112 Me. 416 | Me. | 1914
The plaintiff, an attorney at law, seeks to recover in this action against the husband for professional services rendered the defendant’s wife during divorce proceedings instituted by the husband. In those proceedings the libellee prevailed and the divorce was not granted. No express contract on the part of the defendant to pay for the services is alleged or claimed; but the plaintiff rests his case on the broad ground that the services rendered fall within the class of necessaries for which the husband may be held liable in an independent action.
Two small items in the account annexed cover services for consultations with merchants at about the time of separation relating to supplies to be furnished the wife, but the evidence fails to show that these services were in any way necessary. The wife could have applied directly to these parties for credit, and no reason is given for her not doing so. There was no necessity of employing an attorney to make the request in her behalf. The wife’s implied agency or authority to pledge her husband’s credit, arising from the marital relation alone, might have covered the supplies furnished, but could not be stretched so as to include the apparently unnecessary services of an attorney for consultations with the parties furnishing them. The defendant is not hable for these items.
The balance of the account embraces professional services rendered and disbursements made in the divorce proceeding itself as counsel for the wife, the libellee. Recovery for these items raises a novel question in this State, although it has been passed upon in many other jurisdictions, and the authorities are not in entire harmony. In Georgia, Iowa, Maryland, West Virginia, Texas, it has been held
But the overwhelming weight of authority does not sustain this view. In Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, Illinois, Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, Wisconsin, Washington, the rule of non-liability is asserted and maintained without qualification. Coffin v. Dunham, 8 Cush., 404, Morrison v. Holt, 42 N. H., 478; Ray v. Alden, 50 N. H., 82; Wing v. Hurlburt, 15 Vt., 607; Shelton v. Pendleton, 18 Conn., 417; Cooker. Newell, 40 Conn., 596; Dow v. Eyster, 79 Ill., 254; Pearson v. Darrington, 32 Ala., 227; Kincheloe v. Merriman, 54 Ark., 557; Willaims v. Monroe, 18 B. Mo., 514; Wolcott v. Patterson, 100 Mich., 227; Hamilton v. Salisbury, 133 Mo., App. 718; Yeiser v. Lowe, 50 Neb., 310; Westcott v. Hinckley, 56 N. J., 343; Clarke v. Burke, 65 Wis., 359; Zent v. Sullivan, 47 Wash., 315, 13 L. R. A., U. S., 244 and 15 A. & E. Ann. Cas. 19, and exhaustive note.
Some Courts have based their decisions upon the broad principle that legal services in divorce proceedings cannot be classed as necessaries for which the husband can be held liable in an independent action, while others admitting the necessity of the employment rely upon the power in the divorce Court conferred by statute to compel the husband, pending the libel and as ancillary thereto, to provide an allowance sufficient to enable the wife to prosecute or defend. We adopt, without hesitation, the rule of non-liability in an independent action, not on the ground that such services cannot be classed as necessaries but because of the statutory means provided for their remuneration. Legal services rendered under some circumstances have been held to be necessaries, Peaks v. Mayhew, 94 Maine, 571. Were there no statute in this State providing for the allowance of the wife’s reasonable expenses so incurred we should hesitate to say that in no case should she be allowed the means with which to protect her property, her good name, and herself. Suppose for instance a husband should bring a libel for divorce charging his wife with adultery.
This statute guarantees the wife full and complete relief, and provides the avenue through which her prosecution or defense of a libel may be maintained and the services of an attorney may be secured. It follow's that, in this State, the wife is under no necessity of pledging her husband’s credit for the expenses of prosecuting or defending a libel for divorce, and therefore she has no implied power to do so, and the husband is not liable in an independent action. This rule, which simply enforces the intention of the legislature as expressed in the statute, best protects the rights of all parties, and is in accord with sound public policy. “The divorce Court has before it the parties, their property, their merits and delinquencies, and can fix the amount of the husband’s liability to the wife and her attorney on an equitable basis, without any inquiry into collateral facts, and we are satisfied that the rights of all parties will be best subserved by relegating the question of the husband’s liability for the attorney’s fees of the wife to that tribunal.” Zent v. Sullivan, supra.
The plaintiff has misconceived his remedy, which could have been had only in the,divorce proceedings in accordance with a long established practice, the adherence to which is both just and wise.
Judgment for defendant.