17 S.E. 14 | N.C. | 1893
It is agreed that at the time the goods for the purchase-money of which this action is brought were bought, the plaintiffs were merchants, doing business in the city of Baltimore, in the State of Maryland, and the defendant, L. C. Best, was carrying on the trade of milliner and merchant in the city of Goldsboro, State of North Carolina, in her own name, as a licensed trader; that said goods were ordered by the defendant L. C. Best of the plaintiffs, and they were shipped by the plaintiffs to her from their place of business in the city of Baltimore, and were to be paid for by defendant L. C. Best at the end of sixty days; that at that time, and since, the defendant was and is a citizen and resident of the State of North Carolina, and a married woman, living with her *75 husband, the defendant N.W. Best. The goods have not been (60) paid for, except the credits set out in the accounts filed, and those not paid for were worth the agreed price of $212.43; that the defendant has never been a free-trader under the statutes of North Carolina, and her husband has never consented in writing to the orders of said goods and to the sale thereof.
Judgment was rendered for defendants, and plaintiffs appealed.
If the contract, which is the subject of this action, was made in this State, it is well settled that it would be void by reason of the common-law disability of the feme defendant to make any contract whatever upon which a personal judgment can be rendered against her, except in the cases provided by statute. Pippen v. Wesson,
The plaintiffs, however, insist that the contract was made in the city of Baltimore, Md., their place of business, where they accepted the proposal of the defendant by shipping the goods according to her order. In this they are correct, for if a contract is completed in another State "it makes no difference in principle whether the citizen of this State goes in person, or sends an agent, or writes a letter across the boundary line between the two States." Milliken v. Pratt,
The contract, then, being a Maryland contract, it is next insisted that it is one which a feme covert could have made in that State, and, therefore, enforceable in the courts of North Carolina. We are by no means certain that the present contract is a valid one, according to the laws of Maryland, as the statute of that State seems to recognize the legal capacity of a married woman only to the extent of contracting with reference to property acquired by her "skill, industry, or personal labor." *76 Assuming, however, that it is a valid contract in Maryland, we will proceed to the examination of the question whether it should be enforced by the courts of this State.
It is well settled that the law of one State has proprio vigore no force or authority beyond the jurisdiction of its own courts, and that whatever effect is given to it by the courts of foreign countries or other States is the result of that international comity (more properly called private international law) which is the product of modern civilization. Hornthalv. Burwell,
In Robertson v. Queen,
In Johnson v. Gawtry,
In Bank v. Williams,
In North Carolina it has been conclusively determined that the common-law disability of a feme covert still obtains, and that, except in the cases provided by statute, her promise, as was said by Ruffin, J., is "as void as it ever was, with no power in any court to proceed to judgment against her in personam." Dougherty v. Sprinkle, supra. The Constitution and laws made in pursuance thereof protect her separate estate and prescribe the manner in which she may dispose of or charge it, and the assent of the husband is generally necessary.
This brief reference to our laws in respect to married women is sufficient to show that the enforcement of the present contract is wholly repugnant to our domestic policy, as well as prejudicial to the (65) interests of our citizens. It is not pretended that the defendant has attempted to charge her separate estate in any manner provided by our laws, and to hold that she may subject it to execution upon a personal judgment by reason of a promise made during a short visit to another State, or, as in this case, by a simple order for goods, would afford an easy method of charging her property in contravention of the public policy and laws of the domicile. It is further to be observed that in North Carolina, as a general rule, the written assent of the husband is necessary in order to give any effect whatever to her obligations; yet this wholesome provision may easily be evaded, even in the very presence of the husband and despite his protest, by a simple correspondence by the wife with parties in another State, which may technically amount to a foreign contract. In this way she could indirectly dispose of or charge all of her real or personal property, entirely freed from the restraint of her husband or the methods prescribed by the lex rei situs. We cannot assent to the proposition that a foreign law, thus introduced and so utterly subversive of the laws regulating a large amount of property within the limits of this State, will be recognized and enforced by our courts.
The courts of our State have perfect jurisdiction over all personal and real property within its limits belonging to the wife, and if our laws in respect to the manner in which it may be charged conflict with those of another State, it cannot be made a question in our own courts as to which shall prevail. It is certainly competent for any State to adopt *79 laws to protect its own property, as well as to regulate it, and "No nation," says Story, "will suffer the laws of another to interfere with her own, to the injury of her citizens. That whether they do, or not, must depend on the condition of the country in which the (66) foreign law is sought to be enforced — the particular nature of her legislation, her policy, and the character of her institutions. . . . That whenever a doubt does exist, the court which decides will prefer the laws of its own country to that of the stranger." Conflict of Laws, 28.
For the reasons given, we cannot recognize the present contract as an enforceable one in our courts.
We think his Honor was correct in his ruling that the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover.
AFFIRMED.
Cited: S. v. Wernwag,