85 Ga. 741 | Ga. | 1890
Jordan & Co. sued Mrs. Sudie Hays in bail-trover for an “ opera piano,” alleged to be of the value of $350, and also, in the same action, sued her upon an alleged in debtedness of $35 attorney’s fees. The piano was seized by the sheriff, and Mrs. Hays having failed to give the bond required by law to retain the same, the plaintiffs gave bond and took possession of the piano. Mrs.
On this proposition there is great conflict or diversity of opinion among the courts of different States. But this conflict arises from the different phraseology of the statutes, no two of the acts being alike, and the court in each case having construed the act of the legislature of its own State. See Harris on Married Women, where the decisions of the different courts are collated. Our own statute upon the subject is somewhat different from that of any other State, and this is the first time that the question here made has come squarely before us. We must construe the act according to what we consider to be its true meaning and the legislative intent. The language of the act of 1866, as found in section 1764 of the code, is as follows : “All the property of the wife at the time of the marriage, whether real, personal or choscs in action, shall be and remain the separate property of the wife; and all property given to, inherited or acquired by the wife during coverture, shall vest in and belong to the wife and shall not be liable for the payment of any debt, default or contract of the husband.” This act was in substance incorporated into the constitution of 1868 (art. 7, sec. 2), and also into
It is clear from the terms of the act that all the property the wife had at the time of her marriage and all property given to or inherited by her thereafter, belongs to her just as if she had never married; and we think that, under the same statute, all that she may thereafter acquire besides that which is given to or inherited by her, belongs to her in like manner'. We think the intention of the legislature and of the framers of the constitution, in the use of the word “acquired,” was to confer upon the wife the same rights and privileges as to acquiring property as she had before marriage. The law having thus given her the power to hold in her own right property given to or inherited by her, free from her husband and without the intervention of a trustee, it gave her necessarily the power to contract and be contracted with. If she contracts and makes a profit, the profit thus acquired belongs to her ; if she loses, the loss falls upon her. If the law deals thus generously with wives who were so fortunate as to own property at the time of marriage, or who have received or inherited property since, why will it not so deal with all wives ? Why should it exclude one who had nothing at the time of her marriage, and who has since received and expects nothing by way of gift or inheritance ? Why should she not be allowed to make a contract whereby she may acquire property? Why may she not be allowed, especially if she has an improvident husband, to contract and acquire property for the support of herself and her children ? In our opinion, there can be no doubt that if a woman has property at the time of her marriage, or afterwards acquires it by gift or inheritance, she has all the rights we have mentioned; and we can see no good
“•§100. Early Co., Ga., August 4, 1888.
“ I promise to pay J. Jordan & Co. or bearer one hundred dollars for value received, for the rent of their ‘ Opera Piano,’ Style 8, No. 11540, at the office of John T. Navis & Son, Columbia, Ala., in the following instalments, to wit: One hundred dollars on the 1st day •of October, 1888. The makers and sureties . . agree that if collected by an attorney by or without suit, the fees of such attorney shall be added and paid by the said makers and sureties and may be included in any judgment that may be rendered against them on said note. It is agreed and understood . . that the piano for the use of which this note is given, is and shall remain the property of J. Jordan & Co., and in default of payment the said piano shall be returned to them or their agent in good order, and they or their agent are .authorized to take possession of the same without process of law. On payment of this note (given for the use of this piano), a bill of sale will be given and title •of the same passed to the lessee; but until then the title to the piano shall remain in J. Jordan & Co. [Homestead, etc. waived.]
(Signed) Sudie Hays (Seal). -
“ Attest: J. H. Simonton.
“ Purchaser’s P. O. Address : Cedar Springs, Ga.
“ Recorded in Book C, Mortgages,” etc.
The court below must,have regarded the §100 paid by the defendant, under this note, as in the nature of rent for the use of the piano for the two months during which she had held it, and as lost to the defendant in the event of her failure to pay the remainder of the amount agreed upon. Although the contract does use the term “ rent” and states that the notes are given for the “ use” of the piano, we do not so construe it, but regard it, not as a lease or renting, but as a conditional
The contract being, then, a conditional sale and not a lease, and the payments made thereunder not rent but purchase money, the plaintiffs have no right to retain them as rent. And there is no express stipulation that they shall be treated as a forfeiture. “ Forfeitures are abhorred in equity and are never favored in law,” and provisions for forfeiture are regarded with disfavor and construed with strictness, when applied to contracts and the forfeiture relates to a matter admitting of compensation ’ or restoration. Where adequate compensation can be made, the law in many cases and equity in all cases discharges the forfeiture upon such compensation being made. .The law inclines’to remedy breach of condition by damages rather than by forfeiture. Code, §2295; Story Eq. Jurisp. §§1312, 1314, 1316 et seq. “ On sale reserving title till the price is paid, many of the cases hold that partial payments are forfeited on default of the residue; but in courts possessing equity power's, the modern tendency is to allow the seller who rescinds a contract for default after receiving part of the price, to retain only so much as will compensate
The ruling here made is not in conflict with that in the ease of Guilford, Wood & Co. v. McKinley, 61 Ga. 230. In that case the plaintiffs elected to take a money verdict for the damages, and not a verdict for the property. This court held that they could recover the balance of the purchase money, after deducting what had