| Pa. | Nov 1, 1870

Lead Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered, November 14th 1870, by

Thompson, C. J.

— When a husband turns his wife out of doors without any reasonable or just cause, or forces her to withdraw from him, without any means for her support, the law implies that he has given her credit, to supply herself with such necessaries as are suitable and proper for her to have; namely: clothing, boarding, lodging, and the like. Her condition would be deplorable, indeed, if this were not so, because of her inability to contract for such things, and to obtain them, if she happens to have no separate estate. When, therefore, necessaries are furnished to a wife so situated on the credit of the husband, the party claiming *362to be paid for them must bring himself, in order to recover for them, within the rule stated. He must make out a case which shall negative all idea of a captious, voluntary abandonment of the husband’s domicil, and show that she has either been turned out, or forced to leave his residence: Walker v. Simpson, 7 W. & S. 85, and the authorities therein referred to.

When the plaintiff below filed the items of his claim, he ought I think to have set forth in his affidavit of claim enough to bring himself within the rule of law authorizing him to furnish the boarding to defendant’s wife and charge her husband with it, but this he did not do. He might easily have done it, as he knew the defendant had not employed him to furnish the boarding. But take it as the learned judge interpreted the rule of court, that this was matter of defence — did not the defendant set it up in his affidavit of defence most explicitly ? He denied his indebtedness “to the plaintiff in any sense whatever,” and added “that if he boarded the wife of the affiant, it was without the consent or desire of affiant, and after she had voluntarily left the house of affiant without just cause, as the plaintiff knew.” This was certainly a denial of material averments in the plaintiff’s affidavit of claim, because if true, there was no indebtedness by him on account of the boarding furnished which constituted the items of the plaintiff’s bill. This disclosed plainly the nature of the defence as required in the decisions referred to. But if, as thought, the items of the bill required to be traversed, the defendant did traverse them all by adding “ and the affiant here denies the affidavit of claim of plaintiff.” That affidavit, allowed by the rule of court, averred the truth of the plaintiff’s claim as set forth in his bill of items. The defendant denied it, generally and specially, and this was all that the rule required. to overturn the effect of the plaintiff’s claim as sustained by his affidavit and to exclude it from the jury. The learned judge took a different view of the matter and admitted the plaintiff’s claim and affidavit under objection, and we think in this he erred. When the defendant in his affidavit of defence sufficiently denies the plaintiff’s claim according to rule, which is a question of fact for the court, it excludes the plaintiff’s claim unless it be supported by testimony. This we think is certainly its operation. The mistake of the learned judge was not as to the operation of the rule of court, but in supposing that the defendant had not brought himself within the rule in his denial of the claim. As already said we think he did, and this threw out the plaintiff’s claim for want of proof in order to get it to the jury. It was only evidence at best on the ground of an implied admission because not denied. When denied there was no ground for its admission at all, and the parties fell back on their common law rights and requirement of proof. This we think plain. No doubt the defendant might have taken advantage of the error of allowing the plaintiff’s affidavit and claim to be read, *363by asking tbe court to charge tbe jury that- there was no testimony to support tbe plaintiff’s claim, if be bad sufficiently denied it, and excepted to tbe charge of tbe point if refused. But this mode did not preclude a resort to tbe mode adopted, which was much fairer to tbe plaintiff, for be was apprised by it of tbe objection to bis recovery in time to supply tbe defect by proof, if be bad any. It is enough, however, to say that tbe question of tbe effect of tbe defendant’s affidavit of. defence is sufficiently raised in tbe exception to tbe admission of tbe plaintiff’s claim to the jury, and for tbe error in this we are constrained to reverse this judgment.

It should have attracted tbe attention of tbe counsel on one side or tbe other that there was no charge filed in tbe case. Tbe matter of exception was to tbe question of evidence. It has caused us some trouble, which would have been avoided if tbe counsel bad taken tbe pains to be accurate in stating tbe matter as it-was. Both paper-books treat tbe note of tbe judge explanatory of bis ruling on tbe question of evidence, as bis charge. There is no charge on record. We commend tbe counsel to more care in future.

Judgment reversed, and venire de novo awarded.






Dissenting Opinion

Williams, J.

dissented on tbe ground that no error is assigned to tbe admission of tbe evidence and because the evidence was properly received under tbe rule of court.

© 2024 Midpage AI does not provide legal advice. By using midpage, you consent to our Terms and Conditions.