60 Mo. App. 475 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
The defendant is the wife of Christopher H. Goldsmith. Dissensions having arisen, they were living apart from each other. They owned a house jointly,- and, after the separation, the tenant paid the rent to the defendant. In 1893, Goldsmith, who had failed to get the tenant to attorn to him or to pay him the rent, commenced an action before a justice of the peace, by a landlord’s summons, to recover the rent and the possession of the premises. That suit culminated in a judgment in his favor. The tenant took an appeal to the circuit court, and the defendant signed the appeal bond. In the circuit court the appeal was dissmissed for the failure to comply with an order to give a new appeal bond. The present action is on that bond. It was commenced before a justice of the peace, and, being unable to obtain service on the tenant, the plaintiff dismissed the action as to him, and continued it against the defendant. On a trial de novo in the circuit court, the cause was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury. The judgment was for the plaintiff and the defendant has appealed, assigning for error the refusal of the court to give an instruction of nonsuit.
Whether a court of law will enforce a contract between husband and wife is the question for decision?
In support of the judgment it is urged that the above section, without any restriction or limitation whatsoever, authorizes a married woman to contract and be contracted with with, and to sue and be sued in all courts as if she were a femme sole, and that this extends to the making and enforcement of contracts with her husband. Even though this construction be adopted, we can not see our way clear to an affirmance of the present judgment. At common law husband and wife could not contract with each other, for the reason that they were regarded as one person. The disability rested on both alike. Therefore, in this case, if the complete emancipation of the wife be conceded, the disability remains with the husband. A contract which a court of law will recognize and enforce must be one entered into by two or more persons, who are sui juris andaré capable of contracting with each other. This disability of the husband was stated and recognized by the New York Court of Appeals in the case of White v. Wager, 25 N. Y. 333. The court had under
But does the section admit of the broad interpretation put upon it by the respondent? We will admit that the language is sweeping, but, if if be necessary and possible to give the words a restricted meaning so as to bring the section into harmony with the other portions of the “Married Woman’s Act,” this should be done. By section 6868 of the “Married Woman’s Act,” the real estate of the wife, and its rents and profits, are exempted during coverture from the debts of the husband, unless it. be a debt contracted by the husband for necessaries for the wife and family. This section certainly contemplates a joint occupancy of the wife’s land by the spouses, and a joint use by them of the'rents or products so long as the marital relation continues. But the rents or products are protected against the claims of the ordinary creditors of the husband, and he is prevented from selling or making any disposition of them except by the joint deed of himself and wife duly acknowledged, If the legislature by enacting subsequently section 6864, stt/pra, intended to destroy the marital unity of husband and wife as to property rights, then section 6868, supra, is practically repealed. The husband can no longer claim the joint occupancy of his wife’s real estate. If he attempts without her authority to exercise any acts of ownership over it, he becomes a trespasser and liable to an action as such. If he asserts an exclusive possession of it, he may be prosecuted for forcible entry or unlawful
In the investigation of the case we have not overlooked the principle that in equity husband and wife n^ay contract with each other, and that courts of equity will, where the equities demand it, enforce such contracts. If the plaintiff has any cause of action against the defendant, he must seek redress in a court of equity. The fact that the bond has been assigned can not change this. The infirmity is in the contract itself. It is an obligation that a court of law can not recognize,
Our conclusion is that the judgment of the circuit court must be reversed.