128 Mass. 169 | Mass. | 1880
In this Commonwealth, a married woman, though she cannot acquire property by contract or gift directly from her husband, may acquire it either by purchase or by gift from a third person, and may assert her rights therein by a suit in her own name against any person but her husband. Gen. Sts. o. 108,
In the case at bar, the husband testified that he bought the cattle for his wife as her property at a certain price, part of which he agreed to pay by releasing a debt due him from the seller, and the rest of which the wife was to pay and did pay, receiving at the same time from the seller a memorandum or bill of parcels stating a sale from the seller to her for the price agreed. It was admitted at the argument that, upon this report, the property is to be assumed to have been delivered to the wife. That the husband, in saying that he bought the cattle “ for his wife as her property,” meant that he acted as her agent in the purchase, and not that he bought the property himself in order to give it to her, is made plain by his further statement that he agreed she should pay, and that she did actually pay, part of the price, which clearly implies that his position in the matter was that of an agent assuming and authorized to bind his principal to do something, and not that of a husband buying property for a present to his wife. The ruling that, as matter of law, the title was not in the plaintiff, was therefore erroneous, and the verdict directed for the defendant must be set aside.
The case differs in its facts from those on which the defendant relies, of Towle v. Towle, 114 Mass. 167, and Hawkins v. Providence & Worcester Railroad, 119 Mass. 596.
In Towle v. Towle, the action was brought by the wife on promissory notes received by the husband in payment for a sale by him of his own goods, (without any consideration moving from her,) and, at his request, made payable to her and delivered by him to her for the purpose of making an absolute gift to her of the notes. It was held that these facts, taken most favorably to the wife, showed a voluntary gift to her from the husband, by which she did not, under the Gen, Sts. c. 108, acquire the sole and separate property, free from his control, which
In Hawkins v. Providence & Worcester Railroad, the property in question was bought by the wife with money, either given to her by her husband or taken by her from a fund which wholly belonged to him, although it included money previously added by her to the fund from her own earnings, but which, not being distinguishable from the rest of the fund, had ceased to be her separate property. See Kelly v. Drew, 12 Allen, 107; M' Cluskey v. Provident Institution for Savings, 103 Mass. 300, 306.
New trial granted.