. 58, § 62; St. 1864, ch. 197; Pub. St., ch. 119, § 167; St. 1894, ch. 522, §73. * St. 1887, ch. 214, § 73. 6 St. 1894, ch. 120. 196 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. the statute of limitations, the amount of any pre- miums for said insurance paid in fraud of cred- itors, with interest thereon, shall inure to the benefit of such creditors from the proceeds of the policy.^ Such a policy may be surrendered, like other policies of insurance, but not without her consent. 2 § 422. The legislation proceeds upon the theory that the interest of a man's wife and children in his life, and his duty to make reasonable provis- ion for their support, are not wholly subordinate to the claims of his creditors. Accordingly the security has been held to be not merely indepen- dent of his creditors, or those of the person effect- ing the insurance, but independent of the husband or the assured. The manifest purpose of the statutes is not only to prevent the creditors from reaching the fund by proceedings in law or in equity, but to restrain the debtor from revoking in a moment of caprice or embarrassment the trust which he has once created upon a meritorious and by the statute a sufficient consideration, and the husband therefore cannot dispose of it, either by will,^ or assignment.* § 423. If the policy is made payable to a first wife and her children, the title at her death vesls 1 St. 1894, ch. 522, § 73. 2 Id., § 76. 3 Gould V. Emerson, 99 Mass. 154. * Unity Mutual Life Assurance Association v. Dugan, 118 Mass. 219. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PEOPEETY. 197 in her administrator for the benefit of her children, and not in a second wife, whom the husband sub- sequently marries as administratrix of his estate.^ § 424. Her assignment of such a policy at most can affect her own interest, and not that of the children;^ but if the children are not mentioned in the policy, they have no title to it as against her or her creditors. It is her absolute property, which she may transmit to her children, and which she holds independent of her husband and his creditors, but which is liable to be applied by her or by the law to the payment of her debts, ^ and her creditors can reach its value in equity even during her husband's life.* § 425. The law is otherwise as to benefit cer- tificates in such organizations as the Royal Arca- num,^ and in companies organized on the plan of assessment insurance.® § 426. If a policy in a foreign company is taken out in this State by one domiciled here, the question of whether it may be assigned or taken for debt here is governed by the laws of this Commonwealth. Thus, a policy in a New York company for the benefit of a wife domiciled in Massachusetts, which by the laws of New York 1 Swan V. Snow, 11 Allen, 224. 2 Knickerbocker Life Ins. Co. v. Weitz, 99 Mass. 157. ' Norris «. Massachusetts Ins. Co., 131 Mass. 294. * Troy V. Sargent, 132 Mass. 408. 6 Saunders v. Robinson, 144 Mass. 306. 6 St. 1890, ch. 421, § 23. 198 MAREIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. is not assignable, may be assigned here by the wife to a creditor domiciled here.^ § 427. In determining conflicting claims the law of this Commonwealth does not always gov- ern. Thus, a policy was issued in New Jersey, by a company incorporated under the laws of that State, to a citizen of Massachusetts, by which it was provided that payment was to be made in New Jersey to the wife, or, if she did not survive her husband, to their children. Husband, wife, and children were lost together at sea, under circum- stances which rendered it probable that the vessel encountered a severe cyclone, and was lost with all on board. Our Court held that the contract was obviously made, and was to be construed, with reference to the statutes of New Jersey ; that her interest under it was contingent upon her surviv- ing her husband, and that neither her assigns nor her personal representatives could show any right to the insurance money except upon proof of such survivorship. As no such proof could be fur- nished, the money went to the husband's estate, and not hers.^ § 428. The question of survivorship in case of death in the same accident is one of great diffi- culty in all cases of succession. There are acci- dents in which the evidence of eyewitnesses may be had, and the fact of which survived may be 1 Mutual Life Ins. Co. of N. Y. v. Allen, 138 Mass. 24. 2 Fuller V. Linzee, 135 Mass. 468. SEPAEATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PEOPEETT. 199 accurately determined, or there may be evidence of the attending circumstances, coupled with the peculiar capabilities of either arising from per- sonal strength or vigor ; but mere age and sex are not decisive tests, and where there is a loss at sea in the same accident the presumption, in the absence of clear evidence to the contrary, is that both died at the same moment. ^ § 429. In insurance on the assessment plan, if the wife and children die before the person effect- ing the insurance, there is a resulting trust in his favor, in the absence of language in the policy giving rights to the legal representatives of the wife and children.^ § 430. Where a man took out a policy for the benefit of his mother, and, subsequently marrying, surrendered the policy without the consent of his mother, and took a new policy for the benefit of his wife, which contained the statement that it was a continuation of the first policy, it was held that the first policy was a settlement in trust for his mother, which he could not revoke, and that she and not the wife was entitled to the proceeds.* § 431. Formerly suit had to be brought in the name of the administrator for the wife's benefit;* but in 1894 * it was provided that the person to 1 Coye V. Leach, 8 Met. 371 ; Batchelder, Pet'r, 147 Mass. 465. 2 Haskins v. Kendall, 158 Mass. 224, 227. * Pingrey v. National Life Ins. Co., 144 Mass. 374. * Wright y.Vermont Life Ins. Co., 164 Mass. 302. 6 St. 1894, ch. 225, 200 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. whom a policy of life insurance thereafter (April 11, 1894) issued is made payable may maintain an action thereon in his own name. § 432. Quarantine is the right which a widow has to occupy her husband's house free of rent, and to maintain herself therein from her husband's estate for forty days after his death. ^ Theoreti- cally, it prevents the heirs from turning the widow into the street immediately after the funeral. She is supposed to have at least forty days within which to look around, during which time she may use such provisions and other articles as may be necessary for the reasonable sustenance of the family, and may expend money on hand at his death, to a reasonable amount, in the purchase of provisions and other necessaries. ^ § 433. In practice she is not always sure even of the forty days. In a very recent case a widow was forced to appeal to the Court to protect her against her husband's son by a first marriage. The Court found that " on the day after the funeral the widow, being of advanced age and ill, unwil- lingly left the premises, and was taken in and cared for by her neighbors. " Her husband died in 1889 ; the decision in her favor was rendered in 1894, a delay of five years ! Her quarantine of forty days was not of much practical advantage.^ 1 Pub. St., ch. 124, § 3 ; also ch. 135, § 2. ' Fellows V. Smith, 130 Mass. 376. 3 Pratt V. Pratt, 161 Mass. 276. In this case, she was entitled to homestead {post, § 435), but was denied it by the heir. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PROPERTY. 201 § 434. There seems to be no good reason why a wife, merely because her husband is dead, should be deprived of her home, or be obliged to pay rent for it, at the expiration of forty days, or any other term short of her life. No man should have the right, by will or otherwise, to deprive his widow of the privilege, should she care to exercise it, of living and dying in what has been their common home. That place at least should be sacred to wife and mother. § 435. Homestead is an estate, not exceeding eight hundred dollars in value, to which every householder is entitled in the farm or lot of land and buildings thereon, owned or rightly possessed by lease or otherwise, and occupied ^ by him as a residence.^ It is exempt from attachment, levy on execution and sale for the payment of debts or legacies, and from the laws of conveyance, descent, and devise, except as specially provided in the statute. ^ § 436. If existing at the death of a householder, it continues for the benefit of the widow and minor children, if some one of them occupies the 1 Lee V. Miller, 11 Allen, 37; Foster v. Leland, 141 Mass. 187. 2 LazeU v. Lazell, 8 Allen, 575 ; Holmes v. Winchester, 138 Mass. 542. 3 Pub. St., ch. 123, § 1. See St. 1851, ch. 340 ; St. 1855, ch. 238 ; St. 1857, ch. 298; St. 1858, ch. 62; Gen. St., ch. 104; Richards v. Chace, 2 Gray, 383; Wildes v. Vauvoorhis, 15 Gray, 139; Johnson ». Fay, 16 Gray, 144. 202 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. premises, 1 until the youngest child is twenty- one years of age, and until the marriage or death of the widow. ^ § 437. If the entire estate exceeds eight hundred dollars in value, and is sold subject to homestead, the purchaser may recover all over the homestead by writ of entry ^ in the husband's lifetime, and thereafter that amount may be set off to the widow and children in the same manner as dower is set off.^ The right is not a substitute for, but is in addition to dower.^ § 438. To create such an estate, the fact that the property is to be so held must be stated in the original deed of conveyance ; or after the title has been acquired, a declaration of the design to hold it as a homestead may be made by writing duly signed, sealed, acknowledged, and recorded in the registry of deeds of the county or district where the land lies.® § 439. The acquisition of a new estate of home- stead operates to defeat and discharge any such estate previously existing.® The estate may be released during the husband's life by husband and 1 Brettun u. Fox, 100 Mass. 234; Paul v. Paul, 136 Mass. 286; Abbott V. Abbott, 97 Mass. 136. 2 Pub. St., ch. 123, § 8. ' Copeland v. Sturtevant, 156 Mass. 114. * Pub. St., ch. 123, § 9 ; post, § 470. 6 Mercier v. Chace, 11 Allen, 194; Silloway v. Brown, 12 Allen, 30; Bates v. Bates, 97 Mass. 392, 395; Cowdrey u. Cowdrey, 131 Mass. 186 ; Monk v. Capen, 5 Allen, 146. 6 Pub. St., ch. 123, § 2. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PEOPERTY. 203 wife joining in a deed for the purpose, ^ or in case either is insane the Probate Court may authorize its release by a guardian.^ After the husband's death, the widow, and the guardian of the minor children, if authorized by the Probate Court, may join in a sale of the homestead.^ It cannot be affected by the husband's will.* § 440. Other provisions relating to homestead not especially pertinent to the subject of this book may be found in Public Statutes, chapter 123. § 441. Articles of apparel and ornament of the widow and minor children belong to them respect- ively upon the death of the husband.^ § 442. The Judge of Probate may make an allowance to the widow out of the personal estate for herself and for the family under her care,® whether there is a will or nof The amount lies largely in the discretionary power of the judge. ^ Its purpose is to make a temporary provision only,^ and its amount is to be small, merely enough to provide for her necessities and those of her minor children for a short time, while they have an opportunity to adjust themselves to their new 1 Pub. St,, ch. 123, § 7 ; Howes v. Burt, 130 Mass. 368. 2 Pub. St., ch. 147, §§ 16-22. 3 Pub. St., ch. 123, § 10. * Pratt V. Pratt, 161 Mass. 276. 5 Pub. St., ch. 135, § 1 ; St. 1838, ch. 145 ; St. 1816, ch. 95 ; St. 1805, ch. 90. 6 Pub. St., ch. 135, § 2. ' Williams v. Williams, 5 Gray, 24. 8 Slack V. Slack, 123 Mass. 443. 9 Washburn v. Washburn, 10 Pick. 374. 204 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. situation. In one case, the Probate Court allowed $5,000 to the widow of a man whose personal estate was over $163,000, but whose indebtedness was so large that he died insolvent. The evidence showed that there had been very many instances of allowances to widows ranging in amount from i2,000 to $10,000; but in view of the circum- stances of this case, it appearing that there were no children, that she was living with her father, who was possessed of considerable property, and charged her nothing for board or lodging, and that she had an income of $1, 200 from her private property, the Supreme Judicial Court reduced the allowance to $500. ^ The Probate Court has been very niggardly in making allowances since this decision of the higher Court. § 443. The Supreme Judicial Court has author- ized allowances of $800 out of an estate of $9,000,^ of $1,500 out of an estate of $47,800,3 and of $1,000 out of an estate of $6,000 with debts of $4,000,* each case varying from the others in its circumstances. An allowance of $895 to the wife of a "sheriff of the county, for many years a major general of the militia, " was held none too much.^ § 444. The Judge of Probate in his discretion 1 Dale V. Hanover National Bank, 155 Mass. 141. ' Allen V. Allen, 117 Mass. 27. ' Newell V. West, 149 Mass. 520. * Washburn v. Washburn, 10 Pick. 374. * Crane v. Crane, 17 Pick. 422, 428. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PKOPERTY. 205 may refuse any allowance,^ or if he has once re- fused, may make an allowance, subsequently, under a change of circumstances, and if he chooses, later, a still further allowance ;2 but he cannot reduce an allowance when made.^ § 445. There is no limit of time within which application may be made, although it ought to be at an early day, and it will not be granted if it comes so late as to cause embarrassment in set- tling the estate. Still, it cannot be said, as a matter of law, that even a delay of two years and eight months makes an allowance impossible. If the widow has borrowed means for her support, or has lived on charity, there is no reason why the means of repaying it should not be furnished her by an allowance to the same extent as if she had applied for it before receiving the relief.* § 446. An allowance may be made without notice to any one, unless a special administrator has been appointed, but it is wise to give notice, as otherwise the ordinary time limit of thirty days for an appeal may not apply. ^ § 447. When made it takes precedence of debts, as well as of the expenses of the last sickness and of administration ; ® but it is to be paid only from 1 HoUenbeck v. Pixley, 3 Gray, 521. 2 Hale V. Hale, 1 Gray, 518. ' Pettee v. Wilmarth, 5 Allen, 144. * Lisk V. Lisk, 155 Mass. 153. « Wright V. Wright, 13 Allen, 207. ' Kingsbury v. Wilmarth, 2 Allen, 310. 206 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. personal property, and not from the proceeds of real estate. ^ It is to be paid though it consume the entire personal estate,^ and even if the only- assets are those of a former firm in the hands of a surviving partner, and there is not enough to pay firm debts. ^ § 448. It is personal in its character, and con- fers no absolute or contingent right of property which can survive the widow or go to her personal representatives. If she dies after a decree, but before the money is paid to hei-, her death puts an end to the claim;* but not if she has made demand and been refused.^ § 449. A person aggrieved by the decision of the Judge of Probate upon the matter of an allow- ance may appeal to the Supreme Judicial Court. ^ In the absence of appeal, the decree fixes the right conclusively,' and the question cannot be re- opened upon an accounting by an administrator or executor,^ nor can sureties upon an admin- istrator's bond, who are sued because of their principal's failure to pay an allowance, impeach the decree collaterally by evidence that he was 1 Hale V. Hale, 1 Gray, 518, 523. ' Brazer v. Dean, 15 Mass. 183. 8 Bush V. Clark, 127 Mass. 111. * Adams v. Adams, 10 Met. 170. ^ Drew V. Gordon, 13 AUen, 120. " Litchfield v. Cudworth, 15 Pick. 23; ante, § 414. ' Drew V. Gordon, 13 Allen, 120; Hale v. Hale, 1 Gray, 518. 8 Newell V. West, 149 Mass. 520. SEPABATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PROPERTY. 207 guilty of gross negligence in permitting it to be made.^ § 450. An allowance is not to be made to the widow of a person domiciled in another State. ^ § 451. In case of the appointment of a special administrator pending a controversy over the hus- band's estate, the Probate Court, after notice to all parties interested, may make as an advance- ment a reasonable allowance for the support of the widow and children out of the income of the estate, both real and personal, not exceeding such por- tion of the income of the estate as they would be entitled to whether the will is finally proved or not ; and an appeal from a decree concerning such allowance does not prevent the payment of the sum decreed, if a bond is given to the special ad- ministrator with sureties approved by the Court conditioned to repay such sum if the decree is re- versed.^ § 452. If the will leaves the widow nothing, this allowance cannot be made. If she is to receive anything, it must be under the other form of allowance.* § 453. In the absence, of a will, the rights of the respective parties in the personal estate of the deceased (after the payment of the widow's allow- 1 Choate V. Jacobs, 136 Mass. 297. 2 Shannon v. "White, 109 Mass. 146. « Pub. St., ch. 130, §§ 13, 14. * Shannon v. White, 109 Mass. 146. 208 MAERIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. ance, if any, charges of administration, funeral expenses and debts) are as follows : If there is issue, the husband takes one half,i the wife takes one third.^ If there is no issue, the husband takes the whole whether the wife has kindred or not;^ if there is no issue nor kindred of the husband, the wife takes the whole.' If there is no issue, but there happens to be a relative of the husband, how- ever remote, the wife takes the whole up to #5,000, and one half of all over 110,000, while this rela- tive takes the remainder, even though he may have been an absolute stranger, whose existence has been hitherto unknown.* § 454. These interests in the personal estate are absolute,^ vesting at the death, and are not defeated nor affected by a subsequent marriage or death before actual distribution.^ They do not cover rents or profits of real estate accruing after the death, but which may have come into the hands of the administrator, by agreement or through mistake,' nor any property disposed of prior to death, whether by advancement or otherwise.* § 455. As to real estate, if there is a child of 1 St. 1882, ch. 141. 2 Pub. St., ch. 135, § 3. 8 St. 1885, ch. 276. 4 Pub. St., ch. 135, § 3. 5 Taft V. Stevens, 3 Gray, 504, 506. 6 Poster V. Fifield, 20 Pick. 67; Proctor v. Clark, 154 Mass. 45, 49. ' Steams v. Stearns, 1 Pick. 157. But see post, § 470. 8 Pub. St., ch. 128, § 6; Stearns v. Stearns, 1 Pick. 157. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PEOPERTY. 209 the marriage born alive, the husband has his cur- tesy, or life interest, in the whole of his wife's real estate;^ if there is no child born alive, he has one half curtesy ; '^ if there is no issue (including herein children by adoption^) alive at the wife's death, he takes in addition 5^5,000 in value absolutely ; if there is no issue nor kindred, he takes all absolutely.* § 456. Whether or not there is a child of the marriage born alive, the widow has her dower or life interest in one third of her husband's real estate,^ her quarantine,^ and her right of burial in her husband's lot or tomb.^ If there is no issue (including herein children by adoption^) alive at his death, she takes in addition 15,000 in value absolutely, and, unless within six months after the date of letters of administration she elects otherwise, she takes, instead of dower, a life interest in one half of such other real estate as he may have owned at his death. If there is no issue nor kindred, she takes all absolutely.^ 1 Post, § 475 et seq. 2 Post, § 486. 8 Buckley v. Frasier, 153 Mass. 525. ' Pub. St., ch. 124, § 1 ; St. 1885, ch. 255, St. 1887, ch. 290. The latter statutes were passed to offset the decision as to the rights of widows in Cochran v. Thorndike, 133 Mass. 46. The case of Burke u. Colbert, 144 Mass. 160, was decided under Pub. St., ch. 124, § 1, before amendment. 5 Post, § 460 et seq. 6 Ante, § 432. ' Post, § 515 et seq. 8 Pub. St., ch. 124, § 3 ; Cochran v. Thorndike, 133 Mass. 46. 14 210 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. § 457. If she prefers, she may waive the right which the statute gives her to one half, merely taking her dower or one third. This sounds, upon its face, absurd ; but it must be remembered that the one half which the statute gives applies only to such real estate as her husband owned at his death, whereas dower attaches to all real estate he at any time owned during their marriage. If she has not already relinquished her dower therein, her third might actually amount to much more than one half,^ a paradox which, would have delighted Gilbert and Sullivan, going far to jus- tify the mathematics of the Southern negro, who objected to farming a plantation upon the halves, claiming that he ought to have at least one third. § 458. The estate which the statute gives, whether to husband or wife, differs widely from their common law interests. The title vests inmmediately upon death, and the survivor be- comes seised of an undivided interest either for life or in fee, and a tenant in common with the heirs. 2 The $5,000 in value is in all essential respects a fee, which they take precisely as an heir takes, and which is defined by its value until set out or assigned, ^ and descends like other real 1 Mathews v. Mathews, 141 Mass 511, 514. ^ Sears ». Sears, 121 Mass. 267; Kearns v. Cunniff, 138 Mass. 43,4, 435 ; Allen v. Libbey, 140 Mass. 82. 8 Pub. St., ch. 124, § 17; St. 1889, ch. 234; St. 1894, ch. 170, SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PROPEETY. 211 estate^ subject to many of the same vicissitudes,^ so that as to this they fairly may be called statu- tory heirs.' It is otherwise as to the life interest in one half.* § 459. The 15,000 is not a substitute for, but in addition to, the common law rights of dower and curtesy.^ It does not extend to a vested remainder, nor any interest other than an estate in fee.^ § 460. To entitle a widow to dower in real estate, her husband must have had a technical seisin.'' This must be actual, corporeal, even a vested remainder not being enough.^ Actual pos- session is not necessary, a seisin at law being sufficient;^ so also is an equity of redemption ; i° but if the seisin is only instantaneous, ^^ as if land is purchased, and a mortgage at the same moment is given in part payment of the purchase price, 1 Eastham o. Barrett, 152 Mass. 56. 2 Lavery v. Egan, 143 Mass. 389, 392. " Smith, Pet'r, 156 Mass. 408 ; Lincoln v. Perry, 149 Mass. 368, 374; Holmes v. Hancock, 158 Mass. 398. * Proctor V. Clark, 154 Mass. 45, 50. 6 Elliot V. Elliot, 137 Mass. 116. 8 Watson V. Watson, 150 Mass. 84. ' Smith V. McCarty, 119 Mass. 519. ' Wilmarth v. Bridges, 113 Mass. 407; Eldredge v. Forrestal, 7 Ma.s3. 253. ^ Atwood V. Atwood, 22 Pick. 283. 1° Bolton c. Ballard, 13 Mass. 227 ; Pub. St., oh. 124, § 5. 11 Holbrook v. Finney, 4 Mass. 566 ; Chickering v. Lovejoy, 13 Mass. 51 ; Haynes v. Jones, 5 Met. 292. 212 MAEKIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. dower does not attach as against the mortgage;^ nor does it attach as against a mortgage existing at the time the husband acquires his title. ^ If, however, the purchase and the mortgage are sepa- rate transactions, though carried through on the same day, dower will attach. ^ § 461. Possession by the husband under a defective deed gives dower,* but not under an unrecorded deed, at least as against the bona fide holder of a subsequent recorded deed.^ § 462. Where land is not conveyed to the hus- band during his lifetime, but after his death there is specific performance of a contract to convey, dower attaches.^ It is otherwise, if the contract had been broken by the husband in his lifetime and specific performance could not have been enforced. '^ § 463. If the husband has conveyed the land before marriage, although the deed is not re- corded, his widow has no dower therein ;8 and this although it was made in fraud of creditors.^ 1 King V. Stetson, 11 Allen, 407; Pendleton v. Pomeroy, 4 Allen, 510. " Toomey v. McLean, 105 Mass. 122 ; Bird v. Gardner, 10 Mass. 364. 3 Smith V. McCarty, 119 Mass. 519; Lanfair v. Lanfair, 18 Pick. 299. * Hale V. Munn, 4 Gray, 132. ^ Emerson v. Harris, 6 Met. 475. 8 Eeed v. Whitney, 7 Gray, 533. ' Lobdell V. Hayes, 4 Allen, 187. 8 Blood V. Blood, 23 Pick. 80. 8 Whithed v. Mallory, 4 Gush. 138. SEPAEATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PROPERTY. 213 § 464. Dower may attach to a quarry,^ to a pasture,^ to a fishery,^ to land held in common,* and to a lease for one hundred years or more, of which' fifty years remain unexpired.^ It does not attach to land owned by a firm of which the hus- band was a partner, if it is needed to reimburse the surviving partner for firm debts paid by him, or to satisfy the claims of creditors of the partnership. ^ § 465. A widow has no right of dower in wild lands which her husband owns at his death, except wood lots or other land used with his farm or dwelling-house, nor in such lands if he has sold them, and they are afterwards cleared; but she may take wild land or woodland under the statute, although not as dower, and may use, clear, and improve the same.'' § 466. While a widow may take wood from a wood lot assigned to her in dower for use in a dwelling also assigned to her, her right is limited to that purpose. If the dwelling, becoming un- tenantable, is taken down, and she removes from the land, she cannot cut wood to be used for fuel 1 Billings V. Taylor, 10 Pick. 460. 2 Shattuck V. Gragg, 23 Pick. 88. 8 Eussell V. Russell, 15 Gray, 159. * Pynchon v. Lester, 6 Gray, 314 ; Blossom v. Blossom, 9 Allen, 254. 6 Pub. St., ch. 121, § 1. 6 Dyer v. Clark, 5 Met. 562 ; Howard v. Priest, 5 Met. 582. ' Pub. St., ch. 124, § 4. 214 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. in her new home,i nor can she cut it for sale.^ She may cut timber wood for the purpose of mak- ing repairs, or building fences, but she cannot sell it, and with the proceeds buy fuel.^ If she commits or suffers waste on the premises, she forfeits the place wasted, and is liable in dam- ages.* § 467. How far dower attaches to improvements upon real estate (other than wild land) made by the heir before dower is set out, or by a purchaser from the husband, without the wife's release, does not seem to have been finally decided.^ Most of the Massachusetts cases have arisen on ques- tions of pleading, but the trend of authority here as elsewhere in America is against its attaching.^ It is otherwise as to repairs. In one case the heir had built a cellar wall of brick under a small dwelling-house, previously supported by wooden posts which had become decayed and insufficient. The Court held that this was not an improvement properly so called, but only repairs for the pur- pose of keeping the house in a tenantable condi- tion, that the widow need not pay any part of 1 White V. Cutler, 17 Pick. 248; Cook v. Cook, 11 Gray, 123. 2 Noyes v. Stone, 163 Mass. 490. 3 Padelford v. Padelford, 7 Pick. 1,52. * Pub. St., ch. 124, § 16 ; ch. 179, § 1. 5 Gore V. Brazier, 3 Mass. 523, 544 ; Ayer v. Spring, 9 Mass. 8 ; s. c, 10 Mass. SO; Catlin v. Ware, 9 Mass. 218; Stearns v. Swift, 8 Pick. 535. 8 Note to Kent's Commentaries, IV., (14th edition), 62. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PEOPEKTT. 215 the cost, and that no allowance should be made in any form.^ § 468. If the heir or other person claiming under the husband redeems a mortgage to which the widow's dower is subject, she either may repay to him such part thereof as shall be equal to her proportionate interest, or at her election may take dower in the value of the estate after deducting the money paid to redeem, ^ and this she must do although the original mortgage has been replaced by a new one, if it is for the same debt. 3 § 469. The fact that there has been a tax sale does not affect her right,* nor is her right de- feated if the heir, instead of redeeming, purchases and takes an assignment of the mortgage, espe- cially if he has already assented to the setting out of her dower in the premises.^ It would be otherwise if a stranger purchased the mortgage.^ She can always redeem the mortgage on her own behalf,^ and in case of foreclosure is entitled to notice.^ If there is a valid foreclosure of a mort- 1 Walsh V. "Wilson, 131 Mass. 535. 2 Pub. St., ch. 124, § 5; McCabe ■;. Bellows, 7 Gray, 148; Jen- nison v. Hapgood, 14 Pick. 345. ' Newton v. Cook, 4 Gray, 46. * Walsh V. Wilson, 130 Mass. 124, 6 King V. King, 100 Mass. 224. " Gibson v. Crehore, 3 Pick. 475 ; s. c, 5 Pick. 146. ' Messiter u. Wright, 16 Pick. 151 ; Sargeant u. Fuller, 105 Mass. 119; Davis v. Wetherell, 13 AUeu, 60. 8 Lund V. Woods, 11 Met. 566. 216 MAKEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. gage in which she has joined, or to which her dower is subject, her rights are gone.^ § 470. A widow may have her dower or other interest in her husband's real estate specifically set out to her at any time within twenty years after her husband's death, or if at the time of his death she is absent from the Commonwealth, a minor, insane or imprisoned, at any time within twenty years after such disability ceases;^ or she may continue to occupy the lands with the heirs or devisees, or to receive her share of the rents, issues, or profits thereof, so long as the heirs or devisees do not object;^ but to protect her rights, the joint occupation and enjoyment must be con- tinuous.* It is safer for her to enter into some special arrangement by deed duly recorded, or to petition to have her interest assigned to her as soon after her husband's death as conveniently may be. § 471. Dower may be set out by metes and bounds, when it can be done without damage to the whole estate; but if the estate consists of a mill, or other tenement which cannot be divided without damage to the whole, dower may be as- signed out of the rents, issues, or profits thereof.^ 1 Farwell v. Cotting, 8 Allen, 211 ; Newhall v. Lynn Five Cents Savings Bank, 101 Mass. 428. . Pub. St., ch. 181, § 19. ' Pnh. St., ch. 124, § 14. ° Id., § 13; Hastings v. Mace, 157 Mass. 499; Almy v. Crapo, 100 Mass. 218; Bodfish v. Bodfish, 105 Mass. 317. ' O'Gara v. Neylon, 161 Mass. 140. 6 Pub. St., ch. 124, § 11 ; ch. 174, § 12. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PEOPERTY. 217 § 472. If the widow is lawfully evicted of lands assigned to her, or settled upon her as a jointure, or is deprived of the provisions in a will in lieu of dower, she may be endowed anew.^ § 473. When a woman is entitled to dower, and it is not set out to her by the heir or other tenant of the freehold to her satisfaction according to the true intendment of the law, nor assigned to her by the Probate Court, she may recover the same, and damages for the detention, by bringing a writ of dower. ^ The statutory provisions are a revision and abrogation of the common law upon the subject, and in all cases must be followed.^ If she is in occupation of the land, a trespasser cannot set up an irregularity in the proceedings either of the commissioners or of the Court.* § 474. In any proceedings touching dower, the burden is upon a woman to establish the fact that she is the lawful widow of the deceased.^ § 475. The decisions as to the husband's curtesy are much less numerous than those as to dower, and the reason is apparent. As the wife's share was but one third, there were heirs interested in the remaining two thirds, and thus opportunity was afforded for frequent conflict. The hus- band, on the other hand, took all, and there was 1 Pub. St., ch. 124, § 15. 2 Pub. St., ch. 174; Harrington v. Connolly, 116 Mass. 69. 8 Whitaker v. Greer, 129 Mass. 417, 419. » Nickerson v. Thacher, 146 Mass. 609. ' Nichols V. Munsel, 115 Mass. 567. 218 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. not much chance for controversy; although he was liable to an action of waste. ^ § 476. There are various opinions as to the origin of the word curtesy. "An ingenious modern theory would teach us that curtesy, or curialitas, was understood to signify rather an attendance upon the lord's court or curtis, that is, being his vassal or tenant, than to denote any peculiar favor belonging to this island. This explanation seems more ingenious than satisfac- tory. "^ The word "means civility, good breeding, a favor, a concession,"^ and the law which per- mit's it is a " courteous or, as we might say, lib- eral law."* § 477. The estate sometimes is called a free- hold estate. It becomes a tenancy initiate upon marriage and the birth of a child ; but the estate is not consummate until after the death of the wife, and it gives no power or authority to take the rents and profits, or personal possession, dur- ing the life of the wife. ^ § 478. To entitle the husband to such an estate, the wife must have been seised in actual posses- sion, during the marriage,® of land which their 1 Pub. St., ch. 179, § 1. " Pollock and Maitlaad's History of English Law, II., p. 412. » Id., p. 413. 4 Id., p. 414. 5 Leverett v. Deerfield, 6 AUen, 431, 433; CampteU a. Bemis, 16 Gray, 485, 487. 8 Shores v. Carley, 8 AUen, 425, 426; Webster t/. Ellsworth, 147 Mass. 60ii SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PEOPEETT. 219 issue if born alive would be capable of inherit- ing. ^ An instantaneous seisin, as in case of pur- chase and immediate mortgage, does not give curtesy as against the mortgage.''^ § 479. At common law, if there was no child,^ or if there was one stillborn, the husband took nothing. If there was a living child, the date of its birth was of no consequence ; if property had been alienated by the wife while childless, a sub- sequent birth gave curtesy to the husband.* Nor did it matter how long the child lived; if it breathed but a single breath, although it died immediately thereafter, curtesy attached. "Some have had a notion," says Blackstone, "that it must be heard to cry; but that is a mistake. Crying, indeed, is the strongest evidence of its being born alive; but it is not the only evidence."^ §480. Pollock and Maitland,» say, "This quaint demand for a cry within the four walls is explained to us in Edward I. 's day as a demand for the testimony of males, who are not permitted to enter the chamber where the wife lies, but stand outside, listening for the wail which will give the husband his curtesy. " 1 Blackstone's Commentaries, II., p. 126. 2 Pnb. St., ch. 124, § 2. ' Libby v. Chase, 117 Mass, 105. * Comer v. Chamberlain, 6 Allen, 166. ' Commentaries, 11., p. 127. 8 History of English Law, XL, p. 415. 220 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. § 481. The issue also must be born during the life of the mother, "for if the mother dies in labor, and the Csesarean operation is performed, the husband in this case shall not be tenant by the curtesy, because at the instant of the mother's death he was clearly not entitled, as having had no issue born, but the land descended to the child while he was yet in his mother's womb ; and the estate being once so vested shall not afterwards be taken from him. " ^ § 482. This is a sample of the " reasoning " of the common law. It also accounts for the anxiety of the fathers of old to have a child born to them as soon as possible after marriage, and the loss of affection which sometimes occurred in childless marriages. § 483. The alleged reason for the difference between the rights of husband and wife in the other's real estate may be explained briefly. The wife's dower was theoretically for herself; the husband's curtesy was in theory not for himself, but for the child of which he was the natural guardian.^ It was to keep alive the inheritance, and so only attached to such real estate as the child might inherit ; but the right, once attached, was not lost by the child's death, and for this purpose a single breath or a cry was as good as threescore and ten. 1 Blackstone's Commentaries, II., pp. 127, 128. 2 Pollock and Maitland's History of English Law, 11., p. 417. SEPAEATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PROPERTY. 221 § 484. While we may accept, we cannot respect this reason. " The lawyers themselves cannot de- fend this exaggeration of the right; it is an an- omalous specialty, a concession to husbands made by the courteous but hasty law of England. " ^ It was a legalized grab, made possible because men were in control, in an age when might meant right. This is shown from the further provision that a wife has no dower in real estate held in trust for her husband's benefit,^ while the hus- band has curtesy in real estate held in trust for his wife's benefit.^ Sir Edward Sugden, in com- menting upon this anomaly, says, somewhat caus- tically : " The rule would probably have been the converse of this had women instead of men pre- sided in the Court of Chancery."* § 485. A plausible practical reason for this difference is given by the Courts,^ but, when re- duced to its last analysis, it amounts simply to the statement that "it has been so long and so clearly settled that a woman should not have dower in equity, who is not entitled at law, that it would be shaking everything to attempt to disturb the rule " ; that is, the eel has been skinned alive so ' Pollock and Maitland's History of English Law, II., p. 417. 2 Reed o. Whitney, 7 Gray, 533, 536; Brooks v. Everett, 13 Allen, 457, 458. ^ Loring v. Eliot, 16 Gray, 568, 574; Gardner v. Hooper, 3 Gray, 398. ♦ Sugden on Powers (8th ed.), ch. 1, § 1, p. 22. S D'Arcy v. Blake, 2 Sch. & Lef. 387. 222 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. often that it would be mischievous to give up the practice. No doubt it would be wrong for the Courts to alter the rule ; but what is there to prevent the legislature from acting ? § 486. It has acted in other branches of the law, and, as we have seen, has enlarged the rights of both husband and wife, notably those of the husband. The male legislator, ignorant of its origin, saw no justice in a law which severely punished his failure to beget offspring, and there- fore provided that, even if no child is born, the husband shall be entitled for life to one half of all rights by the curtesy.^ Why he hit upon one half instead of one third, and why the wife's interest in his estate was not at the same time placed upon an entire instead of a partial equality with his in hers, both in law and equity, are not very difficult problems to solve. The law would probably have been, if not the converse, at least more just, had women the right either to vote or to legislate. § 487. Neither husband nor wife can cut off the other's interest of dower or curtesy; they are rights of which nothing but death or their volun- tary act can deprive them.^ Land taken on execu- tion against the husband in his life, or upon a judgment against his executor or administrator 1 Pub. St., ch. 124, § 1 ; St. 1885, ch. 255 ; St. 1887, ch. 290. 2 Comer v. Chamberlain, 6 Allen, 166, 169; Davis v. Wetherell, 13 Allen, 60, 62. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PROPERTY. 223 after his death, is subject to dower. ^ Every sale of real estate, for the purpose of paying debts, legacies, and charges of administration made by an executor or administrator, under authority of the Court, is subject to dower or curtesy.^ § 488. A husband may release his right of curtesy by any written consent, and not necessarily by deed.^ A wife may release (but cannot con- vey *) her right of dower either by deed under seal,^ or by assenting to a jointure settled upon her, or a pecuniary provision made for her benefit and in lieu of dower before her marriage. Such jointure or pecuniary provision made after mar- riage, or made before marriage and without her assent, nevertheless bars her dower, unless within six months after her husband's death, or, should he die while absent from her, within six months after notice thereof, and in all cases within six months after notice of the existence of such join- ture or provision, she elects to waive the same.® Her bond to release her dower when requested is not invalid as against public policy.^ If she signs a release in blank, and verbally authorizes the 1 Pnb. St., ch. 172, § 59. ^ p^i,. gt,, ch. 134, § 2. 3 Pub. St., ch. 147, § 1 ; Silsby v. Bullock, 10 Allen, 94 ; Cor- merais v. Wesselhoeft, 114 Mass. 550. * Mason v. Mason, 140 Mass. 6.3. ^ Giles V. Moore, 4 Gray, 600. " Pub. St., ch. 124, §§ 6 et seq. ; Vincent v. Spooner, 2 Cush. 467 ; Peaslee f. Peaslee, 147 Mass. 171 ; Treeland v. Freeland, 128 Mass. 509. ' Winn v. Sanford, 148 Mass. 39. 224 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. grantee to fill it out, which he does, she is not bound. ^ It is otherwise if some one other than the grantee fills it out, and the grantee does not know that the grantor signed in blank. ^ § 489. For the effect of divorce upon dower, curtesy, and other rights, see ante, § 396 et seq. § 490. Dower may be released by a guardian of a married woman who is insane,^ or a minor.* Curtesy may be released by a guardian of a mar- ried man who is insane,^ and generally any vested contingent or possible right or interest of either may be released and discharged by a guar- dian, with leave of the Probate Court. ^ § 491. If either is of sufficient mental capacity, and the release is made without duress, or mis- representation of the instrument, it cannot after- wards be avoided, on the ground of fraud or undue influence, without showing that the grantee knew or participated therein.'^ § 492. While the interest of dower or curtesy is more than a possibility and may well be called a contingent interest, and may be released, as we have seen, yet neither can be attached or taken on execution while it is still incipient or inchoate.* 1 Burns v. Lynde, 6 Allen, 305. 2 Phelps V. Sullivan, 140 Mass. 36. 3 Pub. St., ch. 139, § 16. * St. 1890, ch. 259. 6 St. 1886, ch. 245. " Pnb. St., ch. 142, § 4; ch. 139, § 36. ^ White V. Graves, 107 Mass. 325. 8 Staples V. Brown, 13 Allen, 64. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PROPERTY. 225 After the husband's death, the widow's dower, although it does not vest until it is formally assigned to her, and so cannot be attached, i is so far a valuable interest assignable in equity that it may be reached by creditors upon a bill in equity.^ As the husband's curtesy vests at once without being set out, it would probably be imme- diately attachable. § 493. Both husband and wife may make wills, ^ disposing of their real and personal estate. Neither should be a witness to the other's will,* nor to a will of a third party under which either is to receive a legacy or devise.^ § 494. A will of either made previous to mar- riage is revoked by the marriage unless it appears from the will itself that it was made in contem- plation of marriage, or unless it is made in the exercise of a power of appointment which other- wise would be unexercised.® 1 Smith V. Shaw, 150 Mass. 297; Sawyer v. Kendall, 10 Cush. 241, 245. 2 McMahon v. Gray, 150 Mass. 289. 8 Pnb. St., ch. 147, § 6; ch. 127, § 1. At common law a wife could not make a will except for the purpose of exercising a power of appointment reserved to her in another's property. (Heath v. Withington, 6 Cush. 497, 500 ; Osgood v. Breed, 12 Mass. 525 ; Morse u. Thompson, 4 Cush. 562.) By St. 1842, ch. 74, a limited right to make a will was conferred upon her. Beach u. Manchester, 2 Cush. 72. See also St. 1855, ch. 304, § 5; St. 1857, ch. 249, § 4; Gen St., ch. 108, § 9 ; St. 1864, ch. 198 ; ch. 276. * Pease v. Allis, 110 Mass. 157. - Sullivan v. Sullivan, 106 Mass. 474; Pub. St., ch. 127, § 3. « St. 1892, ch. 118. 15 226 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. § 495. No child nor issue of a deceased child can be disinherited by the will of either father or motherj unless provision otherwise is made for him, or it appears that the failure to make pro- vision was intentional, and not occasioned by acci- dent or mistake, and the burden of proof is upon those claiming under the will to show that the omission was intentional.^ If the omission was intentional, although it is proved to the satisfac- tion of the court and jury that the testator would not have entertained that intention but by reason of mistake or accident as to matters outside the will, the child is not entitled to a proportionate share of the estate.^ That the omission was intentional may be shown either from the will or by evidence outside of the will.^ In a case where a wife left a will which made no mention of her children, and gave her whole estate to her husband, it was upheld upon evidence that she was a woman of great intelligence and capacity, that she was fond of her children, who were never separated from her, that she had great affection for and the most perfect confidence in her hus- 1 Pub. St., ch. 127, § 21 ; St. 1783, ch. 24, § 8 ; Eamsdill v. Went- worth, 101 Mass, 125; s. c. 106 Mass. 320; Bowdlear v. Bowdlear, 112 Mass. 184; Wilder v. Thayer, 97 Mass. 439; Bancroft v. Ives, 3 Gray, 367 ; Wild v. Brewer, 2 Mass. 570; Terry v. Foster, 1 Mass. 146 ; Church v. Crocker, 3 Mass. 17 ; Wilder v. Goss, 14 Mass. 357. ^ Hurley v. O'SuUivan, 137 Mass. 86. 8 Wilson u. JFosket, 6 Met. 400 ; Converse v. Wales, 4 Allen, 512. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PROPERTY. 227 band, and that he was very devoted to her. The Court said : " To assume that she unintentionally omitted to provide for the child living when the will was made is to assume that she forgot that she had a child, which is incredible. " ^ § 496. In spite of this decision, it is wise, if one intends to disinherit a child, to say so frankly in the will, as in another case another judge might take a different view of this same testimony. ^ A clause excluding " any child born to me before or after my decease " is sweeping and effective. ^ § 497. When a child, born after his father's death, has no provision made for him by his father's will or otherwise, he takes the same share of his father's estate to which he would have been entitled if his father had died intestate,* unless, of course, it appears that the omission was inten- tional.^ This section of the statute by its terms applies only to a birth after a father's death. How would it be where the child was born after 1 Buckley v. Gerard, 123 Mass. 8, 12. '^ A judicial recognition of the different views which may be taken of testimony is found in Commonwealth v. Eichards, 18 Pick. 434, 439, where Mr. Justice Putnam notes the frequency with which counsel differ in their memory of what a witness said, naively adding, "and it is not unusual that the Court understood the wit- ness to state the matter differently from what the counsel on either side suppose was the evidence.'' 3 Prentiss v. Prentiss, 11 Allen, 47. 4 Pub. St., ch, 127, § 22 ; St. 1783, eh. 24, § 7 ; Bowen v. Hoxie, 137 Mass. 527. s Minot. Pet'r. 164 Mass. 38. 228 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. the mother's death, by the Csesarean process, so called, or other more modern surgical operation ? Clearly its rights would not be protected necessa- rily by the previous section of the statute, because under the decision above referred to the omission could not be held to be by accident or mistake, as that would be to assume that she forgot she had a child in her womb. The making of the will at such a time might warrant the presumption that it was made in anticipation of her confinement.^ § 498. It has been held that a wife is not a relation of her husband within the meaning of the statute which provides that a devise or legacy, if made to a child or relation who dies before the testator, shall go to the issue ;^ nor is she in- cluded among his next of kin.^ The word means a blood relation.* The words " my wife " in a man's will do not mean necessarily "lawful wife."® § 499. A widow is not entitled to her dower in addition to the provisions of her husband's will, unless such plainly appears by the will to have been his intention;^ but such provision, if she accepts it, being in lieu of dower, stands first in order of payment, and is to be paid to her in full, 1 Peters v. Siders, 126 Mass. 135. ^ Esty V. Clark, 101 Mass. 36 ; Pub. St., ch. 127, § 23. ^ Haraden v. Larrabee, 113 Mass. 430. * Kimball v. Story, 108 Mass. 382, 385. ° Pastene v. Bonini, 166 Mass. 85. 5 Pub. St., ch. 127, § 20 ; Buffinton v. Fall River National Bank, 113 Mass. 246 ; Pratt v. Felton, 4 Cush. 174. SEPAEATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PKOPEKTY. 229 even if there is not property enough to pay other legacies or devises, whether specific or general.^ § 500. She, however, at any time prior to^ or within six months after the probate of his will, may file a written waiver of its provisions in the Probate Court. ^ If she does so, the waiver must be of the entire will ; she cannot claim part and waive part.* The portion intended for her does not by the waiver become intestate property. ^ § 501. Upon the waiver, she becomes entitled to receive the same portion of his estate, real and personal, to which she would have been entitled if he had left no will;^ except that, if she would thereby get more than $10,000 of his personal estate, she takes 110,000 absolutely, and the income for her life of all exceeding that amount, a trustee being appointed by the Court to take care of the principal upon the application of any per- son interested.'^ She is entitled to the income from the date of her husband's death. ^ § 502. If, after the will is probated, legal pro- ceedings are instituted wherein its validity or 1 Hubbard v. Hubbard, 6 Met. 50 ; Pollard i-. Pollard, 1 Allen, 490; Ricbardsou w. Hall, 124 Mass. 228, 234; Borden p. Jenks, 140 Mass. 562 ; Tomlinson v. Bury, 145 Mass. 346. 2 Atherton v. Corliss, 101 Mass. 40. 3 Pub. St., ch. 127, § 18; Nathan v. Nathan, 166 Mass. 294. * tJpham V. Emerson, 119 Mass. 509. 5 Brandenburg v. Thorndike, 139 Mass. 102. Cochran v. Thorndike, 133 Mass. 46. 7 Pub. St., eh. 127, § 19. 8 Pollock V. Learned, 102 Mass. 49. 230 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. effect is drawn in question, the Probate Court, within the six months, on petition of the widow, and after such notice as it may order, may extend the time for filing the claim and waiver till the expiration of six months from the termi- nation of such legal proceedings. ^ § 503. The right of waiver is personal to her, except when she is under guardianship,^ and if she dies without exercising it, her heirs and represent- atives are bound by the will.^ § 504. The entire burden thus is thrown upon her personally of seasonably knowing her rights, and actively claiming them. The same policy is adopted, as we have seen, in other branches of the law,* her rights being forfeited if she is silent. Sometimes her silence is through ignorance, some- times through over persuasion. Not infrequently she bitterly but vainly regrets her inaction when it is too late. If she makes a mistake, the Court itself cannot help her after the six months.® § 505. The author does not believe that any reader of the foregoing, lawyer or layman, can close this book, and repeat correctly from memory the exact provisions under which the Court may extend the widow's right of waiver. If this is true ' Pub. St., ch. 127, § 18. ^ Pub. St., ch. 139, § 36, to meet the decision in Pinkerton »• Sargent, 102 Mass. 568. , ^ Sherman v. Newton, 6 Gray, 307. * Ante, §§ 457, 488. 5 Mathews i-. Mathews, 141 Mass. 511. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PEOPEETY. 231 as to this one point, how impossible it ordinarily would be for a widow, inexperienced, plunged in grief, surrounded and advised by adverse interests, to know and properly protect her rights ! § 506. The law should be the exact reverse, as it is in lowa,^ Ohio,^ and Kansas,' where the widow must accept affirmatively the provisions of the will, and in the last two States is entitled to the advice of the Court, whose duty it is to ex- plain to her the provisions of the will, her rights under it, and also her rights under the law in the event of her refusing to take under the will. § 507. The care which our Massachusetts law takes of the husband is, by contrast, most amus- ing. He can be deprived of his rights only with his written consent.* His written consent to the obtaining by her of a fraudulent divorce is not such a writing,^ nor is his acceptance of the office of executor of her will ; ^ but if, after accepting the office, he proceeds to execute the will, and receives its benefits, he and all persons claiming under him are estopped from setting up any claim or right which would defeat it.' § 508. Her will is valid without his assent as 1 Code, § 2452. 2 Laws of 1894, p. 204. 8 Geu. St., §§ 7245, 7246. « Pub. St., ch. 147, §§ 1, 6 ; St. 1884, ch. 301 ; St. 1885, ch. 255; St. 1887, ch. 290; St. 1889, ch. 204. ' Hardy v. Smith, 136 Mass. 328. * Tyler v. Wheeler, 160 Mass. 206. ' Smith V. WeUs, 134 Mass. 11. 232 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. to that part of her estate to which her husband is not by law entitled,^ and she can will away from him one half of her personalty, and such real estate as remains after satisfying his curtesy, semi-cui'tesy, or the statute right to $5,000 in value, as the case may be; and this, although she may be living in adultery. ^ § 509. The assent is not a matter over which his creditors have any control, and if he is cared for in the will by means of a trust instead of by direct bequest, they are bound by the terms of the trust, if he chooses to assent to it.*" § 510. Our law as to dower, and presumably as to curtesy, does not apply to land lying without the Commonwealth.* § 511. In case a married woman has been de- serted by her husband, or is living apart from him for justifiable cause, and such facts are established by decree of a Court of competent jurisdiction, she may make a will in the same manner and with the same effect as if she were single, and either by will or deed, without her husband's consent, may dispose of all her real and personal estate.^ § 512. Advice, coming from a practising lawyer, that it is always wise to make a will, may be open 1 Burroughs v. Nutting, 105 Mass. 228; Tyler v. Wheeler, 160 Mass. 206, 208. 2 Hardy v. Smith, 136 Mass. 328. " Baker v. Brown, 146 Mass. 369 ; Silshy v. Bullock, 10 Allen, 94. * Staigg V. Atkinson, 144 Mass. 564. ' St. 1884, ch. 301 i St. 1885, ch. 255. SEPARATION BY DEATH, EFFECT UPON PEOPEETY. 233 to suspicion ; but it is none the less the truth, pro- vided one does not undertake thereby to regulate the universe. A complicated and elaborate will rarely accomplishes its purpose, because no one, however acute, can foresee the future in all its possibilities. A simple will, on the other hand, if properly considered, is really necessary to do justice, especially by a husband to his wife. § 513. It is not an uncommon thing to hear an otherwise kind and loving husband assert that he does not intend to make a will, that the law is common sense, and that he is content to allow his property to go as the statutes provide. Nothing is more unfair, nor more illogical. Presumably no husband desires his wife to be pecuniarily worse off after than before his death. He does not wish that his demise should cause her unnecessary suffering; but that is just what must happen, in nine cases out of ten, unless he provides to the contrary by will. § 514. A man's income usually is derived from two sources, — his personal earnings, and the yield from his investments. He needs them both properly to maintain his home. At his death the item of personal earnings at once is eliminated. Death itself deprives his widow of this primary source of support. The law then deprives her of the larger part of the second source, — his invest- ments. For example, a man has property which yields him #2,500 a year; his salary is $2,500; 234 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. his total income thus being f 5, 000. At his death his salary stops. This leaves but $2,500, the supposed income from his investments. Unless he is absolutely without kindred, however remote, (which is rarely the case,} the very largest share that the law gives his widow is, under the most favorable circumstances, one half, or enough to yield her about 11, 200. If there are children, her interest is still further reduced to one third, or about 1800. So that a woman who, with her hus- band, has been living at the rate of |5, 000 a year, may find herself at his death suddenly reduced to an income of between $800 and $1,200, although he may leave property enough to make her com- fortable for life, did not the statute give it to his next of kin. This is the law ; but is it justice ? EIGHTS OF BUEIAL. 235 CHAPTER XII. EIGHTS OP BUEIAL. § 515. The wife's right of burial at her hus- band's side in his tomb or cemetery lot is some- thing of comparatively recent date. Cemetery lots and tombs are regarded, in law, as real estate,^ and after burial a dead body becomes a part of the ground to which it has been committed, " earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust. "^ Upon his death, the husband's tomb or burial lot descended like other real estate to his heirs or devisees. A widow, at common law, was not an heir of her husband.^ Her only common law right in his real estate was her dower, which, as we have seen,* was a life interest, and of course ceased at her death. A life interest in a tomb or burial lot, if it existed, would be of little value. Unless her husband expressly provided for it in his will, or imless there were no issue, and she took it as a part of her statutory rights in his real estate,^ 1 Judge Euggles's Keport in 4 Bradford, 522 ; Am. Law Keg., (n. s.), XIX. p. 69. ' Meagher v. Driscoll, 99 Mass. 281 , 284. 8 Proctor V. Clark, 154 Mass. 45, 50. * Ante, § 456. 236 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. she had no legal right of burial therein. Atten- tion is said to have been drawn to this through a controversy, which, however, never reached the Supreme Judicial Court, where children by a first wife refused to permit their step-mother to be buried by her husband's side in a lot which, at his death, had descended to them as his heirs. Accordingly, in 1883,^ a statute was passed pro- viding that a wife shall be entitled to a right of interment for her own body in any burial lot or tomb which her husband owned during their married life. But the right to be buried is one thing, and the right to remain buried seems to be another. Whether there was actually an attempt thus to evade the provisions of the law does not appear; but in 1885, ^ it was provided that the widow should have not merely the right of inter- ment, but the further "right to have her body remain permanently interred or entombed therein, " unless a removal should be made to " some other family lot or tomb, with the consent of her heirs. " Exactly how she is to enforce this right to " re- main permanently interred or entombed," the statute does not say. § 516. In the same act it is provided that the widow, or, if there are children, the widow and children together, shall have the possession, care, and control of the lot during her life. This stat- ute of 1885 applies only to incorporated cemeteries 1 St. 1883, ch. 262. 2 gj, jggs^ c]j_ 302. EIGHTS or BURIAL. 237 and to tombs in public cemeteries in cities.^ In 1892 the Legislature broadened its provisions to cover " all lots and tombs in public cemeteries in towns. "^ It would seem as if here there might still be a possible loophole. The statutes expressly recognize the right of any person to erect a tomb on private land for the exclusive use of his own family, ^ and there are instances in the country of private burial lots. There are also tombs in churches.* As to all these, the only statute protecting the wife's rights is the original act of 1883, and that does not give her rights of possession, care, or control during her life, nor of permanent burial after death. § 517. This succession of statutes well illus- trates the disjointed and incomplete way in which our legislation is made. The evil was seen in 1883, and it would seem that it has not yet been completely guarded against. Moreover, no pro- vision whatever has been made giving a husband a corresponding right of burial in his wife's lot or tomb. If. her children or next of kin object, he cannot be buried therein by his wife's side. His curtesy, like her dower, is, as we have seen,^ only a life interest, and gives him no rights after death. 1 Pub. St., ch. 82, §§ I, 4. 2 St. 1892, ch. 16.5. 8 Pub. St., ch. 82, § 18. See also St. 1884, ch. 186. * Sohier v. Trinity Church, 109 Mass. 1. '' Ante, § 455. If there is no issue he might perhaps take, under the statute right to, $5,000. 238 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. § 518. It may not be uninteresting in this con- nection to refer briefly to some other matters in relation to marital rights of burial. It is the husband's right and duty to bury his deceased wife,i although the expense thereof must be borne by her estate, and he can recover from her exe- cutor such necessary and reasonable sum as he may have paid.^ The law raises a promise on the part of an administrator, so far as he has assets, to pay the reasonable funeral expenses of burying the deceased, although they are incurred as they ordinarily must be, before his appointment.^ § 519. The general doctrine laid down by Mas- sachusetts Courts seems to be that there can be no ownership in a dead body.* When a body has been buried, no one has the right to remove 1 Weld V. Walker, 130 Mass. 422; Curniingham v. Eeardon, 98 Mass. 538. 2 St. 1882, ch. 141; Constantinides v. Walsh, 146 Mass. 281. " Hapgood V. Houghton, 10 Pick. 154 ; Adams v. Butts, 16 Pick. 343, 346 ; Luscomb v. Ballard, 5 Gray, 403, 405. * Our statutes punish any officer who takes a dead body upon mesne process or execution (Pub. St., ch. 207, § 46), but do not specifically exempt it from being taken. The maximum penalty is only $500 fine or six months in jail. The dead body of Sir Philip Sidney was held in London and denied Christian burial for over three months, because of " certain legal complications." (Sym- onds's Life of Sidney, English Men of Letters Series, edited by John Morley, p. 174.) In view of such a possibility, however remote and improbable, ought not our law to be drawn much more carefully, and the penalty for its violation be at least a term in State prison? EIGHTS OF BUEIAL. 239 it without the consent of the owner of the grave, or leave of the proper judicial authority; but if a husband, "in great distress of mind, and worn out by Ihe taking care of his wife during her last ill- ness," consents, though "much against his own wishes and feelings," to the burial in a lot not his own, the Court subsequently will permit him to remove the body to his own lot, in spite of the objection of her next of kin.^ § 520. No case has arisen in Massachusetts which undertakes to state what may or may not be the corresponding right of a wife to bury or remove her husband's body. Should such a case arise, there is little doubt that she would be accorded substantially the same rights. In a dictum, the Court has said that "the widow and next of kin undoubtedly have the right, as against strangers, to determine the place of burial. " ^ jf the widow and next of kin differ, her right, like that of her husband, should, and unquestionably would, be paramount. § 521. In Pennsylvania, however, it has been held (whether the law is still the same or not we do not know ^) that a widow has no right nor con- trol over the body of her deceased husband after burial.* In this case the husband had shot him- 1 Weld a. Walker, 130 Mass. 422. See also same case in its early stage, reported in 14 Am. Law Review, p. 57. 2 Sweeney v. Muldoon, 139 Mass. 304, 306. See also St. 1887, ch. 310, § 1. 8 Lowry v. Plitt, 2 Weekly Notes of Cases, 675. * Wynkoop ». Wynkoop, 42 Penn. St. 293. 240 MARRIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. self accidentally, and the wife, frantic with grief, declared that his body " should never be buried at all, but that it ever should remain with her. Her nerves were wrought up to the highest state of excitement, and consequently her reason for the time was almost shattered." In this state of mind, his relatives begged her to consent to the burial of her husband in his mother's cemetery lot, agreeing, "for the sake of soothing her," that it might be removed, subsequently, should she so desire. The mother, in whose lot he was buried, denied making any such agreement, but admitted that it was made by others of his relatives. Later, the wife desired to remove the body, and, upon the mother's refusal to permit her to do so, applied to the Court for relief. The Court declined to aid her, holding that whatever rights she might have had as administratrix terminated with the burial, and that as widow she had no right after the interment. The very profound judge who wrote the opinion says, with matchless logic: " Sup[)ose a woman has had three husbands, who have all died, leaving her a widow, is she to be burdened with the duty and vested with the charge of their three bodies against the expressed wishes of the blood relations and next of kin of each ? " There was no pretence that this widow had had three husbands, but if she had, there was nothing illegal in marrying them. Our Supreme Judicial Court did not have to descend to such puerilities EIGHTS OF BUEIAL. 241 in deciding in favor of the husband, nor would it as regards the wife. § 522. In Rhode Island it has been held ^ that, where the husband's body was buried with his wife's consent in a lot which he owned, but which at his death became the property of his daughter, the wife could not subsequently, against this daughter's wishes, remove the body to a lot which belonged to herself. The wife having already actually removed the body, the Court said, " We think it should be restored to the place whence it came. " § 523. This difference of treatment of husband and wife by the different Courts under similar circumstances may be a mere coincidence, but it is interesting, and upon a less grave subject would be amusing. § 524. In Massachusetts the right to select the burial place carries with it (at least so far as the husband is concerned) the right of placing over the spot a proper monument or memorial. Not even a mother-in-law can interfere with this right. In a case which has found its way into our Massa- chusetts Reports,^ a mother, after waiting three years for her son-in-law to act, proceeded without his knowledge or consent to erect a stone over her daughter's grave. As soon as the dilatory hus- band learned the fact, he promptly removed the ' Pierce v. Proprietors Swan Point Cemetery, 1 K. I. 227. 2 Durell V. Hayward, 9 Gray, 248. 16 242 MAEEIED WOMEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. stone and erected in its place one of his own choice. The mother-in-law brought suit against him, but the Supreme Judicial Court said that he was jus- tified in his conduct, as the mother had "no right to erect a stone at the grave " of her daughter without the husband's knowledge or consent. § 525. The Statute of 1885, chap. 302, gives the widow and children the right to erect a monu- ment, and make permanent improvements, upon a lot in their possession and control; but, as we have seen,^ this statute is limited in its scope, and as to those lots outside the statute the widow may or may not have such right. ^ § 526. As a part of the funeral expenses of a deceased person, a reasonable sum expended for a burial lot and for a monument may be allowed by the Court. ^ How far this right may be exercised by the widow or next of kin has not been deter- mined. The necessity for a decent burial arises immediately upon the decease, and it may be that if the deceased owned no burial lot or other right of burial they would be justified in purchasing one; but if he owned one, and they selected an- other, they might have to do it at their own expense. This is certainly the case as to a tomb- stone or monument. It was not intended that any person may erect a tombstone to the deceased and 1 Ante, § 516. 2 Fletcher v. Evans, 140 Mass. 241. 8 Pub, St., cb. 144, § 6. RIGHTS OF BURIAL. 243 charge the estate with its cost without the author- ity of the executor or administrator, or of the Court. Accordingly, one who, at the request of the widow, but not of the administrator, and with- out an order of Court, erects a monument over a grave, cannot recover its cost in an action against the administrator.^ § 527. If the widow is also administratrix or executrix, and obtains leave of Court to erect a monument on her husband's burial lot, she may buy with her own money another lot, remove the body and put up the monument there, as the statute does not confine an allowance to the case of a monument on a lot bought with the husband's money. She also may be allowed a charge for legal services in obtaining the leave mentioned.^ 1 Sweeney v. Mnldoon, 139 Mass. 304. 2 Dudley v Sanborn, 159 Mass. 185. ,V' ■A'^' / INDEX. INDEX. [eefebences are to sectiohs.] A. ABDUCTION, forcible of child by parent, 154, 155. ACTION, between husband and wife in equity but not at law, 37, 211, 217-220, 226. against wife of Judge of Probate, 40. for breach of promise, 44, 60. against one who causes a marriage engagement to be broken, 62. for alienation of wife's affections, 137. against husband for wife's necessaries, 172. by wife against any one other than her husband, 138, 233. against wife by any one other than her husband, 139, 283, 288. for rights prior to, suspended during marriage, 261. ADMINISTRATION, of estate of deceased, 412. not ordinarily granted after twenty years, 413. who entitled to, 416. how far guardianship of minor child incompatible with, of parents' estate, 417. 248 INDEX, References are to sections. ADMINISTRATRIX, married woman may be, 262, 416. ADOPTION, of married woman, 142. by married woman, 1.'58. none of child without mother's consent, 157. ADULTERY, second marriage when no defence, 105, 318. wife not deprived of child because of her, 152. divorce for, notwithstanding decree for separate support, 185. wife may sue, notwithstanding her, 233. as ground for divorce, 321. when alleged paramour may defend libel for, 325. notice to district attorney after divorce for, 327. evidence of, 328-333. prior to marriage no ground for divorce, 330. divorced husband and wife living together guilty of, 400. husband's, no bar to recovery on settlement, 409. wife may make will, notwithstanding her, 508. AFFINITY, impediment to marriage, 101, 102, 110. AGE OF CONSENT, statute provisions as to, 42. marriage under, when void, 110. AGENT, husband as wife's, 21, 205, 241, 279 et seq., 287. wife as husband's, 161, 169. AGREEMENT, ante-nuptial, 63 et seq. separation by, 404 ei seq. ALIEN, marriage with an, 114. wife of, rights upon coming within state, 289. INDEX. 249 Beferencea are to sectiona. ALIENATION, restraint upon, 79. action for, of wife's affections, 137. ALIMONY, wlien no bar to suit for necessaries, 174. upon and after proceedings for divorce, 389. may be by instalments or in gross, 390. nature and limitations of, 391. arbitration as to, 392. proceedings to enforce decree, 393. in case of foreign divorce, 394. ALLOWANCE, to wife, where living separate from her husband, 175. to widow, upon husband's death, 442-450. where special administrator is appointed, 451, 452. ANTE-NUPTIAL AGREEMENTS, general provisions as to, 63 et seq. may provide for either spouse, 64. when to be recorded, 64. at common law, 65. third party or trustee not necessary, 67. power in, to be exercised by will, 68. void if procui-ed by fraud, 69. violation of, excuses performance, 70. ANTE-NUPTIAL DEBTS, husband liable for wife's at common law, 16. suspended not extinguished by marriage, 261. ANTE-NUPTIAL FRAUD, agreement void if caused by, 69. by womau on insane old man, 211. APPAREL, wife's, at common law, 27, 242. under existing statutes, 243, 441. husband primarily liable for wife's, 167. 250 INDEX. References are to sections. APPAREL — continued. wife may personally contract for, 284. widow and children entitled to, after husband's death, 441. APPEAL, none on questions of fact in divorce, 319, 350. widow's right of, 414. APPOINTMENT, power of, in ante-nuptial agreement, 68. effective in will revoked by mai'riage, 494. APPRENTICE, minor may be bound as, 159. ARBITRATION, as to amount of alimony, 392. ARREST, wife on execution at common law, 19. women by men, 43. for debt under existing laws, 140, 288. attempt to avoid, evidence of guilt, 331. ASSAULT, of husband or wife, 25, 134, 135. in abduction of child, 155. ASSIGNEE, husband's, right to wife's property at common law, 28. wife may purchase from her husband's, 238. ASSIGNMENT, of wife's claim against husband's firm, 225. to and from husband and wife through third party, 22, 221, 231, 234. subtle distinction between indorsement and, 231. of life insurance policies, 251, 421, 424. ATTACHMENT, by wife of husband's property, 177, 364. INDEX. 251 Keferences are to sections. ATTACHMENT — continued. dissolved by insolvency, 177. wife's property subject to, 288. of dead body, 519 note. ATTORNEY AT LAW, woman may be an, 263. B. BANK DEPOSIT, See Savings Bank. BANKRUPTCY, See Insolvency. BIGAMY, good faith in contracting second marriage, no defence, 105, 318. BLOOD FEUD, in modem garb, 419. BOARDING HOUSE, married women's certificate required, 270. BOND, between husband and wife void, 408. binding upon sureties, 408. BREACH OF PROMISE, action for, 44, 49. defences to, 49, 51, 59. specific performance cannot be compelled, 53. damages in case of, 54, 57. seduction under the promise, 55, 56. burden of proof, 60. action does not survive, 61. BURIAL, RIGHTS OF, respective, of husband and wife, 515 et seq. 252 INDEX. References are to sections. BUSINESS, wife may carry on, 266-278. certificate required, 266. any name may be used, 267. place of, should be described, 268. nature of, should be set out, 269-272. description of property used, unnecessary, 273. See Certificate. CEMETERY LOT, rights of husband and wife in, 515 ei seq. CERTIFICATE, MARRIED WOMAN'S, wife doing business must record, 266-278. any name may be used, 267. new, whenever change of business or of place, 268. what should contain, 266-273. mere investment of property does not require, 271. needed to protect personal property only, 274. absence of, does not enlarge husband's rights, 275. unnecessary if husband's domicil elsewhere, 276. formerly, must be filed, 277. CHASTISEMENT, of wife by husband, 25. no longer allowed, 134, 135. CHASTITY, as aflecting marriage engagement, 59. prior, as affecting marriage, 122, 330. reputation as to, as evidence, 331. husband's should be expressly contracted for, 409. CHILD, mother practically no rights in, at common law, 24. marriage of, how authorized, 90. INDEX. 253 Eeferences are to sections. CHILD — continued. illegitimate, when parents' marriage void, 120. legitimacy as affected by divorce, 335. emancipation of, upon marriage, 125, appointment of guardian, 142, 160. to whom custody belongs, 143, 160, 175. who must support, 144-146, 161, 187. habitual truant, or parents unfit, 147, 148. may be surrendered by parents, 149. Probate Court may authorize parents to visit, 150. when parents' rights equal, 151. removal from State forbidden, 153. abduction by either parent, 154. where mother is imprisoned, 156. adoption of, 142, 157, 158. may be bound as apprentice, 159. earnings of, who entitled to, 161, 164. damages for injuries to, 165. right to damages for father's death, 418. right of homestead, 486. wearing apparel and ornaments of, 441. rights where omitted from parents' will, 495. rights of posthumous, 497. See Step-Child. CHOSE-IN-ACTION, husband's right to wife's at common law, 17. compulsory reduction to possession, 29. CLANDESTINE MARRIAGE, penalty for enticing female to, 100. CLOTHES, See Apparel. COERCION, presumption as to husband's over wife, 127. 254 INDEX. References axe to sections. COHABITATION, not essential to constitute marriage, 83. when necessary to obtain divorce, 332, 367. when condonation is implied from, 377. COLLUSION, as a bar to divorce, 372. COLOR, no defence in breach of promise, 59. COMMON LAW, of what it consists, 2-11, 24-32. softened by ecclesiastical interference, 23. modified by legislation, 33. COMMON TENANCY, of husband and wife, 206. widow's dower in, 464. CONDONATION, a defence to divorce, 372, 376-381. conditioned upon future good behavior, 379. CONFESSIONS, evidence in divorce, 329. CONFLICT OF LAWS, as to marriage. 111 et seq. as to divorce, 869, 383 et seq. as to alimony, 394. as to life insurance, 426. CONFUSION OF GOODS, husband's and wife's, effect of, 209. business certificate valid in spite of, 273. CONJUGAL RIGHTS, restitution of, never enforced here, 26 note, 132. CONNIVANCE, defence in divorce, 373, 374. INDEX. 255 BefeTences axe to sections. CONSANGUINITY, impediment to marriage, 101-103, 110. CONSENT, of parents to minor's marriage, 82, 91. of Judge of Probate to minors' marriage, 91. defence to libel for divorce, 344, 373. in adoption, 142, 157, 158. CONSIDERATION', in mutual engagements to marry, 44. for promises based on marriage, 50. for release of dower, 222. for purchase of wife's claim against husband's firm, 225. when wife's note valid without, 228, 280. note without, not subject of gift, 258. reconciliation of husband and wife not a valid, 410. CONSTITUTION, legislative marriage contrary to, 107. legislative divorce contrary to, 316. right of woman to hold office under, 263. CONSUMMATION, not essential to valid marriage, 83. CONTEMPT OF COURT, ■woman may be imprisoned for, on execution, 140. disobeying a decree for alimony, 893. CONTRACTS, between husband and wife invalid if direct, 37, 182, 217. if through third person valid, 229. test is whether valid or invalid at inception, 229. CONVEYANCES, between husband and wife invalid if direct, 209, 234. if through third person, valid, 22, 219, 221, 234, 236, 237. to bind wife she must join in operative clause, 286. 256 INDEX. Beferences are to sections. CONVEYANCES — continued. in fraud of creditors, 221, 234, 252, 254. in fraud of marital riglits, 75. COUNSEL FEES, when necessaries to be paid by husband, 168. upon libel for divorce, 364. CREDIT, when wife may use husband's, 161, 169-174. CREDITORS, common law rights of husband's, 27 et seq. right of wife's in her trust income, 79. transfers in fraud of, 221, 222, 234, 252. donatio causa mortis invalid against, 254. rights of, in life insurance policies, 422, 424. may reach dower and curtesy, 492. husband's assent to wife's will binds, 509. CRIME, wife's, under husband's coercion, 127. wife's perjury in husband's defence, 129. wife injuring husband's property, 130. notice to be given district attorney after divorce for any, 327. CRUEL AND ABUSIVE TREATMENT, ground for divorce, 321, 338 et seq. distinguished from cruelty, 338. CRUELTY, guilty husband liable for wife's necessaries, 169. as ground for divorce, 321, 388 et seq. what is and what is not, 339. CURTESY, misconduct without divorce does not bar, 398, right of husband in wife's realty, 455, 475. origin and meaning of, 476. nature of, 477-482. INDEX. 257 References are to sections. CURTESY — continued. alleged reason for difference between, and dower, 4.83, 485. attaches to wife's equitable estate, 484. statute has enlarged husband's, 486. wife cannot deprive husband of, without his consent, 487, 507. how released, 488, 490. how reached by creditors, 492. does not attach to land elsewhere, 510. CUSTODY, of married female minor, 125. rights of parents to, of children, 143 et seq., 151 et seq., 175. when given to guardian, 147. as affecting adoption, 157. father cannot by will deprive a mother of her child's, 160. D. DAMAGES, for breach of promise, 54-58. for injuries to wife, 136-138. for abduction of child, 155. for injury to child, 165. for negligence causing death, 418. DEAD BODY, rights in, 515, 519 et seq. attachment of, 519, note. DEATH, marriage cannot be annulled after, 119. gifts in contemplation of, 253 et seq. presumption of, affecting divorce, 322. separation of husband and wife by, 412. 17 258 INDEX. Rafereuces axe to aections. DEXTR — continued. damages for negligence causing, 418. in same accident affecting property rights, 428. property rights after, 453, 455. DECLARATIONS, wife's, in suits against husband for necessaries, 172. of giver of donatio causa mortis, 259. DESERTION, ' husband's, gives wife an implied agency, 161, 169. decree for separate support bar to libel for wife's, 185. as ground for divorce, 321, 343-348. defences to libel for, 843 et seq. deserted party only may maintain libel for, 346. temporary return no defence, 347. DISTRIBUTION AND DESCENT, personal estate after death, 453. real estate after death, 455. DIVORCE, effect of upon marriage settlements, 66. marriage of parties after, 104, 114. wife's counsel fees in, 168, 364. decree for separate support, bar to libel for wife's deser- tion, but not for her adultery, 185. libel for, supersedes decree for separate support, 186. does not legalize void contracts between husband and wife, 226. does not bar recovery, when, 233. early jurisdiction, 312 et seq. Superior Court now has jurisdiction, 315. legislature no power to grant, 316. forms of, 317. danger in decrees nisi, 818. bed and board, formerly but not now, 320. grounds for, 321. INDEX. 259 Beferences are to sectionB. DIVORCE — continued. denial of sexual intercourse not a ground for, 341, 345. no distinction in sexes as to gravity of offence, 823. granted notwithstanding presumption of death, 322. ordinarily not gi-anted on libellant's uncorroborated testi- mony, 324. when alleged paramour may defend, 325. name of alleged paramour must appear in libel, 326. notice to district attorney after, for adultery or other crime, 327. confessions as evidence, 329. adultery prior to marriage not ground for, 330. second marriage without cohabitation, not ground for,332. insane person, for or against, 384, 357. legitimacy of children, affecting, 335. for libel, provisions as to, 355 et seq. domicil and cohabitation here, when necessary, 367. defences to libel for, 372 et seq. conflict of laws in, 369 et seq. , 383 et seq. foreign, 383 et seq. alimony in, 389. change of name, after, 395. property rights after, 396. contracts and suits after, 399. residing together in same house after, is adultery, 400. soliciting business forbidden, 401. fraud in, punished, 401. decree vacated for fraud, 402. writ of review does not lie, 403. DOMICIL, as affecting libel for nullity of marriage, 118. wife's follows husband's, 132, 369. as affecting married woman's certificate, 276. as affecting marriage, 114-116. as affecting divorce, 361, 368-371, 383-388. 260 INDEX. References are to sections. DONATIO CAUSA MORTIS, either husband or wife may make, 253. nature and subjects of, 255 et seq. not valid against creditors, 254. DOWER, release of, when a valid consideration, 222. right of wife to, upon divorce, 397. offence without divorce no bar to, 398. wife's right in husband's realty, 456, 460. in what widow may or may not have, 460-467, 484. how affected by mortgage, 460, 468. not affected by tax sale, 469. may be set out to widow, 470, 471. new, in case of eviction, 472. when writ of, lies, 473. burden of proof upon woman to establish that she is lawful widow, 474. alleged reason for difference between, and husband's curtesy, 483. none in husband's equitable estate, 484. husband cannot deprive wife of, without her consent, 487, 500. wife's election as to, 456, 500. when barred by jointure or settlement, 488. wife may release but cannot convey, 488. may be released by guardian, 490. how creditors may reach, 492. how affected by husband's will, 499, 500. does not attach to land elsewhere, 510. DRUGS, intoxication from opium or other, ground for divorce, 321. DRUNKENNESS, wife may recover damages from liquor seller, 189-191. ' as ground for divorce, 321, 349, 351. INDEX. 261 References are to sections. E EARNINGS, wife's at common law, 28, 30. under present law, 132, 138, 217, 242. right of mother to child's, 161, 164. wife's cannot be trusteed for husband's debt, 265. ELECTION, wife's right of, as to dower, 456, 457. ENGAGEMENT TO MARRY, may be made verbally, 44. mutual, must be proved, 45. evidence of, 45, 48. when writing is essential, 49, 56. specific performance not enforced, 53. damages for breach of, 54, 55. seduction under, 55. married man to unmarried woman, 58. grounds for breaking, 59. ENTICEMENT, of female for clandestine marriage, 100. ENTIRETIES, husband and wife as owners by, 206, 207. EQUITY, adopted from ecclesiastical courts, 1, 11, 23. suits in, between husband and wife, 37, 202, 206, 209, 218-220. distinction between law and, 37, 210, 212. jurisdiction of Probate Court in, 72. relieves against breach of trust or fraud, 76, 209, 211, 213. ESTOPPEL, as to indorser of promissory note, 227. wife's warranty an, 286. 262 INDEX. References are to sections. EVICTION, of wife from dower estate entitles her to new, 472. EXECUTION, wife's arrest on, at common law, 19. enforcement against married woman, 140, 288. on decree for separate support, 177. for alimony, 393. EXECUTOR, of will of husband or wife, 412, 416. EXECUTRIX, married woman may be, 262. F. FARM, carrying on, is business requiring certificate, 270. if husband carries on wife's, no certificate required, 278. FATHER, rights in child at common law, 24. when entitled to custody of child, 143. duty to support child, 144, 187. duty ceases, if custody taken away, 146. right to custody of child conditioned upon fitness, 147. right subject to court's order, 151. should not seek forcible possession of child, 154. proper remedy is habeas corpus, 154. liable criminally for assaulting child, 155. no adoption of child without consent of, 157. may bind child as apprentice, 159. may appoint guardian of child by will, 160. cannot affect mother's right of custody, 160. when heir to child, 166. omission of chjld in will of, 495. rights of posthumous child, 497. INDEX. 263 BeferenceB are to sections. FIRM, See Partneeship. FORECLOSURE, light of, by husband or wife as against the other sus- pended, 232. wife may purchase husband's property at, 237. FRAUD, in effecting marriage engagements, 59. in effecting ante-nuptial agreements, 69. in conveyances prior to raairiage, 75 et seq. in effecting marriage, 122. not condoned by marriage, 211. husband's actual, not necessarily illegal, 214. rights of creditors, 221, 234, 243, 252, 254. husband's conveyance in, may be impeached by divorced wife, 891. charges of, on execution, 393. in obtaining divorce, 401, 402. FRAUDS, STATUTE OF, affecting agreements as to marriage, 49, 65. what writing sufficient to satisfy, 52. affecting agreements as to realty, 222. FUNERAL EXPENSES, paid from estate of deceased, 518. monument and burial lot as, 526. G. GAMBLING, wife may recover husband's money lost in, 192. GIFT, between husband and wife, 21, 208, 241, 242, 252. of personal ornaments and necessaries, 243-249. money not subject of, from husband to wife, 242, 247. in contemplation of death, 253-259. by husband of buildings on wife's real estate, 260. 264 INDEX. Beferences are to sections. GUARDIAN, may act in marriage settlement, 63. no right to custody of wife, 125, 142. of wife, how appointed, 142. of minors, when has custody, 147. appointed by parents' will, 160. has charge of ward's property, 160, 162, 165. of spendthrift, duty as to ward's family, 183. of married woman, may use income for her support, 193. married woman may be, 262. may act in divorce proceedings, 355, 357. office of, sometimes incompatible with that of adminis- trator, 417. may release homestead, 439. may release dower, curtesy, and other rights, 490. may waive provisions of will, 503. H. HABEAS CORPUS, wife may have, against husband, 133. to obtain possession of child, 154. HABITUAL DRUNKARD, wife of, may recover damages from one selling liquor toj 189-191. divorce from, 321. HEIR, parents, of child, 166. husband or wife may be statutory, 458. wife not, of husband, 515. HOME, wife's same as that of her husband, 132. if husband leases, wife may be turned out, 132. widow right to occupy forty days after husband's death, 432. INDEX. 265 References are to eections. HOMESTEAD, rights of, 435. occupation essential to maintain, 436. addition to, not substitute for dower, 437. how created, 438. how released, 439. HOUSEHOLD EXPENSES, husband primarily liable for all, 167. wife may, by contract, become liable for, 284. HUSBAND AND WIFE, conflicting theories as to, 11-23. at common law, 16-32, 136. may be agents one for the other, 21, 161, 169, 205, 241 279-283, 287. cannot be partners but may be joint owners, 205. may sue each other at equity but not at law, 37-40, 202, 206, 209, 211, 217-220, 223. transfers between, invalid if direct, valid if through third person, 22, 209, 221, 231-242. contracts continue valid or invalid as in their inception, 229. gifts between, 21, 208, 209, 213, 214, 242-260. gifts in contemplation of death, 253-259. criminal liability of, 127-130. by modern law, personally independent, 131. wife's domicil follows husband's, 132, 369. bodily correction forbidden, 134. damages for injury to, 136-138, 418. liability for injuries to others, 139, 278. rights in their children, 143-164, 175. obligations towards their children, 144-146, 161-164, 167, 175, 187, 199. husband must support wife, 167-193. when wife may contract for necessaries in husband's name, 167-174. 266 INDEX. References are to sectiona. HUSBAND AND WIFE — continued. ■wife cannot borrow money on husband's credit, 170. court may decree separate support, 175-186. receiver of husband's property may be appointed, 179. pension money not exempt, 181. husband's neglect punished criminally, 187, 188. damages where liquor sold to habitual drunkard, 189. wife may recover husband's losses at gambling, 192. wife's income sometimes may be used for her support, 193. respective rights of, under pauper laws, 194-201. rights as tenants by entireties, 206, 207. as tenants in common, 206. private conversations between, 213-215. promissory notes between, 217, 218, 227-231. life insurance for benefit of, 251, 420-481. ante-nuptial debts between, suspended not extinguished, 261. rights and obligations where wife carries on business, 266-277. in absence of certificate, liability several and not joint, 276. rights of alien, coming into State, 289. no distinction between, in gravity of offence authorizing divorce, 323. separation by divorce, 312-402. effect of marital offence, without divorce, 398 separation by agreement, 404-409. separation by death, 412-514. neither under obligation to pay the debts ot deceased, 415. will may be made by either, 493, 508, 511. neither should be witness to the other's will, 493. respective rights of burial, 515-527. neither relation, nor next of kin to the other, 498. INDEX. 267 References are to sections. HUSBAND AND WIFE — continued. words "my wife" in a will do not necessarily'mean lawful wife, 498. rights in their respective bodies after death, 519-523. See Married Womaii; Widow. I. IDIOT, See Insane Person. IMPOTENCY, as ground for divorce, 321, 336, 337. IMPKISONMENT, of married woman on execution, 19, 140. as ground for divorce, 321, 353. pardoned, does not affect divorce, 354. IMPROVEMENTS, by husband on wife's realty, 239, 260. no dower in, 467. INCHOATE RIGHTS, of dower and curtesy, 492. INDORSEMENT, subtle distinction between assignment and, 231. INFANT, See Child. INJURIES, to married woman, 136-138. by man-ied woman, 139. to child, 165. causing death, 418. INSANE PERSON, marriage of, prohibited, 108-110. prior insanity does not affect marriage, 109. 268 INDEX. References are to sections. INSANE PEUSO'S — continued. defence to divorce against, 334. in divorce proceedings, may act by guardian, 357. See Guardian. INSOLVENCY, of husband affecting wife's property, 28. attachment dissolved by, 177. ■wife's claim against husband in, 218, 228, 233. conveyances prior to, 222. married woman may go, or be put into, 288. INSURANCE, See Life Insurance. INTERMENT, wife's right of, 515. INTOXICATION, wife may recover damages from liquor seller for hus- band's, 189-191. as ground for divorce, 321, 349, 351. ISSUE, of void marriage when illegitimate, 120. absence of, affecting property rights, 453. essential to entitle husband to curtesy, 479-482. but not to half curtesy, 486. not essential to dower, 456. J. JOINT OWNERS, husband and wife as, 205. JOINT TENANCY, of husband and wife, in real estate, 206. JOINTURE, unless waived, dower barred by, 488. INDEX. 269 References are to sectionB. JURY, women not allowed to serve upon, 41. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, woman cannot be, but may be appointed special com- missioner with powers of, 263. L. LABOR, wife's presumed to be for herself, 265. LACHES, in bringing libel for divorce, 337. LAW, under which we live, 1. the Common, 2-11, 24-32. there may be a fashion in, 35. as distinguished from equity, 37, 210-212. difference between mistake of fact and of, 319. LEASE, husband may, his home to another, without wife's con- sent, 132. dower in, for more than one hundred years, 464. LEGISLATION^, softening the common law, 38. marriage by, unconstitutional, 107. divorce by, unconstitutional, 316. review of, as to married women, 291-311. LIBEL, annulling or affirming marriage, 118. in divorce proceedings, 355. may be prosecuted by guardian, 357. may charge more than one offence, 358. may be amended, 358. unless dismissed without prejudice, bar to new, 359. 270 INDEX. References are to sections. LIBEL — continued. specifications may be ordered, 360. written answer required, 360. where to be filed and heard, 361. service of, 362. when appearance may be entered, 363. attachment of husband's property on, 364. no final judgment on, 365. defences to, 372-382. LIFE INSURANCE, policy may be transferred by husband to wife, 251. for protection of husband or wife, 420. legislation as to, 421. rights of creditors in, 422, 424. on assessment plan, 425. conflict of laws as to, 426. survivorship as affecting, 427, 429. conflicting claims to, 423, 429, 430. suit may be brought in name of beneficiary, 431. LOAN, between husband and wife, 213, 217. cannot be recovered in law or equity, 218. M. MAINTENANCE, husband liable for wife's, 167. separate, may be decreed, 175. See Separate Support. MARRIAGE, mutual engagement of, 44. status cannot be modified by agreement of parties, 63. at common law, 80. statute requirements in this State, 81-90. INDEX. 271 References are to sections. MARRIAGE — continued. valid without consummation, 83. presence of official essential, 84. Quakers may solemnize, according to their peculiar forms, 85. who may officiate at, 86, 88. where should be solemnized, 87. notice of intention required, 89. consent of parent or guardian of minor, 82. consent of Judge of Probate, 90-95. when valid, notwithstanding non-compliance with stat- ute provisions, 95. penalties for illegally solemnizing, 95. foreign, before United States consul, valid, 96. records of, should be kept, 97, 98. evidence of, 99. penalty for enticing to clandestine, 100. between certain relations prohibited, 101-103. polygamous, prohibited, 104, 105. after divorce, permitted, 104, 114. second, entered into by mistake, 105, 318. legislation affording relief where second, by mistake, 106. no power in legislature to enact, 107. of insane person or idiot, void, 108, 110. valid, if sane at time of, 109. certain kinds void without decree, 110. validity of foreign, 111-117. in evasion of our laws, when void, 112. valid, if not within statute prohibition, although evasion intended, 113. after invalid foreign divorce, how attacked, 117. proceedings where validity doubted, 118. Superior Court proper tribunal for annulling, 124. petition to annul cannot be brought after death of one party to, 119. 272 INDEX. References are to sections. MARRIAGE — continued. issue of void, when illegitimate, 120, 121. induced by fraud, how avoided, 122. mistake no ground for avoidance, 122. prior lack of chastity does not avoid, 122. where woman pregnant at time of, 123. emancipates a minor, and deprives guardian of custody, 123. penalty for wilfully publishing false notice of, 126. does not condone prior fraud, 211. operates as oblivion of the past, 330. second, without cohabitation, no ground for divorce, 832. will revoked by, 494. MARRIED WOMAN, arrest on execution, 19, 140, 288. earnings of, her husband's at common law, 28, 80. earnings her own under present law, 132, 138, 217, 265. has absolute right to her personal property, 77, 202. may dispose of her real estate subject only to husband's rights after her death, 487. under husband's coercion, 127. may be punished for crime, 128, 129. perjury in husband's defence, 129. punished if injures her husband's property, 180. right to her person practically absolute, 131, no legal voice in selection of home, 132. may refuse to occupy husband's room, 132. injuries to or by a, 136-139. guardian of, may be appointed, 142. may be adopted, 142. husband may be trustee for, 209, 213. cannot sue husband's firm, but may individuals thereof, 223, 224. liable as iiidorser on invalid note, 227. innocent holder of invalid note may sue, 228. INDEX. 273 References are to sections. MARRIED WOMAN — continued. may take assignment of husband's mortgage, 231. rights against husband suspended not extinguished, 232, 261. may enforce rights again.st others than her husband, 233. cannot purchase husband's property at sheriff's sale, but may at foreclosure or from his assignees, 236-238. exoneration of real estate mortgaged for husband's debt, 260, 285. may occupy any position of trust without her husband's consent, 262. offices open to a, 263, 264. may carry on business, 266. may make contracts, 284. estopped from setting up title after warranty, 286. to be bound by deed must join in operative words, 286. may ratify husband's acts, 287. may go or be put into insolvency, 288. course of legislation as to, 291-311. See Husband and Wife; Separate Support; Widow. MILL, dower set out from the rents and profits, 471 MINOR, husband although a, must support wife, 188. See Child. MISTAKE, difference between in law and fact, 319. MONEY, wife cannot borrow, on husband's credit, 170. real estate purchased with wife's, hers in equity, 222. husband cannot make valid gift of, to wife, 247. not a necessary, 247. MONUMENT, erection of, over grave of husband or wife, 524-527. 18 274 INDEX. Bef erences are to Bections. MORTGAGE, to third person for wife's benefit, 231. husband or wife holding, on the other's property cannot foreclose during marriage, 232. securing note without consideration, invalid, 234. exoneration of wife's property from, for husband's debt, 260, 285. wife may, her property, 285. • dower, how affected by, 460, 468, 469. widow may redeem, 469. curtesy, how affected by, 478. MOTHER, at common law, 24. when entitled to child's custody, 143, 147, 151, 152. duties as to child's support, 144-146, 161-164. abduction of child by, 154, 155. imprisoned, right to young child, 156. adoption of child without consent of, 157. may bind child as apprentice, 159. may appoint guardian of child by will, 160. right to child's earnings, 161, 164. rights where child is injured, 165. when heir to child, 166. omission of child in will, 495. posthumous child, 497. N. NAME, reappointment of woman as special commissioner where change of, by marriage or otherwise, 263. wife may do business under any, 267. mistake of, in libel for divorce, 362. change of, of wife and child after divorce, 395. INDEX. 275 BeferenceB are to sections. NECESSARIES, husband must supply wife with, 167, 174. what are and what are not, 167, 168, 246. money is not, 170, 247. in suit for, burden of proof on plaintiff, 172. motive of person furnishing, immaterial, 173. alimony no bar to suit for previous supplies, 174. gifts of, from husband to wife, 243. NE EXEAT, writ does not lie against woman, 141. NEXT OF KIN, when entitled to administration, 416. wife not included in, 498. NIGHTWALKER, male as well as female, 42. NOTARY PUBLIC, woman cannot be, 263. NULLITY, of marriage, how decreed, 118-124. 0. OPIUM, intoxication from, a cause for divorce, 321. ORDEAL, trial by, at common law, 4. ORNAMENTS, wife's, subject to husband's debts, 27, 249. gifts by husband to wife under statute, 243. widow and children entitled to, after husband's death, 441. 276 INDEX. References are to sections. p. PARAMOUR, name, if known, must appear in libel for divorce, 326. adulterous disposition of alleged, not evidence, 328. as witness, 338. notice to district attorney after divorce, 327. PARAPHERNALIA, at common law, 27. See Ornaments. PARENTS, See Fathek; Mother. PARTICEPS CRIMINIS, See Paramour. PARTNERSHIP, husband and wife cannot join same, 205. wife cannot sue husband's, 223. members may assume several liability to wife, 224. land belongiug to, when no dower in, 464. PAUPER LAWS, duty of married woman under, 145. husband and wife under, 194-201. PENSION, husband's, subject to wife's support, 181. PERJURY, wife punished for, in husband's defence, 129. PERSONAL PROPERTY, husband's rights in wife's, at common law, 16, 27. may be conveyed by wife, 77, 202. ownership in, by entireties, 207. agreement as to, not within Statute of Frauds, 222. legal distinctions as to, 240-259. certificate necessary for protection of, in wife's business, 274. distribution after death, 453, 454. INDEX. 277 Keferences are to sections. POSTHUMOUS CHILD, rights of, in parents' estate, 497. PRECEDENT, binding force of, 5-8. PRIVATE CONVERSATIONS, between husband and wife, 213-215. PROBATE COURT, JUDGE OF, suits against wife of, 40. PROFITABLE GUARDIANSHIP, theory of husband over wife, 14, 36. PROMISE, BREACH OF, See Breach or Promise. PROMISSORY NOTE, between husband and wife invalid, both in law and equity, 217-220. holder of invalid, may sue indorser, 227. if invalid in inception, all parties liable, 228-233. donor's, not subject of gift, 258. wife's estate exonerated if mortgaged to secure hus- band's, 260, 285. wife may repudiate, if without consideration, 280. reconciliation between husband and wife not a valid consideration for, 410. Q. QUAKERS, marriage among, 85. QUARANTINE, widow's right to, 432-434. 278 INDEX. References are to eections. E. REAL ESTATE, transfers between husband and wife, 22, 219, 235. husband's right in wife's, at common law, 22, 31. ownership of husband and wife by entireties, 206. by statute now tenants in common, 206. if paid for with wife's money, hers in equity, 222. agreements as to, require writing to satisfy Statute of Frauds, 222. purchase by husband in wife's name, 239, 287. husband building on wife's, 260. business certificate not necessary to protect wife's, 274. wife bound by her covenants as to, 286. rights in, after divorce, 896, 397. widow's quarantine in husband's, 432. rights of homestead in, 435-440. dower and curtesy in, 455-457, 460-492. statutory rights of husband or wife in, 458, 459. when widow may take wood from, 466. widow and heirs may occupy together, 470. See Curtesy; Dowee; Homestead. RECEIVER, of husband's property, when appointed, 179. RECONCILIATION, agreement for, not a valid consideration, 410. RECORDING, ante-nuptial agreements, 64. marriages, 97, 98. married woman's certificate, 277. RECRIMIl^ATION, defence in divorce proceedings, 872, 382. INDEX. 279 References are to sections. REDUCTIOlSr TO POSSESSION, of wife's chose iu action, 17. compulsory, 29. RELATIONS, marriage between certain, prohibited, 101, 102. even after death or divorce, 103. husband and wife not, of each other, 498. RENT, husband primarily liable for, 167. wife may by contract become liable for, 284. RESTITUTION OF CONJUGAL RIGHTS, at common law, 26. never in force here, 26 note, 132. S. SAVINGS BANK, wife's money iu, 28, 208. deposit in, subject of gift, 257. SCIRE FACIAS, to enforce decree for alimony, 393. SEDUCTION, a punishable crime, 42. not in itself actionable, 55. damages for, under promise of marriage, 56. marriage of minors when prohibited in case o:^ 92. action for wife's, 137. SEPARATE SUPPORT, of wife under decree of court, 175. petition may be brought without a preliminary demand, 175. custody of children in case of, 175. in what county to be brought, 176. attachment of husband's property, 177. 280 INDEX, References are to eectionB. SEPARATE SUFFO'RT — continued. dissolved by insolvency within four months, 177. successive executions may issue, 177. equity jurisdiction doubtful, 178. receiver may be appointed, 179. ■what notice to be given husband, 175, 180. may be ordered if pension husband's only property, 181. wife's direct release to husband no bar, 182. no decree if husband under guardianship as a spend- thrift, 183. decree not a judicial separation, 184. superseded by divorce proceedings, 186. bars divorce for desertion, but not for adultery, 185. See Support. SEPARATION, under decree of court, 175, 184. through divorce, 312 et seq. by agreement, 404 et seq. by death, 412 et seq. bond upon, not against public policy, 408. SETTLEMENT, marriage, 63-73. trust in, how construed, 73. pauper law of, as it affects husband and wife, 194-201. in view of separation, 404-409. wife should expressly contract for husband's chastity in, 409. when a bar to dower, 488. SHERIFF'S SALE, vnfe cannot purchase husband's property at, 236. SIGNATURE, in promise of marriage, 52. notice to liquor seller, wife's, 191. to libel for divorce, 357. INDEX. 281 Beferences are to sections. SISTEKrIN-LAW, marriage with, permitted, 103. SLANDER, of both husband and wife, no joint suit for, 20. married woman liable for, 139. SPECIAL COMMISSIONER, woman may be, 263. commission terminates on marriage, 263. may be reappointed in new name, 263. SPENDTHRIFT, guardian of married, 142. support of wife of, 183. guardian of, cannot sign libel for divorce, 357. STEP-CHILD, husband need not support, 167, 199. SUPPLICAVIT, writ of, 25. SUPPORT, wife entitled to, from husband, 167. under pauper laws, 194. receiver of husband's property may be appointed for wife's, 179. husband's neglect punished criminally, 187. cruel failure to, ground for divorce, 340. See Separate Support. SURVIVORSHIP, wife's rights in chose in action in case of, 17. in action for breach of promise, 61. in property held by entireties, 206, 207. does not make void contract valid, 226. as afiecting donatio causa mortis, 253. in case of death in same accident, 427, 428. as affecting life insurance, 427, 429. 282 INDEX. References are to sections. T. TAX SALE, afEecting dower, 469. TENANTS IN COMMON, husband and wife as, 206. THREATS, trust to protect wife from husband's, 78. husband's, afEecting wife's note, 228. TOMB, wife's right in husband's, 515-517. TOMBSTONE, as part of funeral expenses, 526. TORT, married women may sue or be sued in, 138, 139, 140. TRUST, in marriage settlements, construction of, 73. established prior to marriage, 74. no implied power of revocation, 78. restraint upon alienation in, 79. presumption against, between husband and wife, 213. TRUSTEE, none needed in ante-nuptial agreement, 67. appointed to hold wife's property, 77. equity will protect wife against misconduct of her hus- band as, 209, 213. married woman may be, 262. TRUSTEE PROCESS, not for wife's wages on husband's debt, 265. on libel for divorce, 364. INDEX. 283 References are to sections. u. UNITY OP PERSON, theory of, between husband and wife, 13, 23. never consisteiitly operative in Massachusetts, 15-23. W. WAGER OF BATTLE, at common law, 4. WAGES, See Earnings. WAIVER, wife's, of statutory rights in her husband's real estate, 457. wife's, of jointure, 488. ■wife's, of husband's will, 500-505. difficulties of, pointed out, 504, 505. WARRANTY, wife bound by her, 286. WASTE, by widow in dower land, 466. action against tenant by curtesy for, 475. WEARING APPAREL, See Apparel. WIDOW, rights and duties as to minor child, 161-165. heir to child's property, 166. when may prove note against husband's estate, 233. right of appeal, 414. when entitled to administration, 416, 417. right to damages for husband's death, 418. right in life insurance policy, 420-431. 284 INDEX. Bef erences are to sections. WIDOW — continued. right of quarantine, 432. right of homestead, 435-440. right to ornaments and apparel, 441. allowance to, may be made out of personalty, 442-450. allowance where special administrator is appointed, 451. interest in her husband's personalty, 453, 454. rights in her husband's realty, 456-474, 487-492. statute rights in realty additional to dower, 459. right to take wood from wood lot, 466. must not commit waste, 466. may redeem mortgage on dower estate, 469. burden of proof upon her to show that she is the, 474. rights under husband's will to be paid in full, 499. may waive husband's will, 500. difficulties of waiver pointed out, 504, 505. burial rights of, 515-517. right to possession, care and control of husband's burial lot or tomb, 516-525. right to her husband's body, 520-.523. right as to erecting monument or tombstone at hus- band's grave, 525-527. See Dowek; Homestead; Will. WIFE, See Husband and Wipe; Married Woman. WILD LAND, no dower in, 465. widow may take under statute provision, 465. WILL, appointment of guardian by, 160. when should be filed in Court, 413. husband or wife may make, 493. revoked by marriage, 494. disinheriting child by, 495, 496. INDEX. 285 References fvre to sections. WILL — continued. right of posthumous child omitted in, 497. provision for widow to be paid in full, 499. widow may waive husband's, 500. i-ights of widow in case of waiver, 501. difficulties of waiver pointed out, 504. wisdom of making a, 512-514. WITNESS, husband or wife as, 214, 493. WOODLAND, rights of widow in, 466. WRITING, See Frauds, Statute of. WRIT OF REVIEW, none in divorce, 403. YEAR, engagements to marry beyond a, 51.