133 So. 903 | Ala. | 1931
The action is upon the common counts, and arises from a purchase of goods in Houston, Tex., by defendant's wife, amounting to $207.35. The trial court gave for the defendant the affirmative charge in his behalf, and this is the sole question here presented for determination. The testimony offered by plaintiff was without dispute, defendant offering no proof.
Plaintiff's right to recovery is rested upon the theory that certain necessaries were sold to defendant's wife at its store in Houston, Tex., and that under the statute law of that *13
state the defendant and his wife became jointly and severally liable therefor. Articles 4624, 4621, Revised Civil Code of Texas; article 602, Penal Code, and articles 4613 and 4623, Civil Code, Revised Statutes of the State of Texas 1925; McKee v. Popular Dry Goods Co. (Tex.Civ.App.)
The witness Henderson, a practicing attorney at the Houston bar, qualified as a legal expert as to the law of that state and decisions relating to such a purchase as that here involved (Smith v. Blinn,
The suit in this jurisdiction was therefore, not only authorized by the several principles of law recognized in the Caine Case, supra, but by our present statute. Section 5681, Code 1923.
There is here no occasion to review the evidence. Suffice to say the account was proven undisputedly, a statement of which was mailed to defendant without response thereto (Reed v. Robinson,
In view of our statute and the cited authority of Caine v. S. L. S. F. R. Co., supra, we see no impediment in the way of the enforcement of such liability in the courts of this state where jurisdiction of the person was obtained. It may be suggested that the statute of Texas (article 1840, Rev. St. 1911, Texas) stands in the way, for the reason the wife is not also sued. True, that statute provides for a joint suit against husband and wife for debts contracted by the wife for necessaries furnished herself and children, but we think very clearly that statute was not intended as having extraterritorial effect. Irene Kennamer Smith v. L. B. Goldsmith et al., post, p. 155,
The action of the count in giving the affirmative charge for the defendant was error, for which the judgment must be reversed.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and BOULDIN and FOSTER, JJ., concur.