89 A. 889 | Conn. | 1914
The plaintiff by this action seeks to recover damages from her husband for an assault and battery and false imprisonment. The parties were married in October, 1877. If she has a cause of action against her husband it is not questioned that the suit is well brought. The complaint is demurred to, the only ground of demurrer assigned being that by reason of her coverture she has no cause of action against him for the personal injuries alleged in the complaint. The Superior Court sustained the demurrer, and the only question presented by this appeal is whether that ruling was correct.
By the common law the husband might restrain the wife of her liberty and might chastise her. 1 Blackstone's Commentaries, 444. "The law which attached such subjection to the legal status of a married woman has been abolished, but not by direct legislation; it has disappeared under the continuous pressure of judicial interpretation or indirect legislation." Mathewson v.Mathewson,
Chapter 114 of the Public Acts of 1877, p. 211, entitled An Act in Alteration of the Act concerning Domestic Relations, but commonly called the Married Women's Act, established a new legal status for persons thereafter married. It took effect April 20th, 1877, and is embodied in the present revision of the General Statutes. §§ 4545, 4546, 391, 392. The purpose and effect of the Act were in question in Mathewson v.Mathewson,
In Marri v. Stamford Street R. Co.,
By these two cases it is established that a wife, married since April 20th, 1877, may contract with her husband or other person, and may in her own name sue her husband or such other person for breach of such contract; also that she has a cause of action upon which she may recover in a suit brought in her own name for *46 personal injuries wrongfully inflicted upon her by others than her husband. If a cause of action in her favor arises from the wrongful infliction of such injuries upon her by another, why does not the wrongful infliction of such injuries by her husband now give her a cause of action against him? If she may sue him for a broken promise, why may she not sue him for a broken arm? The defendant's answer is that a wise public policy forbids it, that no right of action accrued to her from such a tort prior to the statute of 1877, that none is expressly given her by that statute, and that none can be implied; and that this is the holding of courts in other jurisdictions in cases which have arisen under similar statutes.
It is true that courts in some of the States have held that statutes more or less similar to the one here in question give a married woman no right of action against her husband for a tort. They find in the statutes construed no legislative intent to change the legal status of husband and wife as regards the legal identity of the two, but simply an intent to ameliorate the condition of the wife by permitting her to retain and deal with her own property, and to contract with, and sue and be sued by, others than her husband. These courts generally hold that unless there is an express provision giving her the right to sue her husband she has no action against him upon contract or for tort. It is unnecessary to review the individual cases. As we said in Mathewson
v. Mathewson,
In the Mathewson case we held that a wife's right to contract with the husband, and to sue him for breach of such contract, followed necessarily from the fact, established by the statute, that her legal identity was not lost by her coverture. It is an equally necessary consequence of her retention of her legal identity after coverture, that she has a right of action against her *48 husband for a tort committed by him against her and resulting in her injury. Such a tort gives rise to a claim for damages. Such claim is property not in her possession, but which she may by action reduce into her possession, just as she might before her coverture have had an action against him for such a tort committed before that event. The husband's delict, whether a breach of contract or personal injury, gives her a cause of action. Both necessarily follow from the fact that a married woman now retains her legal identity and all her property, both that which she possessed at the time of marriage and that acquired afterward.
In the fact that the wife has a cause of action against her husband for wrongful injuries to her person or property committed by him, we see nothing which is injurious to the public, or against the public good, or against good morals. This is the usual test for determining whether a statute or a contract is against public policy. When a wife is allowed to possess and deal with her own property and carry on business in her own name like a feme sole, she ought to have the same right to contract and enforce her contracts, and the same remedies for injuries to her person and property, which others have, and to be liable upon her contracts and for her torts the same as others are. This is the position in which she now stands. The danger that the domestic tranquility may be disturbed if husband and wife have rights of action against each other for torts, and that the courts will be filled with actions brought by them against each other for assault, slander and libel, as suggested in some of the cases cited in behalf of the defendant, we think is not serious. So long as there remains to the parties domestic tranquility, while a remnant is left of that affection and respect without which there cannot have been a true marriage, such actions will be impossible. When the purposes of the marriage *49 relation have wholly failed by reason of the misconduct of one or both of the parties, there is no reason why the husband or wife should not have the same remedies for injuries inflicted by the other spouse which the courts would give them against other persons. Courts are established and maintained to enforce remedies for every wrong, upon the theory that it is for the public interest that personal differences should thus be adjusted rather than that the parties should be left to settle them according to the law of nature. No greater public inconvenience and scandal can thus arise than would arise if they were left to answer one assault with another and one slander with another slander, until the public peace is broken and the criminal law invoked against them. We find nothing to warrant the claim that public policy is opposed to the existence of a cause of action for a personal tort in favor of husband or wife against the other spouse where the wife's identity is not merged in that of her husband. The plaintiff and defendant having married subsequent to April 20th, 1877, the facts alleged in the complaint were not insufficient by reason of her coverture, and the demurrer should have been overruled.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.