84 Ky. 645 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 17th day of January, 1877, Mrs. Franziska Bruning, in conjunction with her husband, executed to the appellants the following note: ‘ ‘ For lumber and other building materials furnished at the special instance and request to the undersigned Franziska Bruning, used in the necessary repair of her house, situated in or near Catlettsburg, Kentucky, we, the said Franziska Bruning and F. Bruning, her husband, promise to pay to the order of Mockabee & Co., six months after date, the sum of one hundred twenty-two and thirty-one hundredth dollars, with six per cent, interest after maturity until paid.
(Signed) “F. Bruning.
“Franziska Bruning.”
At common law a married woman is liable for frauds and torts which are not directly connected with contract, and which do not form the means of effectuating •the contract, but she is incapable of binding herself by a contract, express or implied. And this disability stood as a shield to her from all liability growing out of any contract she might make, until the doctrine of .separate use, evolved by courts of equity from cases which sprang out of efforts of persons to secure independent incomes to married women, by settling real property to their separate use, so qualified her general incapacity as to render her acts in the nature of a contract binding on her separate estate. And this doctrine, though irregular and fragmentary in its development, has grown to such perfection as to include
Leaving other fields of statutory enactment untouched, we find in this State that the act of February 23, 1846, is the foundation of the principal authority on the question. Under that act it was held that any contract of a married woman would bind her separa teestate, if it could be determined by the contract and her situation that she so intended. The indorsement of a note, or becoming surety upon it, when she had. none but separate estate, was held, under this rule, to-be binding upon it, although the contract embraced no express or necessarily implied promise, from its terms, that her separate estate should be bound. Experience-taught that the separate estate of a married woman, controlled by this doctrine, was often diverted from the-purposes it was created to subserve, and in many instances became the prey of the husband’s recklessness, or improvidence. Hence it was provided in the Revised Statutes, in the year 1852, that the separate-estate of a married woman should not be sold or encumbered without the aid of a court of equity, and then only for the purpose of exchange and reinvestment-. This statute was construed to mean that she-could not bind her separate estate for debts growing-
Separate estate of a married woman, and the proceeds resulting from the alienation of such estates under the present statute, are subject to her exclusive control, independent of her husband, except to the extent that he may refuse to join her in their conveyance; and she may dispose of them as she pleases,
There is nothing in the statute supra changing the nature of her interest in separate estate, or its proceeds, from what it was under the known principles of equity which were recognized in this State before the adoption of the Revised Statutes. Nor is there any prohibition in the letter or necessary operation of the statute against her power to bind her separate estate for debts created for her own' use and benefit; but the whole force and restrictions of the statute fortify the construction that the Legislature intended to restore her rights in and control over separate estate, as they existed before the adoption of the Revised Statutes, "subject to the restrictions we have mentioned, and her inability to bind it for her husband’s debts, or the debts of other persons not contracted for her sole use and benefit, or to subserve the same objects for which the separate estate was created and sought to be bound by her contract.
We conclude, therefore, that she may, by express contract, or by necessary implication, to' be derived from the terms of her contract, and the use and purpose to which any property or thing of value obtained under, or by reason of it, is devoted, bind her separate estate or its proceeds for the payment of such debts as she may create, or the discharge of any contract she may make, for her own use and benefit, and thus accomplish the substantial objects of the devisor or grantor of such estates, and insure to the wife their full and exclusive enjoyment, without permitting her to violate the plainest principles of justice, or become the prey
Wherefore, the judgment is'reversed, and cause remanded with directions to overrule the demurrer, and for further proper proceedings.