20 A. 229 | R.I. | 1890
The plaintiff brings this *82 action to recover damages for the negligence of the defendant's servant in driving. The defendant, now a widow, pleads coverture at the time of the alleged negligence: to which the plaintiff replies that at said time the defendant was living separate and apart from her husband, who was then a resident of New York and never a domiciled inhabitant of Newport; that the defendant maintained herself separately in Newport, hiring her own servants and paying them from her own income, including the servant whose negligence is complained of; and that such servant was under her direction and control. To this replication the defendant demurs. The replication does not set out facts to bring the case within Pub. Stat. R.I. cap. 165; and therefore the question is, simply, whether a married woman is liable for the negligence of a servant employed by her apart from her husband. At common law a married woman is incapable of making a contract, and consequently incapable of holding the relation of master to servant. If she hired domestic servants or others whose service the husband accepted, it was held she did so as her husband's agent and on his behalf. They were his servants and not hers, and he alone was responsible to and for them. But the plaintiff contends that as a married woman is liable jointly with her husband during coverture, and solely after his death, for her own torts, this action can be maintained against the defendant, and that her liability under a contract of hiring is not the test of his right to sue.
That a married woman is liable for her torts, as claimed by the plaintiff, is a general rule, which has been recognized by this court in Curry v. Allen,
The incapacity of a wife to enter into a contract on her own behalf arises from the fact of marriage, and does not depend upon the other circumstances under which she may seek to act. In some States the incapacity has been removed or modified by statute, but in this State there has been no change sufficient to cover the claim made in this case. Hence the fact set up by the plaintiff in his replication, that the defendant was living separate from her husband, does not affect the question at issue; since it does not alter her character or condition, nor relieve her from the disability which the law imposes upon married women.Marshall v. Rutton, 8 Term Rep. 545.
While there are cases which have gone far towards treating a married woman, living apart from her husband, as a feme sole,
yet such decisions, it will be found, have generally been induced by circumstances which do not appear in this case. Where the husband had been banished, or had abjured the realm and was an alien, or was so situated that he might be treated as civilly dead, the courts in England long ago relaxed the rules to meet apparent necessities, and practically treated the wife as a widow. Marsh v. Hutchinson, 2 Bos. Pul. 226. In this country courts have followed the same course, Gregory v.Paul,