4 Gill 463 | Md. | 1846
delivered the opinion of this court.
It is a general and well settled principle, as well at law as in equity, that no person under the age of twenty-one years, is com
In reviewing the decisions upon the subject, Justice Story appears to have arrived at correct results. In page 26, section 42, of Story on Contracts, he states, that “the true rule seems to be, that when articles are furnished to the infant, which do not come within the definition of ‘ necessaries,’ and which are consumed or parted with; or when money is lent, which is expended by the infant; that the other party has no remedy to recover an equivalent for the goods, or the money:
The complainants, by the statements in their bill, having failed to shew themselves entitled to an injunction, or any equitable relief whatever; and the defectiveness of their bill being wholly unaided by the admissions in the answer of Brawner and wife, the court, below might, have granted the motion of the appellants to dissolve the injunction, and dismiss the bill filed by the appellees, without giving to them any serious cause of complaint.
That the answer of the co-defendant, Dyson, is no evidence against Braioner and wife, is so conclusively settled by repeated adjudications of this court, that it is unnecessary to refer to them in the decision of such a question. This court, therefore, might content itself with a simple reversal of the decision of the court below, and passing a decree dissolving the injunction, and
JUDGMENT REVERSED AND CAUSE REMANDED.