8 S.E.2d 522 | W. Va. | 1940
This certificate involves the sufficiency of a bill by a wife against her husband to recover one-half the property held by him, alleged to have been accumulated through their joint efforts. The circuit court overruled a demurrer to the bill. *121
The bill mentions suits for divorce and specific performance, respectively, brought by her against her husband, the first dismissed by mutual agreement and the second dismissed without prejudice to her. See Brecker v. Brecker,
We see no occasion now to discuss the postulate that equity will give effect to contracts, fairly made, between husband and wife. Plaintiff's right of recovery here depends upon the bare allegations that the business conducted by herself and husband was a "joint enterprise" and that she "understood and believed * * * that she was an equal business partner" with him. She does not specify how or from whom she acquired herunderstanding and belief; and the fact, alone, that she, a wife, devoted some indefinite part of her time to helping her husband conduct the enterprise, did not make her his business partner. An elementary rule of equity practice requires that a plaintiff's cause be stated with reasonable particularity and that an ambiguous averment be construed strongly against the pleader. Lockhart v. Hoke,
The ruling of the circuit court is reversed; the cause remanded.
Reversed; remanded.