98 Mass. 538 | Mass. | 1868
The husband who by his cruelty compels his wife to leave him' is considered by the law as giving her thereby a credit to procure necessaries on his account; and is responsible to any person who may furnish her with them. ^This responsibility extends not only to supplies furnished her while living, but to decent burial when dead. Its origin is not merely and strictly from the law making her his agent to procure the articles of
Nor is any notice to him requisite, in order to charge him for her funeral expenses, any more than for necessaries to sustain life. The burden is on the plaintiff in either case to prove the existence of the necessity, and that the husband has failed to make provision for it. But when this is established, nothing more is needed to create the liability ; and it would seem to be an idle ceremony to give notice of his wife’s death to a man who had refused her the means of sustaining life. The responsibility for funeral expenses is not a new and distinct cause of action, differing in kind, or in the rules by which it is created; but an incident to the obligation to furnish bodily support.
Judgment for the plaintiff for the full amount claimed.