13 Wis. 603 | Wis. | 1861
By the Court,
This action was brought by the defendants in error against the plaintiff in error, for taking and converting a quantity of wood, alleged to belong to the plaintiffs. The defendant below justified under executions against Bobert Duress, the husband of Bridget Duress, averring that the wood belonged to him.
The plaintiffs offered evidence tending to show that Bridget Duress and Patríele, her son, had been engaged in a partnership together with one Powers, in rectifying and selling liquors; that Powers left the firm, and that the business was subsequently conducted by the plaintiffs, and that the wood in question was bought for the firm. The counsel for the plaintiff in error raises the question whether a married woman could enter into such a contract of partnership, and
It seems also that the complaint did not allege any value to the wood. And the counsel for the defendant below requested the court to instruct the jury that the plaintiffs could recover only nominal damages, which was refused. The value of the wood was proved, and we think this technical defect in the complaint was properly disregarded by the court. It should have ordered the complaint amended without costs.
But there was one error for which we think the judgment must be reversed. The plaintiff’s case showed a married woman and her son engaged in business together, and the husband and father acting as managing agent. The contest was between the wife and her husband’s creditors. Undoubtedly the case was one which should require the clearest proof on the part of the married woman, that the property was her separate property. Stanton vs. Kirsch, 6 Wis., 338. The proof relied on for this purpose was the existence of the partnership, and the actual transaction of business in the name of the firm, and the statements of some of the witnesses, that the plaintiffs put in some money as capital when the partnership was formed. But where the plaintiff Bridget got her money was not shown, and there was nothing offered tending to show that she had any money or separate property, with the exception of a receipt offered in evidence, purporting to be signed by 0. Hurley, acknowledging the receipt of $3,000 from Robert Duress, in trust for Bridget Duress, and promising to pay the same to Bridget on demand. The receipt refers to an agreement in pursuance of which it was given, which did not appear in the case. And it may be
Eor the admission of that receipt the judgment must be reversed, with costs, and a new trial ordered.