138 Mass. 358 | Mass. | 1885
Questions as to the meaning of the word “ necessaries ” have often arisen in actions brought against infants for goods alleged to have been furnished to them, or against husbands for goods furnished to their wives. It has always been held that those articles were to be considered necessary which were suitable to the degree and condition of life of the person to whom they were furnished, having regard to the estate of the infant or the husband; and that it was not to be confined to those which were required to sustain life or to preserve decency. While in certain cases it would be the duty of the court to direct the jury authoritatively that the articles furnished could not be necessaries, in others it would be for the jury to say whether they were such as could come within that class, and also to determine whether in amount, quality, quantity, and value they were suitable and proper in the particular case. Raynes v. Bennett, 114 Mass. 424, and cases cited. While it
The St. of 1879, e. 133, enacts that “ the wearing apparel and articles of personal ornament of a married woman and articles necessary for her personal use, acquired by gift from her husband, not exceeding two thousand dollars in value, shall be and remain her sole and separate property.” It contains also a provision that this shall not “ make valid any gift or transfer by a husband in fraud of his creditors.” As articles of personal ornament merely are expressly named as proper subjects of gifts, the words “ articles necessary for her personal use ” must be construed in connection with them, and with the well-known meaning which, in similar cases, has been given to the word “ necessaries.” They must include articles, the use of which is attended with pleasure and enjoyment, as books, music, or a musical instrument, or which might be used as a means of education, or perhaps of obtaining a livelihood, as well as those which minister only to strictly physical comfort. The limit in amount which the statute has fixed to such gifts, and the provision that they shall not be made in fraud of creditors, indicate also that, within that limit, and subject to that provision, the words defining them are to receive a liberal construction. The evidence relating to the condition and circumstances in life of the plaintiff is not fully disclosed by the exceptions in the case. The request was for a ruling that a piano could not, under the statute, be the subject of a gift from husband to wife. This was properly refused; and the instruction given was all that the case, as disclosed to us, required. Exceptions overruled.