Allowance for maintenance may be made to bankrupt by the Trustee with
consent of committee of inspection, for his support, or for services
in winding up the estate. Where the bankrupt is a beneficed clergyman,
the Trustee may apply for sequestration of profits, and, with
concurrence of the bishop, allow a sum equal to a curate's stipend for
bankrupt's services in the parish. In the case of officers and civil
servants, in receipt of salary, the Court directs what part of
bankrupt's income shall be reserved for benefit of creditors.
1555. Declaration of Final Dividend
A final dividend may be declared when the Trustee and committee of
inspection consider that as much of the estate has been realised as
can be done fairly without needlessly protracting the bankruptcy.
1556. Close of Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy may be declared closed, and order to that effect published
in the
London Gazette
, when the Court is satisfied that all
bankrupt's property has been realised, or a satisfactory arrangement
or composition made with the creditors.
1557. Grant of Order of Discharge
Order of discharge may be granted by the Court on the application of
the bankrupt at any time after adjudication. The Court may suspend or
withhold order if bankrupt has kept back property or acted
fraudulently.
1558. Fraud
In cases of fraud, the bankrupt may be proceeded against under the
Debtors Act, 1869, under which he may be imprisoned for not exceeding
two years with or without hard labour.
1559. Void Settlement
Settlement of property by a Debtor on wife and children will become
void if the settlor becomes bankrupt within
two
years after date of
settlement, and within
ten
years unless it can be proved that the
settlor was able to pay his debts when settlement was made without aid
of property settled. This does not apply to a settlement made before
marriage, or after marriage of property accruing in the right of wife,
or settlement made in favour of purchaser in good faith for valuable
consideration.
1560. Arrest of the Debtor
Arrest of the debtor may be ordered by the Court if, after a
bankruptcy notice or petition, there is reason to believe he is about
to abscond or to remove, conceal, or destroy any of his goods, books,
&c., or if, after a receiving order, he removes any goods above the
value of £5, or if, without good cause, he fails to attend the Court
for examination.
1561. Breach of Promise of Marriage
Oral engagements and promises to marry will sustain an action, unless
the marriage is limited to take place upwards of a year from the
making of the contract, in which case the agreement to marry must be
in writing. No plaintiff can recover a verdict unless his or her
testimony shall be corroborated by some other material evidence in
support of the promise. The conduct of the suitor, subsequent to the
breaking off the engagement, would weigh with the jury in estimating
damages. An action may be commenced although the gentleman is not
married. The length of time which must elapse before action must be
reasonable. A lapse of three years, or even half that time, without
any attempt by the gentleman to renew the acquaintance, would lessen
the damages very considerably—perhaps do away with all chance of
success, unless the delay could be satisfactorily explained.
The mode of proceeding is by an action at law. For this an attorney
must be retained, who will manage the whole affair to its termination.
The first proceeding (the writ, service thereof, &c.) costs from £2 to
£5. The next proceeding—from a fortnight to a month after service of
the writ—costs about £5 more. The whole costs, to the verdict of the
jury, from £35 to £50, besides the expenses of the lady's witnesses.
If the verdict be in her favour, the other side have to pay her costs,
with the exception of about £10. If the verdict be against her, the
same rule holds good, and she must pay her opponent's costs—probably
from £60 to £70.
Too Many Cooks Spoil the Broth.
1562. Before Going to Law
Before legal proceedings are commenced, a letter should be written to
the gentleman, by the father or brother of the lady, requesting him to
fulfil his engagement. A copy of this letter should be kept, and it
had better be delivered by some person who can prove that he did so,
and that the copy is correct: he should make a memorandum of any
remarks or conversation.
1563. Examples
We give an abstract or two from the law authorities: they will, we
have no doubt, be perused by our fair readers with great attention,
and some satisfaction.
"A man who was paying particular attentions to a young girl, was
asked by the father of the latter, after one of his visits, what his
intentions were, and he replied, 'I have pledged my honour to marry
the girl in a month after Christmas'; and it was held that this
declaration to the father, who had a right to make the inquiry, and
to receive a true and correct answer, taken in connection with the
visits to the house, and the conduct of the young people towards
each other, was sufficient evidence of a promise of marriage."
1564. Length of Engagement
"The Common Law does not altogether discountenance long engagements
to be married. If parties are young, and circumstances exist,
showing that the period during which they had agreed to remain
single was not unreasonably long, the contract is binding upon them;
but if they are advanced in years, and the marriage is appointed to
take place at a remote and unreasonably long period of time, the
contract would be voidable, at the option of either of the parties,
as being in restraint of matrimony. If no time is fixed and agreed
upon for the performance of the contract, it is in contemplation of
law
a contract to marry within a reasonable period after request.
"
1565. Call or Refusal
"Either of the Parties, therefore, after the making of such a
contract, may call upon the other to fulfil the engagement; and in
case of a refusal, or a neglect so to do on the part of the latter
within a reasonable time after the request made, the party so
calling upon the other for a fulfilment of the engagement may treat
the betrothment as at end, and bring an action for damages for a
breach of the engagement. If both parties lie by for an unreasonable
period, and neither renew the contract from time to time by their
conduct or actions, nor call upon one another to carry it into
execution, the engagement will be deemed to be abandoned by mutual
consent, and the parties will be free to marry whom they please."
1566. Roman Law
"The Roman Law very properly considered the term of two years amply
sufficient for the duration of a betrothment; and if a man who had
engaged to marry a girl did not think fit to celebrate the nuptials
within two years from the date of the engagement, the girl was
released from the contract."
1567. Deed of Separation between a Man and his Wife
This indenture, made the —— day of ——, in the year of our Lord
1864, between Charles B——, of ——, of the first part, Anna R——
B—— (the wife of the said Charles B——), of the second part, and
G—— R—— B—— of the third part: Whereas the said Charles B——
and Anna R——, his wife, have, for good reasons, determined to live
separate and apart from each other, and on that consideration the
said Charles B—— hath consented to allow unto the said Anna R——
B—— a clear weekly payment or sum of ——s., for her maintenance
and support during her life, in manner hereinafter contained: And
whereas the said G—— R—— B—— hath agreed to become a party to
these presents, and to enter into the covenant hereinafter contained
on his part:
Now this indenture witnesseth, that in pursuance of the said
agreement, he, the said Charles B—, for himself, his heirs,
executors, and administrators, doth covenant, promise, and agree, to
and with the said G—R—B—, his executors, administrators, and
assigns in manner following, that is to say, that he, the said
Charles B—, shall and will, from time to time, and at all times
hereafter, permit and suffer the said Anna R—B—to live separate
and apart from him, the said Charles B—, as if she were sole and
unmarried, and in such place and places as to her from time to time
shall seem meet; and that he, the said Charles B—, shall not nor
will molest or disturb the said Anna R—B—in her person or manner
of living, nor shall, at any time or times, hereafter require, or by
any means whatever, either by ecclesiastical censures, or by taking
out citation, or other process, or by commencing or instituting any
suit whatsoever, seek or endeavour to compel any restitution of
conjugal rights, nor shall not nor will commence or prosecute
proceedings of any description against the said Anna R—B—in any
ecclesiastical court or elsewhere; nor shall nor will use any force,
violence, or restraint to the person of the said Anna R—B—; nor
shall nor will, at any time during the said separation, sue, or
cause to be sued, any person or persons whomsoever for receiving,
harbouring, lodging, protecting, or entertaining her, the said Anna
R—B—, but that she, the said Anna R—B—, may in all things live
as if she were a feme sole and unmarried, without the restraint
and coercion of the said Charles B—, or any person or person by his
means, consent, or procurement; and also that all the clothes,
furniture, and other the personal estate and effects, of what nature
or kind soever, now belonging or at any time hereafter to belong to,
or be in the actual possession of her, the said Anna R—B—; and all
such sums of money and personal estate as she, the said Anna R—B—,
or the said Charles B—in her right, shall or may at any time or
times during the said separation acquire or be entitled to at law or
in equity, by purchase, gift, will, intestacy, or otherwise, shall
be the sole and separate property of the said Anna R—B—, to
manage, order, sell, dispose of, and use the same in such manner, to
all intents and purposes, as if she were a feme sole and
unmarried:
And further, that he, the said Charles B—, his executors or
administrators, or some or one of them, shall and will well and
truly pay, or cause to be paid, unto the said G—R—B, his
executors, administrators, or assigns, a clear weekly payment or sum
of —s., on Monday in each and every week during the life of the
said Anna R—B—, but in trust for her, the said Anna R—B—, for
her separate maintenance and support: And the said G—R—B—, for
himself, his heirs, executors, and administrators, doth hereby
covenant and agree to and with the said Charles B—, his executors,
administrators, and assigns, that she, the said Anna R—B—, shall
not nor will not, at any time or times hereafter, in any wise molest
or disturb him the said Charles B—, or apply for any restitution of
conjugal rights, or for alimony, or for any further or other
allowance or separate maintenance than the said weekly sum of —s;
and that he, the said G—R— his heirs, executors, or
administrators, shall and will, from time to time, at all times
hereafter, save, defend, and keep harmless and indemnify the said
Charles B—, his heirs, executors, and administrators, and his and
their lands and tenements, goods and chattels, of, from, and against
all and all manner of action and actions, suit and suits, and all
other proceedings whatsoever which shall or may at any time
hereafter be brought, commenced, or prosecuted against him the said
Charles B—, his heirs, executors, or administrators, or any of
them, and also of, from, and against all and every sum and sums of
money, costs, damages, and expenses which he, the said Charles B—,
his executors, administrators, and assigns, shall or may be obliged
to pay, or shall or may suffer, sustain, or be put unto, for, or by
reason, or on account of any debt or debts which shall, at any time
hereafter, during such separation as aforesaid, be contracted by the
said; Anna R— B—, or by reason, or means, or on account of any
act, matter, cause, or thing whatsoever relating thereto. In witness
whereof, the said parties to these presents have hereunto set their
hands and seals, the day and year first above written.
At Open Doors Dogs Come In.
1568. Divorce and other Matrimonial Causes
The powers of the Ecclesiastical Court are abolished in these cases,
which are now taken in the Probate, Divorce, and Admiralty Division of
the High Court.
Idle Folks Take the Most Pains.
1569. Divorce à mensâ et thoro
By Divorce
à mensâ et thoro
is meant a separation only; it does not
sever the matrimonial tie, so as to permit the parties to contract
another marriage. These are now called
judicial separations.
1570. Suits of Jactitation of Marriage
By suits of jactitation of marriage is meant suits which are brought
when a person maliciously and falsely asserts that he or she is
already married to another, whereby a belief in their marriage is
spread abroad, to the injury of the complaining party.
1571. Absolute Divorce
By absolute divorce is meant a dissolution of the marriage, by which
the parties are set absolutely free from all marital engagements, and
capable of subsequent marriage. In these cases a
decree nisi
is
first obtained, which is made absolute after the lapse of a certain
time, unless the decree should be set aside by subsequent appeal.
1572. Grounds of Divorce
The grounds of divorce are very various, and in most cases fit only
for confidential communication to a solicitor. In all cases a highly
respectable professional adviser should be employed.
1573. Sentence of Judicial Separation
A sentence of judicial separation may be obtained either by the
husband or the wife, on the ground of desertion without cause for two
years or upwards. To constitute wilful desertion on the part of the
husband, his absence must be against the will of his wife, and she
must not have been a consenting party to it.
1574. Insufficient Grounds
Persons cannot be legally separated upon the mere disinclination of
one or both to live together. The disinclination must be proved upon,
reasons that the law recognises; and the court must see that those
reasons actually exist.
1575. Costs
The amount of costs of a judicial separation or a divorce varies from
£25 to £500 or more, according to the circumstances of the suit, and
the litigation that may ensue. But a person being a pauper may obtain
relief from the court by suing
in forma pauperis.
Any such person
must lay a case before counsel, and obtain an opinion from such
counsel that he or she has reasonable grounds for appealing to the
court for relief. The opinion of the counsel must then be laid before
the judge ordinary, and leave be obtained to proceed with the suit.
1576. Magisterial Order for Protection of Wife's Property
When a wife is able to prove that her husband has deserted her without
cause and against her will, she may obtain from the Matrimonial Court,
or from the judge ordinary, an order to protect her against his
creditors, and against any person claiming under him, by way of
purchase or otherwise, any property she may acquire by her own lawful
industry, or may become possessed of after such desertion.
1577. Obtaining an Order
The order may in any case be obtained from the court, and when the
wife lives in London, from a police magistrate; or where she lives in
the country, from two magistrates sitting in petty sessions.
1578. Nature of the Order (1)
The order does not prevent the Husband returning to his Wife, but only
prevents his taking her earnings while the desertion continues.
Home is Home, be it Ever So Homely.
1579. Nature of the Order (2)
The order, when obtained, puts the wife in the same position with
regard to ownership of property and the right to sue and be sued upon
contracts (that is, all bargains and business transactions), as if she
had obtained the decree of judicial separation, placing her, in fact,
if the situation of a single woman.
1580. Penalty
If after this Order is made, the husband, or any creditor of his, or
person claiming through him by purchase or otherwise, should seize or
continue to hold any property of the wife, after notice of such order,
the wife may bring an action against her husband or such other person,
and may recover the property itself, and double its value in money.
1581. Liability of Husband for Wife's Debts
A husband is only liable for the debts and liabilities of his wife
contracted before marriage to the extent of the property which he
receives from, or becomes entitled to through his wife. The wife
herself is liable to the extent of her separate property for all debts
incurred by her either before or after marriage.
1582. Earnings, etc., of Married Women
A married woman, after January 1, 1883, may carry on business separate
from her husband, and is entitled absolutely for her separate use to
all wages and earnings acquired by her in any employment, occupation,
or trade, in which she is engaged, and which she carries on separately
from her husband, and to all money acquired by her through the
exercise of any literary, artistic, or scientific skill, and her
receipt alone is a good discharge for the amount.
1583. Personal Property, etc., of Married Women
A woman married after January 1, 1883, is entitled to hold all real
and personal property which she was entitled to either at or after
marriage, for her separate use.
1584. To Search for Wills
If you wish to examine a will, your best course is to go to "The Wills
Office," at Somerset House, Strand, have on a slip of paper the name
of the testator—this, on entering, give to a clerk whom you will see
at a desk on the right. At the same time pay a shilling, and you will
then be entitled to search all the heavy Index volumes for the
testator's name. The name found, the clerk will hand over the will for
perusal, and there is no difficulty whatever,
provided you know about
the year of the testator's death.
The Indexes are all arranged and
numbered according to their years.
Not only the names of those who left wills are given, but also of
those intestates to whose effects letters of administration have been
granted. There is no charge beyond the shilling paid for entering. If
you require a copy of the will, the clerk will calculate the expense,
and you can have the copy in a few days. No questions whatever are
asked—nor does the length of the will, or the time occupied in
reading it, make any difference in the charge. Beyond the shilling
paid on entering, there is no other demand whatever, unless for
copying the whole or a portion of the will.
If the deceased at the time of his death had a fixed place of abode
within the district of any of the District Registries attached to the
Court of Probate, the will may now be proved, or letters of
administration obtained from the district registrar. There are
numerous district registries, viz., at Liverpool, Manchester, Bristol,
York, Newcastle, Durham, and other places. If the will has not been
proved in London, it will be found in the registry of the district in
which the deceased dwelt at the time of his death. The same rules are
observed in the country as in London, with regard to examination, &c.
The fee—one shilling—is the same in all. Having ascertained that the
deceased left a will, and that it has been proved, the next inquiry
is,
"Where was it proved?"
The above explanation and remarks apply
also to the administrations granted to the effects of those who died
without wills.
Every Man's House is His Castle.
1585. Making a Will
The personal property of any person deceased, left undisposed of by
deed or will, is divisible among his widow, should he leave one, and
his next of kin, in the following order:
-
Children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, &c. The next
inheritors, in the absence of these, are,
-
Father;—if none, mother, and brothers and sisters, and their
children (but not their grandchildren);
-
His grandfathers and grandmothers;—if none,
-
His uncles and aunts;—if none,
-
His cousins, and great-nephews and nieces.
1586. Further Details on Intestacy
If the Deceased leave a Widow, but no child or children, one half of
his personal estate will fall to his widow, and the other half will be
divisible among the next of kin. The father of an intestate without
children is entitled to one half of his estate, if he leave a widow,
and to the whole if he leave no widow. When the nearest of kin are the
mother and the brothers and sisters, the personal estate is divisible
in equal portions, one of which will belong to the mother, and one to
each of the brothers and sisters; and if there be children of a
deceased brother or sister, an equal portion is divisible among each
family of children.
1587. Valid Wills (1)
Wills, to be Valid, can only be made by persons at or above the age of
twenty-one, and in a sound state of mind at the time of making the
last will and testament; not attainted of treason; nor a felon; nor an
outlaw. As regards the power of married women to make wills, a married
woman may make a will, disposing, as she may think fit, of all
property to which she is entitled for her separate use.
1588. Valid Wills (2)
No will is valid unless it is in writing, signed at the foot or end
thereof by the testator, or by some other person in his presence and
by his direction. And such signature must be made or acknowledged by
the testator, in the presence of two or more witnesses, all of whom
must be present at the same time, and such witnesses must attest and
subscribe the will in the presence and with the knowledge of the
testator.
1589. Irrevocable
A Will or Codicil once made cannot be altered or revoked, unless
through a similar formal process to that under which it was made; or
by some other writing declaring an intention to revoke the same, and
executed in the manner in which an original will is required to be
executed; or by the burning, tearing, or otherwise destroying the same
by the testator, or by some person in his presence and by his
direction with the intention of revoking the same.
1590. Loses Effect
No Will or Codicil, or any part of either, that has once been revoked
by any or all of these acts, can be revived again, unless it be
executed in the manner that a fresh will or codicil is required to be.
1591. Alterations
Alterations in Wills or Codicils require the signature of the testator
and of two witnesses to be made upon the margin, or upon some other
part of the will, opposite or neat to the alteration.
1592. Revoked by Marriage
Every Will is revoked by the subsequent marriage of the testator or
testatrix, except a will made in the exercise of a power of
appointment, when the property appointed thereby would not, in default
of appointment, pass to the heir, executor, or administrator, or next
of kin of the testator or testatrix.
1593. Basic Requirements
There being no Stamp Duty, or tax, on a will itself, it should be
written on plain parchment or paper. Nor is it necessary, though
always advisable where means are sufficient, to employ a professional
adviser to draw up and complete the execution of a will.
1594. Identifying a Illegitimate Child
If it be intended to give a legacy to an illegitimate child, the
testator must not class him with the lawful children, or designate him
simply as the child of his reputed parent, whether father or mother,
but must describe the child by name as the reputed child of —— or
——, so as to leave no doubt of identity.
1595. Paraphernalia
Wearing apparel, jewels, &c., belonging to a wife are considered in
law her "paraphernalia;" and though liable for the husband's debts
while living, cannot be willed away from her by her husband, unless he
wills to her other things in lieu thereof, expressing such intention
and desire in the will.
The wife may then make her choice whether she will accept the
substituted gift, or remain possessed of what the law declares her
entitled to.
Half a Loaf is Better than No Bread.
1596. Property of Different Kinds
Where property is considerable, and of different kinds,—or even where
inconsiderable, if of different kinds, and to be disposed of to
married or other persons, or for the benefit of children, for
charities, or trusts of any description, it is absolutely necessary
and proper that a qualified legal adviser should superintend the
execution of the will.
1597. Executors
When a person has resolved upon making a will, he should select from
among his friends persons of trust to become his executors, and should
obtain their consent to act. And it is advisable that a duplicate copy
of the will should be entrusted to the executor or executors. Or he
should otherwise deposit a copy of his will, or the original will, in
the office provided by the Probate Division of the High Court for the
safe custody of wills.