76 Ill. 526 | Ill. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was a bill in equity, brought in the Madison circuit court, by Conrad Schaub, a merchant engaged in the retail of dry goods and groceries, against Mary T. Street and Kennedy Street, her husband, upon an account, for the purpose of charging the separate property of the wife for the amount thereof, the same being for necessaries furnished by complainant out of his store to the defendants while living together as husband and wife.
The court below sustained a demurrer to the bill, and complainant declining to amend, a decree of dismissal was entered, and error brought to this court.
At law, the husband is bound to provide' necessaries for his wife and infant children, suitable to their condition in life. The wife, while living with her husband, can, by the common law, bind herself by no contract, not even for necessaries. Cookson v. Toole, 59 Ill. 515. In that case, and the rule has been followed in subsequent cases, it was held that, where the marriage was after the Married Woman’s act of 1861, and the wife had property, whether real or personal, belonging to her at the time of the marriage, or if, during coverture, she, at any time after the act went into force, derived property from any person other than her husband, then, in either case, she was entitled, by that statute, to hold, own, possess and enjoy such property the same as though she were sole and unmarried ; that such a right of enjoyment gave her a capacity, by implication, to contract with reference to and for the benefit of such separate estate; that the right itself of enjoyment of the estate, being conferred by statute, it was a legal right, and she would have a legal estate where, under the same circumstances of the title, an unmarried woman would; and that it followed from the premises, the capacity thus given by implication was a legal capacity; so that contracts made within the limited capacity here conferred would be enforceable at law.
There doubtless may be cases where she has a separate estate under the statute of 1861, and her contracts are not in relation to or for the benefit of such separate estate, that, although such contracts would not fall within the implied legal capacity conferred by the statute, yet, if they were made for her own personal benefit, upon the faith and credit of such separate estate, they might be enforced in equity, the same as in cases where the wife, independently of the statute, had a separate estate in equity under a settlement. This is the doctrine announced in the case of Cookson v. Toole, supra, and we perceive no objection to it^
If this bill had been properly framed in other respects, a question might arise whether a contract for necessaries for the family, which the husband was bound to furnish, could be regarded as for her personal benefit. As this case must be disposed of upon other grounds, it is unnecessary here to discuss it.
In order to show a case by bill in equity to enforce the engagements of a married woman, entered into prior to the act of 1874, it must be distinctly shown by the bill, that she held a separate estate under such circumstances as tvould clothe her with the right to hold, possess and enjoy it, as though she were sole and unmarried, under the statute of 1861, above referred to; or to show a settlement giving her an estate in equity, without reference to any statute.
The bill in this case shows neither. It was impossible for the court below to have intelligently, and upon defined principles, passed a decree charging the separate estate of the wife upon what appeared upon the face of the bill. 1Non con-stat, the only interest she had was under a deed of settlement, which specified the mode and manner in which she Should create any charge upon it. Conkling v. Doul, 67 Ill. 355.
The decree of the court below will be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.