37 Mo. App. 525 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
There was a trial in th s case before a jury, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff in
The court sustained this motion and the plaintiff •refusing to proceed or plead further, the cause was dismissed and final judgment entered for the defendant. The case has been brought to this court by plaintiff on ¡appeal. The action of the court in sustaining this •motion is the only.thing complained of by plaintiff. As there is no dispute as to the facts, a question of law only is presented.
Plaintiff’s action was at law, and she alleged in her ■petition that during her “coverture” she entered into ¡a contract with the defendant which had been fully performed on her part; that by the terms of this contract, she was to go to Granite Bend in Missouri, and establish a “boarding house” of sufficient capacity to accommodate one hundred and fifty of the defendant’s employes; that the defendant agreed to furnish the plaintiff that number of men to board during her stay; ■that she was to receive four dollars per week for each 'boarder; that in pursuance of this contract the plaintiff went to Granite Bend and established a boarding house •of the capacity agreed on, and remained there from February, 1886, to September, 1886, and that during •that time the 'defendant furnished an average of forty boarders only, to the plaintiff’s damage in the sum of three thousand dollars. This was the alleged breach on which the plaintiff went to the j ury.
The suit was first begun in the names of the plainitiff and her husband, but before the trial the plaintiff
The motion in arrest of judgment, when properly interpreted does not, as contended by the plaintiff,, go to the non-joinder of plaintiff’s husband, but it challenges the right of the plaintiff to maintain this action under any circumstances. In other words, the defendant denies the right to institute the action in the first instance, in the joint names of husband and wife, and in this we think the defendant is supported by the common-law authorities. This is not an action which, by the rules of the common law, could be maintained jointly by husband and wife; if so, the right to continue the action after divorce might be held to devolve on the wife alone, she being the meritorious cause of the action. Hunt v. Thompson, 61 Mo. 148. Such a case is presented when a joint action has been brought by the husband and wife on a note or bond made payable to both, or wh'en suit has been instituted by the husband and wife on a bond or note executed to the wife prior to her marriage. In such cases the right of survivorship belongs to the wife.
This right of joint action and survivorship has been sustained in an action for work done by the wife alone,
When we apply the principle of this cause to the case at bar, it will be readily perceived that plaintiff’s action is without warrant under common-law procedure. The damages sought were special damages growing out of the violation of contract, and belonged to the husband alone, the wife having no interest in them.
But counsel for plaintiff urge that section 3296, of the Revised Statutes, as amended in 1883, affords
The only object of the statute was to declare that certain property, therein designated, should thereafter become the separate estate of married women. This would seem to be the only purpose of the statute as •originally enacted. It did not attempt to enlarge or extend the right of a married woman to make contracts; her power in that respect remained as before. Now it cannot be said that the special damage, arising out of an alleged violation of this contract by the defendant, •became the separate property of the plaintiff, unless made so by the words “rights in action” found in the .statute. The words “rights in action” as used in the .statute mean “choses in action,” and the legislature merely intended to enact, that what was then and is now ¿recognized as the “choses in action,” of a married woman, should thereafter become her separate estate, unless reduced to the possession of the husband by the •written consent of the wife. Previous to this statute, the common-law rule was in- force by which the husband could at his pleasure become the absolute owner of •of his wife’s “choses in action,” and this change of ownership was generally held to be brought about by .any action on the part of the husband indicating such an intention. The amendment of 1883 merely enables a Jemme covert to assert her property rights and enforce her contracts concerning her separate personal estate in •courts of law. Previous to this enactment, hér title to personal property, and her right to protect •or enforce contracts in reference to it, were only ¿recognized in a court of equity.
Our conclusion is that the statute relied on by plaintiff has not afforded her a remedy, and that the
the judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.