33 Barb. 596 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1861
The objection raised, that the plaintiff’s husband should have been joined with her in this action, and for
It is also urged, that there being evidence that there were other cows upon the farm, the cow in question cannot be claimed as the excepted cow, without a specific designation by the persons authorized to set apart to the family one cow. There is, it is true, evidence of there having been two other cows. One, however, does not seem to have been in existence at the husband’s death, and was not milked, but “beefed,” as the testimony is, and there is no evidence that the other was kept after his death, as a milch cow. hi or does the statute anywhere expressly authorize any person to designate
The word “ cow,” construed in reference to the providing for minor children, implies, I think, something more than merely an animal of that species; otherwise the word ox would have been equally appropriate. The cow in question is the the only one shown by the case to have been kept for a milch cow. I think, therefore, that while the title and possession of the cow in question was sufficiently in the plaintiff, legally, to authorize her to bring the action in her name alone, for its conversion, the title was at the same time, by the provision of the statute, so devoted and set apart in trust for the specific object of supporting the widow and minor children, as to seciu-e it from liability for the individual debts of the plaintiff.
But I think the plaintiff was also entitled to recover, on the ground that she was at the time of the conversion of the property a householder; that this, being the only cow in the family, 'was exempt by the provisions of. the statute, (2 R. S. 367, § 22,) which are as follows: “ The following property, when owned by a person being a householder, shall be exempt from levy and sale under any execution,” &c. This section, subdivision 4, specifies “ one cow.” By all the legal definitions of householder, it will be seen that from the time of the death of her first husband until her marriage to the second) the plaintiff was a householder. She was the chief
The fact that she married, and took him into her household, and that he did not take her to his, (if indeed he had any,) and the absence of all evidence that he furnished support either to her or to her family, added to the positive evidence in the case that she still provides for her children, is, I think, sufficient to overcome any legal presumption that her headship of the family, and household, had been changed, or merged by the marriage ; and more especially so, since the statute of 1860, which authorizes, if it does not create, a separate individuality, in married females, in conducting and carrying on business transactions, independent of their husbands, or of the rights -of their husbands. It is not necessary for the proper decision of this case, and it might be a difficult
Potter, Justice.]
The judgment must therefore be affirmed.