The plaintiff’s wife, Margaret Nolte, was killed while being carried as a passenger upon the defendant’s railway, and this action is brought to recover the damages thus occasioned to her estate. The jury returned a verdict in plaintiff’s favor for $9,500, and, from the judgment entered thereon, the defendant has appealed.
I. The defendant does not seriously deny its liability if, as a matter of fact and of law, the estate of the deceased has suffered damages by' reason of her death. The substance of the defense urged is that the deceased was a married woman having no separate estate, and engaged in no independent occupation or business, and because of these conditions the recoverable damages, if any at all, are at most merely nominal.
The question whether a woman’s marriage raises a presumption of her abandonment of an independent profession or business in which she has theretofore been engaged, or of an election to give her time and energies for the remainder of her life to duties of a merely domestic nature, remained undecided until very recently. It came up in the Niemeyer case, supra; but the plaintiff was there able to show as a matter of fact that the interruption of her business by her marriage was temporary only, and with the express purpose of resuming it after a brief wedding trip. In Withey v. Fowler,
While these things indicate a wide departure from the ideas embodied in the common-law conception of the marriage relation and its effect upon the status and rights of women, it is not for this court to interpose a barrier to the march of legislative progress, or to rob the statute of its natural force and effect by overnice construction. As a proposition of morals and abstract justice uninfluenced by mere precedent and prejudice, there is nothing inherently startling or repulsive in the conception of marriage as a union of equals which implies neither the effacement or subjugation of either party to the contract. It ought not to be impossible for a wife to be a helpmeet to her husband without becoming his bond servant. So long as the wife remains a woman of normal quality the fear expressed by counsel that the recognition of these principles will lead her'to “desert” her husband’s home “to go out and earn her own living and keep the proceeds” may safely be dismissed, for, if common observation be worth anything, the wife who possesses an independent occupation has never been less ready than her spouse to devote her separate estate to the support and comfort of the family and home. While we have no statistics upon the subject, we feel justified in saying that the granting to married women of equal rights in matters of property and business and the rapid extension of their activities in all lines of employment have occasioned no visible reduction in the number of men willing to cast an anchor to windward by marrying thrifty milliners, stenographers and washerwomen.
In several of these cases it is held that, generally speaking, the question whether an offered photograph is practically helpful or instructive upon any material issue in the case is a preliminary question addressed to the court, and is not open to exception. It is not necessary here to go to the full extent which some of the preceding cases would justify in this respect. It is enough to say, as was said by us upon a similar question, raised in the Faivre case, supra, that, even
IY. Exceptions were preserved to certain instructions given and requests refused by the trial court, and counsel have discussed them in argument; but the material questions thus raised are controlled against the contention of appellant by the conclusions already amiouneed in the foregoing paragraphs, and it is unnecessary to extend this opinion for a repetition of the discussion.
Affirmed on condition.
