58 Ala. 650 | Ala. | 1877
This action was brought by appellant for medical services rendered, and medicines furnished for tbe support and comfort of tbe household of defendants, S. J. Flournoy and Eliza Flournoy, his wife; and the complaint alleges, that at tbe time tbe debt was contracted, said Eliza J., was owner of an undivied one-seventh part of certain real estate, situated in Barbour county, and particularly described in tbe complaint, “said interest of said Eliza J. Flournoy being a vested remainder in said property after tbe termination of a life estate in tbe same to Sarah Toney, who is'now in life.”
A demurrer was sustained to tbe complaint ■ upon tbe ground that an estate of which defendants bad no present beneficial enjoyment, was not liable by virtue of tbe statute under which tbe suit was brought.
Tbe question presented is a new one, and must be determined by a consideration of tbe enactment known as tbe “ married woman’s law,” in connection with a doctrine of tbe common law relating to property so situated.
2-3. The statute was not intended to operate on, and make the husband manager of, any other property of the wife than that of which, but for this enactment, he might, by virtue of the marriage, have become the owner. Upon this principle it is, that tne construction is established that prevents it from reaching property, real or personal, which, by the instrument through which it comes to the wife, is so secured to hei% as to be put beyond the husband’s marital power, as was said in Short v. Battle, (52 Ala. 465). “In the absence of the statute, if the husband did not renounce his marital rights, the property of the wife became the property of the husband. He had unqualified dominion over her personal property, and of her real estate, but a mere reversion was left in the wife or her heirs. Having title, it was subject to the payment of his debts, and he could alienate or devise it at pleasure. To take away these common law rights of the husband, and to define and regulate the manner in which the property of the wife should be held, to which these rights ivould have attached, was the only purpose of the statutes.” And it is only this same property, that by section 2711 (2376), is made liable to be subjected to the payment for “ articles of comfort and support of the household, . . . suitable to the degree and condition in life of the family,” &e. Now, no
Let the judgment of the City Court be affirmed.