6 Mo. App. 19 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1878
delivered the opinion of the court
This is a suit in equity to charge real estate of the appellant, held by a trustee to her separate use, with the payment of a note signed by herself and her husband during coverture. The note was a negotiable note, in ordinary form except that it was payable one day after date. It was • indorsed without recourse to the respondent. The petition alleged that before the bringing of this suit the appellant was divorced from her husband, assumed her maiden name, “ and is now a feme sole.” The answer is a general denial. The appellant demanded a jury, which was refused, and the court, upon the evidence afforded by the note, entered a special judgment against the property.
It is contended that a court of equity had no jurisdiction of the case; that under the decision of the Supreme Court of this State in King v. Miltalberger, 50 Mo. 182, the
But coverture creates a disability at law ; and where the married woman has separate property out of which an obligation can be enforced, equity, during coverture, affixes to the woman the status of a feme sole, and lends its process, that there may be some remedy and that the property may not be beyond -all juridical reach. But the occasion ceasing, there is no propriety in resorting to' the extraordinary remedy. Indeed, on principle it cannot be resorted to. The settlement is during coverture; when the woman is discovert, the separate estate ceases. Thus, if during coverture she has no power of alienation by the
The position taken that the contract creates a lien on the wife’s separate property is untenable. This doctrine would lead to the most mischievous consequences, and has no support in principle. Liens exist where there is, or is supposed to’ be, some peculiar merit in the claim. Here, though, to protect the married woman, peculiar evidence is required; the nature of the contract, as such, cuts no figure; and, as equity does not give liens where contracts are made with women rather than with men, it is difficult to see any ground for the position asserted. The effort of equity is to protect the woman, not to impose additional burdens on her. She is not, indeed, to have property exempt from all process; and accordingly, as a general judgment would be of no avail, equity, furnishing one of its peculiar remedies, makes its decree efficacious by charging her property. As the woman is a feme sole by reason of her separate property, so that property is resorted to to discharge her obligation. There is no necessity of supposing any lien. The creditor has during coverture his equitable remedy. When the coverture ceases, the creditor must sue at law.
Had this suit been brought during coverture, the court below might upon the note, though it is a simple promissory note, signed by the husband and wife, without any further writing, have properly charged the wife’s separate estate. The cases of Coats v. Robinson, 10 Mo. 757, and
The judgment of the court below is reversed and the case remanded. If the respondent desires to amend, leave should be granted; otherwise the suit should be dismissed.