14 Abb. N. Cas. 341 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1884
— This cause was tried at the Schoharie circuit in October, 1883. The action was upon a promissory note dated April 1,1876, by which the defendants, who were, at the date of the execution of the note, husband and wife, promised' to- pay “ Elizabeth Fairlee (the plaintiff), or bearer, -two thousand dollars, with interest, for value received.” The note was signed' “ P: Bloomingdale,” “ F. M. Bloomingdale,” and contained no clause charging the separate estate of the wife, who alone defended.
According to .-the testimony of the plaintiff, the consideration of this note was an- old note made by the same parties for $1,300 and $700 cash. She further testified that the wife, at the time the money was loaned and the note in suit given, stated they needed the money for goods, that she would see it paid, that she was as much interested in the business as her
The defendants, on the other hand, testified that they had never been partners; that the first note was signed by the husband alone, and that neither at the giving of the first or the second note was there any statement by the wife that she was interested in business with the husband.
The jury was charged that if the plaintiff loaned the $700 on the representation of the wife that she was interested in the business with the husband, she was entitled to recover the $700, with interest; and if the wife had signed the first note, and the loan which the note evidenced had been made upon the faith of the wife’s statement that she was interested in the business with the husband, then the plaintiff was also entitled to recover the amount of the first note included in the second; but that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover the amount of such first note unless it had been executed by the wife, and she had also, at the time of its delivery and execution, made the statement attributed to her.
The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the whole amount of the note, with interest. The defendant, the wife, having made a motion for a nonsuit, which was refused, moves for a new trial upon the minutes, founded upon exceptions taken to the refusal to grant the nonsuit, and also to the charge as made.
The motion for a new trial presents this one question: Are the contracts of husband and wife, professing to be made by them as partners in business, enforceable against the wife ?
The obligation upon which the action was brought did not by its language expressly charge the separate estate of the wife. It was a joint and several promissory note in the
Such partnership, or any partnership between husband and wife would certainly have been impossible at common law. The rule then was “ the husband and wife are one person in law * * *. The very being or legal existence of the woman is suspended during the marriage, or at least is incorporated and consolidated into that of the husband, under whose wing, protection and cover she performs everything ” (1 Bl. Com., 442). The legal conclusion, which the same author states as flowing from the unity of the persons of husband and wife, that the husband cannot covenant with the wife because it “ would be only to Covenant with himself,” clearly forbade a partnership between them, which could only exist between persons having a separate legal existence and the one capable of contracting with the other. This rule of the common law
The discussion of this question must begin with a recognition of the fact that our legislation has not entirely destroyed “ the common law unity of husband and wife, and made them substantially separate persons for all purposes ” (Per Earl, J., in Bertles agt. Nunan, 92 N. Y., 152, see p. 159). The wife can only make such contracts as positive enactments allow. Her ability “ to make contracts is limited. Her general engagements are absolutely void, and she can bind herself by contract only as she is expressly authorized to do so by statute ” (Per Earl, J., in the same case, p. 160). With this recent and deliberate utterance of our court of last resort, substantially repeated in a still later case (Coleman agt. Burr et al., 93 N. Y., 17) before us, we must, to uphold a partnership between husband and wife, find a statute authorizing it.
Section 2 of chapter 90 of the Laws of 1860, is the provision relied upon to validate such an agreement. The act is entitled “An act concerning the rights and liabilities of husband and wife,” and the section referred to reads thus : “A married woman may bargain, sell, assign and transfer her separate personal property and carry on any trade or business, and perform any labor or services on her sole and separate account, and the earnings of any married woman from her trade, business, labor or services shall be her sole and separate property, and may be used or invested by her in her own name.”
In determining the effect of this section, a well recognized principle of interpretation must also be observed, that “ it is not, to be presumed that the legislature intended to make any innovation upon the common law, further than the case absolutely required. The law rather infers that the act did not
The literal interpretation of the words of the statute is that the wife is thereby authorized to “ carry on any trade or business, and perform any labor or services on her sole and separate account,” and when the “trade or business” and “ labor or services ” are carried on or performed on her “ sole and separate account,” the earnings therefrom then, and only then, become “ her sole and separate property.”
Precisely this construction was given to the act by the court of appeals of this state in Coleman agt. Burr et al. (93 N. Y., 17, see pp. 24 and 25), that court saying: “ The statutes referred to touch a married woman in her relation to her husband only so far as they relate to her separate property and business, and the labor she may perform on her sole and separate account. In other respects the duties and responsibilities of each to the other remain as they were at common law.”
In a partnership there can be no “ separate property and business,” and the “ labor ” performed by one partner in connection therewith cannot possibly be on the “ sole and separate account ” of the partner performing it. There must in every such case necessarily be a joint, and not a “ separate property and business ” and services on joint account, and not,on the “ sole and separate account ” of one partner.
As then the unity of husband and wife at common law forbade a business partnership between the two, as the common law has only been abrogated so far as express statutes have clearly indicated an intent to abrogate, and as all statutes abrogating the common law must be strictly construed, it may well be asked, how can a statute which authorizes a wife to hold “ separate ” property and conduct a “ separate” business, and which only gives to her the earnings from labor performed “ on her sole and separate ” account, be so construed as to authorize her to hold property jointly
The conclusion of judge Beach in the case referred to is at variance with that of Sedgwick, J., in Chamboret agt. Cagney (35 N. Y. Sup. Ct. R., 474, 487, 488) and those of the courts in two other states. In Massachusetts, which has a statute containing a provision substantially identical with ours, it has been held in several cases (Lord agt. Parker, 3 Allen, 127; Plummer agt. Lord, 5 Allen, 460, and 7 Allen, 481; Knowles agt. Hull, 99 Mass., 562) that husband and wife cannot become partners in business. The reasoning of the court in these cases, and especially in the one first cited (3 Allen, 127; see pages 129 - 130) is well worthy of attention. The Massachusetts cases have also been recently followed in Indiana (Haas et al. agt. Shaw et ux., 91 Ind., 384; Scarlett agt. Snodgrass, 92 Ind., 262), and in that state also a statute contains a provision very similar to ours. These authorities are of too high a character to be disregarded, and should certainly be followed by a trial judge in this state, when the reasoning by which they are supported commends itself to his judgment, and is in harmony with that of our own court of appeals.
There are cases decided which seem to imply that such a thing is possible in this state, and there ar<? others which imply a contrary doctrine. That question is not now determined. Certain it is that the words “ separate ” and “ sole and separate,” used in our statute in connection with the property, business and labor of the wife, must have some meaning. If they do not forbid a partnership in property, business or labor with all persons, because not permitting her to engage in a joint venture with any one, then they must refer to' property, business and labor “ separate ” from the husband, held, carried on and performed on “ her sole and separate account,” as distinguished from that in which he is interested. Without this construction, at least, of the words, they are meaningless; and with it the impossibility of the soundness of the position assumed by plaintiff only becomes the more apparent.
This opinion might, perhaps, well stop here, but I cannot forbear to allude to another argument based upon direct adjudications of the court of appeals. A valid agreement of partnership can only be made between individuals who are independent persons, and neither owing any duty to the other in regard to such business which shall make the enforcement of the partnership agreement impossible. Is this theory of mutual independence applicable to a wife who is about to embark in a business venture with her husband? In that business the husband, at least, is interested, and it is exceedingly difficult to determine what the wife owes to him as a
Perhaps the argument to show that husband and wife cannot become business partners is already complete, but two other points are entitled to some attention. First. By section 8 of the act of 1860 (the one which it is claimed gives the •power), it is declared “no bargain or contract entered into by any married woman in or about the carrying on of any trade or business under the statutes of this state, shall be binding upon her husband, or render him or his property in any way liable therefor.” It can hardly be supposed, that if the legislature supposed it had under the act, of which the provision just quoted forms a part, allowed a partnership between husband and wife, it would have inserted that clause in its present form, without any exception in favor of contracts made by the wife in regard to a business in which the husband was her partner. Second. While chapter 381 of the Laws of 1884, has removed in general all disabilities of a married woman to
Having reached the conclusion that husband and wife cannot be partners in business, and that no contract made by the latter in regard to such business is enforceable against her, it is scarcely necessary to add, that any declaration' by the wife to the effect that she sustained that relation to her husband is not binding upon her. In the making of contracts all parties thereto are assumed to know the law. If the wife had made the direct statement that she was the partner of her husband, the plaintiff had no right to be deceived by it (Brewster agt. Striker, 2 N. Y., 19). It is somewhat questionable whether or not the evidence of the plaintiff, if found to be true, necessarily justified the legal inference that the wife thereby intended to assert the existence of a legal business partnership with the husband. Her declaration, if made, to the effect that she was equally interested in the business with her husband, was capable of another explanation, and perhajts it was erroneous to assume, as the court did in its charge, that if the jury found that such statement was -made, they should find for the plaintiff. It would, perhaps, have been more accurate if the jury had been directed to find whether or not the defendant had thereby intended t.o assert that she was a partner in the business for which the money was loaned, and was so understood by the plaintiff to assert. Of that error, however, the plaintiff cannot complain. The case was sub
It is proper to state, in conclusion, that if any doubt existed in my mind in regard to the question discussed, the motion for a new trial would be denied. Careful study of such question has, however, brought me to the clear conviction that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover against the wife, and that therefore a new trial should be granted.