We do not think that the plaintiffs, have had fair measure. After the evidence had all been submitted and argued to the jury, the Court told the jury “that the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover in any event, and if the issues were found for the plaintiffs he would set aside the verdict.” Afterwards the Court said, “the jury can take the issues and pass upon them and say how the matter was.”
*453This manner of submitting the issues was calculated to throw the jury off their guard and to prejudice the rights of the plaintiffs.
Why consider the evidence with that care and attention, which properly belongs to all jury trials, if their findings are to have no weight with the Court, but are to be set aside in .any event ?
But even under this unfavorable charge, the j ury have found that “ that John Witherspoon did enter into an agreement with his wife Elizabeth, that if she would convey the Callo-way tract of land, and join him in a deed therefor to Prudénce Calloway, the heir-at-law of William Howard, that she should have the Elk Farm tract (the same now in suit) as a substitute ,and in lieu thereof, as her own land.”
And now John Witherspoon and his wife Elizabeth both being dead, the Elk Farm has descended to the plaintiffs in this action, who are the heirs-at-law of both the said John and the said Elizabeth.
By act of law the legal estate of the father and the equitable estate of the mother have united in their children and heirs-at-law, so that the lands are now just where they would have been had everything been done which ought to have been done; that is, if the Elk Farm had been settled upon the wife in lieu of her Calloway lands. When John Witherspoon received the money for the Calloway lands, he held it upon trust for his wife, and his estate became responsible to her for that amount.
This was a constructive or implied trust, such as is raised " between persons who are brought together into a relation implying confidence, and is embraced by the statute of frauds. The authorities cited on the argument by Mr. Smith, and many other cases, show that the Courts will enforce parol agreements between the husband and wife, especially when the wife is not a mere volunteer. The demand of Elizabeth Witherspoon did not rest upon the moral duty or voluntary bounty of her husband, but having parted with her own lands, *454she was entitled to say, I have paid valuable eonsideration, there has been the utmost good faith on my part, and, like any other creditor, I must have money or property sufficient to pay my debt.
The case most relied upon by the defendants’ counsel to defeat this view is Smith v. Smith, 1 Winston Eq. 30; but the plaintiffs here are not seeking to have a specific performance, as in that case, so as to be met by the statute of frauds, but the law having cast the descent upon them, in Confederate phrase, they only “ wish to be let alone.”'
While it was held in Smith v. Smith, that the wife was not entitled to a specific performance of the contract between herself and husband, yet the Court says, “ We think the wife is entitled under the contract to the proceeds of her land which was sold in consequence of it, subject to the interest which her husband, as such, had in the land, * « * * So far as It entitles her to the money for which her land was sold, the contract must be considered in this Court as having been executed at the time when the price of the land was received by her husband.”
The pleadings show that the Elk Farm has been sold upon the petition of the defendant Clarke, the administrator of John Witherspoon, to pay debts, and that the sale has been reported' to Court, but that it has not been confirmed, “ and that the order of sale was made without prejudice to the plaintiffs5' claim.”
We declare our opinion to be, that the plaintiffs are entitled to the lands in controversy, free from the demands of Clark, the administrator, and all who claim under him.
Let this be certified, to the end that the Superior Court may proceed according to law.
Judgment reversed and case remanded.
Judgment reversed. Pee Cubiam.