84 N.Y.S. 1063 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This action is brought by a married woman for the rent of a room occupied by the defendant’s testatrix in her lifetime, and for board, care and attention given to the said testatrix while she so occupied said room. The principal contention in this court is as to whether the alleged cause of action is the property of the plaintiff or of her husband. The plaintiff was married in 1884. The testatrix was a maiden, possessed of some property, and an aunt of the plaintiff. The year following the plaintiff’s marriage her husband obtained from his father the title to a small piece of land near his father’s home, and on such land a house was built costing about $1,200. The testatrix voluntarily paid towards the cost thereof the sum of $1,000. From the time said house was completed the plaintiff lived with her husband therein. He worked with his father on the farm of the latter under an arrangement by which each shared in the proceeds of the farm. In 1889 plaintiff’s husband had a fall and sustained injuries to his spine, which partially incapacitated him from work. Soon thereafter he became wholly incapacitated for Work, and is, and has for several years been, helpless. During the greater part of the time mentioned in the complaint the proceeds of his father’s farm were in part delivered to him, and used by him and the plaintiff in maintaining the household. During all such times he was wholly unable through any personal effort to support his
Where a husband as the head of the household takes boarders into his house and his wife takes charge of the house, and thus aids the husband in carrying on the business so maintained in the house, her services and earnings belong to the husband, notwithstanding the statutes of recent years in regard~A married women and their separate estates. (See Laws of 1896, chip. 272, § 20 et seq. which contain the substance of said statutes in revised form.) The right of a married woman to contract with her husband enables her, however, to enter into an agreement with him by which she is to receive the compensation for her personal services in the care and
Where a wife renders services and furnishes meals to a stranger under an agreement made between herself and her husband that in case she renders such services and furnishes such meals she alone shall receive the recompense therefor and that it shall become her separate property, the common-law rights of the husband to his. wife’s services are abrogated and she may enforce the claim in her own name and right. (Lashaw v. Croissant, 88 Hun, 206 ; Sands v. Sparling, 82 id. 401; Carver v. Wagner, 51 App. Div. 47.)
The evidence relating to the agreement between the plaintiff and her husband, together with the. surrounding circumstances, is sufficient to sustain a finding in the plaintiff’s favor. The statements of the plaintiff’s husband relating to the agreement were properly received in evidence for the purpose of establishing the special agreement between him and his wife necessary to entitle, her to recover against the defendant.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment unanimously affirmed, with costs.