9 Tex. 297 | Tex. | 1852
Two grounds are relied on for reversing the judgment, which require notice. 1st. The non-joinder of the plaintiff ’s husband. 2d. Tho ruling of the court sustaining the demurrer to the answer.
The. question respecting the necessity of obtaining the authority of tlie court to enable the wife to sue without joining her husband was settled in the en e of Jlclntire ?>. Chappell. (2 Tex. R., 378.) It was there held that the rignC to sue, iu a proper case, is one which cannot be denied the wife; that w here, the facts are such as authorize tlie action, the authority of tlie court will always.be presumed, and that no express grant of autlioritjris necessary.
But it is insisted that it should appear, expressly, that the husband had “failed or neglected” to join his wife in the suit.
The power ol exercising the “sole management” of the separate property of the wife, which tlie law confides to tlie husband, is for the mutual benefit
Tho ruling of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the amended answer presents a graver question.
The law, while it affords protection to the marital rights of the wife in respect to her separate property, requires of her to deal justly and to respect the rights of others. The law protects the wife, but it gives her no license to commit a fraud against the rights of an innocent party. It will not permit her to practice deception and fraud upon innocent third persons who come to deal with her husband and to trust him on the faith of property. The acts and representations of the wife iu respect to her rights of property, made to deceive and which do deceive others to their injury, will bo binding upon her, and she will be precluded from asserting- her claim as against those who have confided in aud acted upon her representations and admissions, or who have been deceived to their prejudice by her fraudulent acts. This subject was considered in the ease of Cravens v. Booth, 8 Tex. R. And that case is decisive of the question we are considering against tho ruling of the court upon the sufficiency of the answer.
The judgment must therefore he reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.