124 Pa. 311 | Pa. | 1889
Opinion,
It was incumbent on the plaintiff in this feigned issue to prove that the goods levied on by her husband’s creditors and claimed by her were in fact her separate property, not acquired in any manner, directly or indirectly, from or through her
In substance, the uncontradicted evidence was, that in March, 1885, Mrs Bornstein, a married woman, having then no separate property of her own, determined to engage in the business of a shopkeeper, with the view of supporting herself and family. In furtherance of that purpose she presented a petition to the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia and in due form obtained the benefit of the act of April 8, 1872, entitled “An act securing to married women their separate earnings.” She then communicated to her friend and relative, Mr. Silberstein, her plans, etc., and requested him to furnish the funds necessary to purchase a stock of goods. After making the necessary inquiry and satisfying himself that her purpose was commendable, and that, under the law, her separate earnings were secured to herself, so that they could nob be taken and applied to her husband’s debts, he loaned her $1,500, with which she, in good faith, purchased a stock of goods and embarked in business on her own account. The loan was not made at the request, or in any manner upon the credit of her husband, or his property, neither of which he possessed, but solely on her personal credit and on the faith of her promise and ability to repay the same out of her separate earnings, to be acquired in the prosecution of the business. Silberstein testified positively that the husband had nothing whatever to do with the loan; that he would not have given him the money, and that it was “ not to be paid back by him ” or out of his property or effects, if he ever acquired any. In short, the plaintiff’s evidence all tended strongly to prove the foregoing facts. No rebutting testimony was even offered by plaintiffs in error; and, by necessary implication from the verdict, the facts as claimed by plaintiff below were found by the jury.
After the business, thus established by Mrs. Bornstein, had been conducted by her for about eighteen months, plaintiffs in error, creditors of her husband, obtained judgment against him and levied on the stock of goods which represented the original purchase made with the money loaned by Silberstein as above stated. The sheriff was duly notified by Mrs. Bornstein
The learned judge who presided at the trial refused to charge, as requested by defendants below, “ that under all the evidence the verdict should be for the defendants,” and said to the jury: “ It is lawful for a married woman to carry on business, provided it is not a cover for fraud, and to prevent her husband’s creditors from collecting their claims. The whole question is one of good faith. If you are satisfied that it was really her business, it cannot be taken to pay her husband’s debts, and in that case you should find for the plaintiff.” This instruction and the refusal to charge as requested by defendants, constitute the only specifications of error.
The question thus presented for our consideration is whether a stock of goods, acquired and held in good faith, as above stated, by a married woman legally entitled to her own earnings, can be seized and sold by her husband’s creditors as his property? We think they cannot. It was never intended that the law should sanction such an act of injustice. The gradual tendency of modern legislation, since the act of 1848, has been to emancipate married women from their common law disabilities and invest them with at least some of the rights and privileges they enjoyed before marriage. That fact should not be ignored by the courts. On the contrary, their decisions should be so moulded as to harmonize, as far as practicable, with the spirit of such legislation.
While the act of 1848 was doubtless intended to secure married women in the ownership, use, and enjoyment of their separate property, its provisions were construed to embrace only property in the strict sense of the term. It was accordingly held, at the outset, that a married woman’s earnings, the result of her own skill, credit, and industry, were not within the protection of the act, and therefore belonged to her husband as before; that property purchased and paid for by her out of her own earnings, or the joint earnings of herself and husband, unless earned in the management of her separate estate, belonged not to her, but to her husband: Hallowell v. Horter, 35 Pa. 375; Robinson v. Wallace, 39 Pa. 129; Bucher
In view of the remedial object of the act of 1872, as well as the tendency of more recent legislation, the act should be construed liberally, as in the main it has been. In Bovard v. Kettering, 101 Pa. 181, it was held that while the act does not
The act of 1872 undoubtedly conferred on plaintiff below the right to embark in business on her own account, and thus render herself liable for debts contracted in the prosecution of that "business as if she were a feme sole. If her friend Silberstein had confidence in her integrity and business qualifications, and was willing to furnish her with money to buy a stock of goods, relying solely on her honesty and ability to repay the same out of the business, why had she not the right to accept and use the same as her own ? It is said she had no separate estate, and therefore no basis of credit. While it may be true, as a general proposition, that without separate property a married woman has nothing on which to base a credit, it is not universally so. Known integrity and business qualifications, coupled with the right to engage in business on her own account, with full control of her own earnings, secured to her under the act of 1872, ought to be and undoubtedly are recog
As we understand the cases relied on by plaintiffs in error, they are not in conflict with the rulings of the learned judge in this. case. Id Leinbach v. Templin, 105 Pa. 522, a married woman was in possession of property which appeared to have been bought and paid for, in part at least by her earnings, in a business which she carried on prior to obtaining the benefits of the act of 1872. As to those prior earnings, they, of course, under all the authorities, belonged to her husband. In Pier v. Siegel, 107 Pa. 502, and similar cases, the husband was liable for the loan.
This case was well tried. The questions of fact presented by the evidence were fairly submitted to the jury with instructions of which plaintiffs in error have no just reason to complain. The assignments of error are not sustained.
Judgment affirmed.