56 Miss. 333 | Miss. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
The action was against the wife, for plantation supplies bought by the husband, the latter being joined in the suit, for conformity.
Plaintiff counted, in the declaration, upon a note executed by the husband, and upon an account stated.
In support of the second count, he proved that the supplies furnished were purchased for and used upon the wife’s plantation ; that at the end of the year a settlement took place between himself and the husband; and that the balance was ascertained and agreed upon, and the note of the husband taken for the amount due. He had no dealings or conversation with the wife.
Upon motion of defendant, all the testimony was excluded from the jury, upon the ground that no itemized bill of particulars of the goods furnished had been filed with the declaration, as required, in suits on open account, by sect. 580 of the Code of 1871.
All the testimony being excluded, the jury, of course, returned a verdict for the defendant.
The exclusion of the testimony by the court was necessarily
An agent may agree to, or participate in, the settlement of an account, so as to make it a stated account against his principal, provided it be within the scope of his agency, and occurs during the transaction of the business, dum fervet ojjus. Such acts amount to admissions of the correctness of the account; but the admissions of an ■ agent stand on a different footing from those of the principal. They are receivable in evidence only when contemporaneous with the matter in hand. They are regarded more in the light of verbal acts, and as constituting apart of the res gestee, than as ordinary admissions. If they relate to past transactions, and are narrative in form, they are ordinarily inadmissible. 1 Greenl. on Ev., sect. 114; Burnham v. Ellis, 39 Me. 319; Thallhimer v. Brinherhoff, 4 Wend. 394; Haven v. Brown, 7 Greenl. 421.
These well-settled principles of the law of agency throw but little light on the powers of the husband, under our statutes, to bind the wife in contracts relative to her separate property. His is an agency sui generis, and of a very peculiar character. It is statutory, involuntary, and irrevocable. For the purchase of plantation supplies he is made by law her agent, not only without her consent, but even against and in direct.opposition to it. His agency depends neither upon her wishes nor his own, and it lasts as long as the matrimonial relation subsists between them. His acts, so far from deriving their validity
It is evident that his powers spring rather from the rights and liabilities which our statutes have imposed upon the matrimonial relation than from any supposed delegation of authority by the wife, and we shall only confuse and entangle ourselves in contradictions if we undertake to deduce his powers from the general principles governing the relationship of principal and agent. Recourse must be had to our statutes.
“All contracts made by the husband or wife, or either of .them, for supplies for the plantation of the wife, may be enforced, and satisfaction had out of her separate estate.” Code 1871, sect. 1781.
“She [the wife] may be sued jointly with her husband on all contracts or other matters for which her individual property is liable; but if the suit be against husband and wife, no judgment shall be rendered against her, unless the liability of her separate property be first established.” Code 1871, sect. 1783.
“All contracts” made by the husband for plantation supplies are declared to be obligatory upon the property of the wife. There is no stipulation or specification of the form which the contract must take. Why may it not be by note, as well as by account? Why not by account stated, as well as by open account? The statutory test of the obligatory force of the contract is the purpose for which, and not the mode in which,
■ In a suit upon an open account, or quantum meruit or quantum valebat, there will, of course, be no such presumption, and
The views here announced were strongly foreshadowed, though not positively decided, in Clopton v. Matheny, 48 Miss. 285.
In the count on the note in this case, it is averred that the same was given and executed by the husband, as the agent of the wife, for plantation supplies, and was so received and accepted by the creditor. In the count on the account stated, the same is averred to be the stated account of the wife. We think that the note was admissible in evidence under the first count, and the stated account under the second, preliminary proof having been made that the contract was for supplies for the wife’s plantation.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.