58 N.H. 298 | N.H. | 1878
Under Gen. Sts., c. 164, s. 1, the farm became the separate property of the defendant when the title passed to her from the plaintiff. And if her note for part of the price, given when the title passed, was a contract made by her "in respect to" her separate property, it was valid, and this action can be maintained. Gen. Sts., c. 164, s. 13.
In Bailey v. Pearson,
In Ames v. Foster,
In Hammond v. Corbett,
The defence of legal incapacity in this case cannot stand on the literal meaning of words, or nice and critical construction. The note for $4,250, part of the price of the farm, was a promise made by the defendant upon a good consideration. It was made in respect to the farm: her promise to pay for the farm related as much to the farm as would her promise to pay for neat stock bought for use on the farm. Batchelder v. Sargent,
A method of construction less strict, less technical, and more consistent with the liberal intention of the legislature and the emancipating character of the statute, leads to the same conclusion. The act of 1846 (c. 327, ss. 1, 2, 4) provides, that, under an antenuptial contract, a wife may hold her antenuptial property to her sole and separate use, free from the control and interference of her husband; that any devise, conveyance, or bequest of property may be made to any married woman, to be held by her without the intervention of a trustee, to her sole and separate use, free from the interference or control of her husband; and that married women, "in the cases aforesaid," shall be liable to be sued upon any contract by them made "in respect to such property," and upon any contract by them made before marriage, in the same manner and with the same effect as if they were unmarried. The act goes beyond the mere dispensing with a trustee, and turning an equitable estate into a legal one, beyond the chancery doctrine of separate property (Crane v. Thurston,
We must consider how essential the power of making contracts of purchase of property generally is to the enjoyment of the power of making other contracts in respect to it; how extensively married women were disabled by the common law in making the former as well as the latter; and how explicitly the legislature continued their antenuptial power of making contracts in respect to their property, without expressly excepting contracts of purchase, or expressly making any distinction between the purchase of property and other contracts respecting it. A contract of purchase, though not the only mode, is a common mode of acquiring property. Legal capacity to make such contract is, in general, a material and fundamental part of the power of making contracts in respect to property. A purchase of property is an exercise of the power of making contracts in respect to it. Of a theoretical system or series of contracts respecting a piece of property, the purchase of it is the first in natural order: and practically the purchase of it is often the contract without which the power of making other contracts in respect to it would be inoperative and worthless. A person's capacity to make, in respect to his property, any contract except the contract of purchase so often necessary for acquiring it, would be a general and comprehensive power with an extraordinary exception. And to supply such an exception by implication would be a construction not in harmony with the liberating purview of the statute.
Whether a married woman's executory contract to purchase property is authorized by the General Statutes, or any previous statute (Jones v. Crosthwaite,
Case discharged.
BINGHAM, J., did not sit.
SMITH, J., was absent. *302