80 Ga. 620 | Ga. | 1888
Mrs. Berry was a femme covert, and her husband was indebted to Goodger & Naylor. He had failed in business, made an assignment, and was insolvent. These creditors undertook to make an arrangement with him as to the settlement of the claim which they held against him; and it was agreed among themselves that they should compromise their claim at fifty cents on the dollar, taking Mrs. Berry as endorser on the note to be given in compromise. They applied to a counsellor, who advised them that this could not be done; but he suggested that Goodger & Naylor should assign their claim against the husband to the wife; that she should buy it and give her note therefor. This arrangement was carried out; and the note sued on in this case was the note given by Mrs, Berry to Goodger & Naylor for the claim against her husband.
While it is declared that a married woman is a femme sole'as to her separate estate, yet she cannot do as she pleases therewith; .she cannot alien or sell it to her husband, nor in payment of his debts. She is, in that respect, under the protection of the law, and before she can make a contract with her husband in reference to the disposition of her separate estate, she must apply to the superior court of the county wherein she resides, and get an order for that purpose.
To allow such a transaction as this to stand would be, in effect, to turn over and commit the separate estates of wives to the-creditors of their husbands, or to the husband himself. So, while we do not criticise particularly the different charges of the court excepted to in this case, we
Judgment reversed.