88 Vt. 441 | Vt. | 1915
The claim in question is for services rendered by the claimant in caring for the intestate within her last sickness, under a contract entered into by the latter, whereby she promised to pay therefor. At the time the contract was made and the services performed, the intestate was a married woman, and substantially all the property she then owned was the farm on which she and her husband then lived. She did not hold this real estate to her sole and separate use, and therefore her husband had marital rights therein; nor does the record show that she held any separate property. She died, the husband surviving her. The claim was presented for allowance against her estater, and the matter being heard in the county court on appeal the claim was disallowed on defendant’s objection that, since the intestate was a married woman without separate property when the contract was made, she was incapable of making the contract upon which the claim is based. Thus the question is presented whether, under the statute, the capacity of a married woman to make a contract with a person not her husband, depends upon her holding property to her sole and separate use.
By P. S. 3037, “A married woman may make contracts with any person other than her husband, and bind herself and her separate property, in the same manner as if she were unmarried, and may sue and be sued as to all such contracts made by her, either before or during coverture, without her husband being joined in the action as plaintiff or defendant, and execution may issue against her, and be levied on her sole and separate goods, chattels and estate.” And by section 3039, “A married woman shall not become surety for her husband’s debt except by way of mortgage, and shall not convey or mortgage her real estate except by deed duly executed by herself and husband.”
The law of these sections was enacted as a part of No. 140, Laws of 1884, and divers eases, involving some features of it, have been before this Court for determination. In Reed v. Newcomb, 59 Vt. 630, 10 Atl. 593, the action was general assumpsit against husband and wife, and the questions presented were on general demurrer to the declaration. It was held that the Act of 1884 gives a married woman power to make contracts with any person other than her husband, and to bind herself and her separate estate in the same manner as if she were unmarried; that this law removes the incapacity of á married woman to contract, and permits her to make contracts in the same manner and
Thus the result of the holdings is, that by statute' (P. S. 3037) a married woman has the unrestricted power to make contracts in the same manner and to the same extent as a feme sole, excepting with her husband and also excepting contracts relating to her property in which her husband has marital rights, and bind herself and her separate estate in the same manner as if she were unmarried, and that she may sue and be sued as to' all such contracts made by her either before or during coverture. The result here stated must be considered as having no reference to her contract as surety for her husband’s debts, concerning which the statute contains a specific provision. That question was recently before the Court in First Nat. Bank v. Bertoli, cited above.
It follows that the contention of the defendant that the test of liability on the part of the estate is, whether the debt went to the benefit of the intestate’s separate property, or for her benefit on the credit of such property, and that such property must be shown by the plaintiff in making out her case, cannot be sustained. The claim is to be proved against the estate and allowed (when proved) in the same manner as if the intestate were unmarried at the time of creating the liability, (see Russell v. Phelps, 73 Vt. 390, 50 Atl. 1101; Ainger v. White’s Admrx., 85 Vt. 446, 82 Atl. 666), but whether there is any estate out of which the debts proved can be paid, is a question not before us.
It was conceded by defendant’s attorney at the trial below that if the plaintiff can recover, she is entitled to the amount of her specifications. The disallowance of the claim on the ground
Judgment reversed, and judgment for the plaintiff to recover the amount of her specifications iuith interest, and costs. To be certified to the probate court.