65 Me. 277 | Me. | 1876
The plaintiffs sold and charged to the husband the building materials for the price of which they here sue the wife, claiming a lien upon a certain house and barn and the lot on which they stand, belonging to her, upon the ground that the materials were furnished by virtue of a contract with her and were used in the erection of the buildings.
The case comes before us upon a motion to set aside the verdict for the defendant as against law and evidence.
The plaintiffs insist that the buildings, being erected upon and attached to the wife’s land, became her property as they were erected, and that the husband in purchasing materials for their erection must be regarded as her agent, that a promise from her to pay the plaintiffs is implied from the fact that she knew her husband was getting materials from them, that she ratified the purchase of the materials by mortgaging the land and buildings to the savings bank, professedly to get money to pay the bills which accrued in building, that having sold the materials in the belief that the husband was the principal and since discovered that he was merely the agent of the wife, they may recover against her as the undisclosed principal notwithstanding they at first debited the husband.
The plaintiffs had no communication whatever with the wife until after they had presented their bill to the husband and failed to get payment. The foundation of their claim is the allegation that the husband was in fact the agent of the wife in making the purchase.
This the defendant and her husband both denied, and the
It is with the legal and not the moral aspect of the case that we have to deal. We are unable to say that the finding of the jury that the wife made no such contract as the plaintiffs alleged, and that the husband was acting not for her but for himself in his purchase from the plaintiffs, is wrong as matter of law, or so manifestly against the weight of the evidence as to justify us in setting it aside.
Whatever we might suspect as to the intentions of the husband and the expectations of the wife, it cannot be said to be conclusively proved that they conspired together to defraud the plaintiff's, or that the wife gave the husband any authority to contract debts on her account in order to put up the buildings on her land.
And this was what the plaintiffs alleged and undertook to prove. If the jury believed the defendant’s testimony (and the question of its credibility was for them) it was competent for them to say as they have done by their verdict that the husband purchased in fact, as well as in appearance, upon his own account. If so, the plaintiffs’ suit could not be maintained although the property came ultimately into the hands of the wife. No promise from her to the plaintiffs would be implied.
It seems to have been both conceded and proved that the wife had money of her own which had gone into the hands of the husband. He had the legal right to prefer her to his other creditors and to appropriate his property to pay her claim, and such preference is not necessarily and of itself a fraud at common law, though both debtor and creditor knew at the time that the effect of such appropriation would be payment and satisfaction of her demand to the exclusion of all others to whom he was justly indebted. Motley v. Sawyer, 38 Maine, 68. French v. Motley, 63 Maine, 326. Giddings v. Sears, 115 Mass., 505.
At present the remedy must be found in the greater vigilance of material men as to the responsibility of the parties with whom they contract.
The jury have said that this contract was made with the husband and not with the wife, and the plaintiffs must abide the result. ' Motion overruled.