206
STATUTES FOUND APPLICABLE,
There is reason to believe that the proprietor under
his charter, claimed the same prerogative on
this subject, as was exercised by the king in England; and if there were
not before, debts due to the
king, in the province, there were at the same time of the government being
seized into the hands of the
crown.
By the act of 1638, Ch. 2, it was provided that
the mere and proper debts of the lord proprietary
should be first satisfied, and a similar act was passed in 1650, Ch. 28,
which remained in force till the
revolution; although it appears that in 1699, when the government was in
the hands of king William,
the house of delegates rejected a saving, proposed in the act for limitation
of suits, of lord Baltimore's
bonds, &c. alledging that it was not though fit further to indulge
his lordship, than other his majesty's
good subjects of the province.
In the act of 1642, Ch. 15, touching causes testamentary,
the order of payment of debts was prescribed;
1, funeral charges; 2, landlords rents; 3, debts of the lord proprietary,
contracted bona fide,
not fines, &c. It was provided by the constitution and form of
government, (Sect. 58,) that all
penalties and forfeitures heretofore going to the king or proprietary,
should go to the state. Whether
the prerogative or privilege with respect to debts, was thus derived, or
was taken as an incident to
the assumption of government, under the authority of the people, as expressed
in the preamble to the
declaration of rights, it may not be very material to enquire, but the
preference of the state in the
payment of debts, is considered as being fully established. This
preference of all debts, unless on
record, was determined in the general court at October term, 1793, in the
case of Forrest and Stoddard,
against Ridley's administratrix, and was stated therein to be by common
law; of course it
would not be necessary that this chapter of the great charter, should be
incorporated for that purpose.
But it appears proper that it should be so in conjunction with Ch. 8, as
a restraint on taking the lands
left by the debtor, where there was personal estate sufficient, although
the practice may be thought
otherwise sufficiently established.
The last part of this statute, as to the saving to the
wife and children their reasonable parts, will
require to be considered.
The case of Griffith and Hall, decided in the general
court at May term, 1798, will probably shew
that this statute, as confirming or shewing what was the common law, as
to the reasonable part of
the wife, is proper to be incorporated with our laws.
Blackstone in treating of this subject, (2 Vol. 492,)
has the following remarks: " Whatever may
have been the custom of later years in many parts of the kingdom, or however
it was introduced in
derogation of the old common law, the ancient method continued in use
in the province of York, the
principality of Wales, and the city of London; till very modern times,
when in order to favour the
power of bequeathing, and to reduce the whole kingdom to the same standard,
three statutes have
been provided, 4 and 5 W. and M. Ch. 2, explained by 2 and 3 Anne, Ch.
5, for the province of
York; 7 and 8 W. 3, Ch. 38, for Wales; and 11 Geo. 1, Ch. 18, for London;
whereby it is enacted,
that persons within those districts, and liable to those customs, may (if
they think proper,) dispose
of all their personal estates by will, and the claims of the
widom, children and other relations to the
contrary, are totally barred. Thus is the old common law now utterly
abolished throughout all the
kingdom of England, and a man may devise the whole of his chattels as freely
as he formerly could
his third part or moiety."
The opinion of the general court in the above case,
was that our acts of assembly of 1704, 1715
and 1729, were a recognition of the right of the wife to one third of the
personal estate; and that
they were the best evidence of what was the common law in the opinion of
the legislature.
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