Florida not being one of the original thirteen States, and the law of Florida not being pleaded, it is presumed that such law is the same as the statutes and laws in force in this State.
Trustees of Jesse Parker William Hospital
v.
Nisbet,
189
Ga.
807 (1) (
A simple direct allegation that the operator, in driving the defendant’s family to a designated point in the defendant’s automobile, was acting as his agent, is a sufficient allegation of agency.
Conney
v.
Atlantic Greyhound Corp.,
81
Ga. App.
324 (3) (
The plaintiff in error further contends that the petition should have been dismissed because it shows on its face that the plaintiff was injured by the act of her husband; that the husband and wife are, in legal fiction, one person, and consequently neither can maintain against the other a civil action based on a tort
(Wright
v.
Wright,
85
Ga. App.
721 (1),
These cases are, by parity of reasoning, like
Stapleton
v.
Stapleton,
85
Ga. App.
728 (
Accordingly, the petition stated a cause of action, and the trial court properly overruled the general demurrer.
In her cross-bill of exceptions, the plaintiff assigns error on the ruling of the court sustaining a special demurrer to various items of expense relating to the injury, such as dehtal, medical, and nursing bills and hospital expenses, on the ground that these are properly obligations of the husband for which the wife cannot recover. In this regard, the amended petition alleged as follows: “The damages itemized and sued for in the fifth paragraph of her petition are obligations which plaintiff is legally bound to pay, she having contracted for said services, which
*325
were her own original undertaking, upon her part, which obligations she assumed upon her own responsibility.” These expenses are necessaries, which the husband is bound to furnish as a part of the support and maintenance of his wife, and there is a rebuttable presumption, when she obtains such services, that she does so upon the credit of her husband. Code § 53-510. However, a woman is not, by virtue of her marriage relationship, under a disability to contract, and the rule is that, where there is clear and unequivocal evidence that she entered into a contract, even though it be for necessaries, by pledging her own credit exclusively, she, and not the husband, will be liable for the resulting debt.
Bell
v.
Rossignol,
143
Ga.
150 (
Judgment affirmed in case No. 34654. Judgment reversed in case No. 34655.
