78 Mo. 320 | Mo. | 1883
On the 12th day of November, 1878, the plaintiff' brought suit against the defendants for a trespass upon her premises in her actual possession and occupation, wherein she alleges that defendants wrongfully entered upon said premises and into the dwelling and out-buildings thereof, and took from her possession and control-210 bushels of wheat; locked up all of her out-houses containing her farming utensils and thirty bushels of shelled oats; prevented her from selling her wheat or sowing her land with it; prevented her from selling or using her corn in the field; by reason whereof she was damaged in the sum
At the trial the plaintiff gave evidence tending to prove all the issues on her part, at the close of which the defendants interposed a demurrer to the evidence, which was overruled. The defendants then submitted evidence tending tO' prove the issues on their part. At the termination-of the evidence, the court, at the instance of plaintiff and of its own motion, gave an instruction bearing upon the right of the plaintiff to sue as a femme sole, to the following effect “ The jury are instructed that if they believe from the evidence that plaintiff was, at the time of the institution of this action, a married woman, and has continued to be a married woman since its institution, then the plaintiff has no legal capacity to sue, and they will find for defendant, unless the jury further find that said Phelps had abandoned his wife and left the State.” As the principal question in the case concerns the validity of this instruction, the other instructions relating to the trespass need not be set out in full. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $166.50, from which defendants have appealed to this court.
I. It was a general rule at common law that the husband of a married woman had to join with her in all actions prosecuted in her behalf. But this rule had a few exceptions as well recognized and established at common law as the rule itself. Lord Coke in his commentaries remarks:
II. Of course this long established exception to the rule of joinder in actions by married women, could not be
III. The doctrine of this exception has been accepted and approved in this State from a very early date. Rose v. Bates, 12 Mo. 33; Zallagher v. Delargy, 57 Mo. 37; Musick v. Dodson, 76 Mo. 624; Danner v. Berthold, 11 Mo. App. 351. The case of Chouteau v. Merry, 3 Mo. 254, is an authority somewhat in conflict with the doctrine, but it does not seem to have been cited or recognized as such by either court or counsel in any of the subsequent cases which have established the exception in this State beyond all question.
IV. But it is maintained by the counsel for appellant, in an able and ingenious brief, that whatever may have been the rule in-this State at common law, it has been modified and changed by our Practice Act, which reads as follows : “ When a married woman is a party, her husband must be joined with her in all actions except those in which
It is argued that by virtue of this section the husband must be joined with the wife ill all cases in which she is plaintiff, except when she sues her husband. It is contended that the legislature having enacted a general rule and marked an exception to it, impliedly repealed all other exceptions, and forbade the courts to engraft any others upon it. There is an apparent plausibility in this argument, which perhaps derives some support from the form and language of the provision, which first appeared in our Session Acts in 1868. But when we come to interpret it, as we must, iu the light of the common and statute law theretofore existing, its true meaning and import will not be found in such a construction. The provision iñ our Practice Act which this section took the place of, reads as follows: “ When a married woman is a party her husband must be joined with her, except that: First, when the action concerns her separate property, she may sue and be sued alone; second, when an action is between herself and her husband, she may sue and be sued alone. But when her husband cannot be joined with her, as herein provided, she shall prosecute or defend by her next friend.” This provision came in with our new Practice Act, and will be found in the revision of 1855. R. S. 1855, p. 1018, § 7. It will be observed that the act of 1868 under which this suit was brought, and which appears in our present revision of
What this section of 1868 declares about the joinder of the husband is in effect nothing more than the general rule of the common law, which required the husband to be joined with the wife as plaintiff, when she prosecuted a suit in her own behalf. But of course this rule could not apply to a case in which the suit was against the husband by the wife. To require him to join in such a case would have been equivalent to denying her the right to sue him at all; for it is not reasonable to suppose he would consent to a bona fide suit against himself, or that he could assist her in such a prosecution. No cultivated system of jurisprudence could tolerate the absurdity of a man suing himself. If there was no allusion at all to suits between husband and wife, the general rule of joinder as sanctioned by this section would not apply to suits between husband and wife. Indeed the previous provision in the revision of 1855 recognized expressly that the husband could not “ be joined with her” in such actions. "What, therefore, appears in form to be an exception to the general rule of joinder, is in reality no exception at all to that' rule. It never did apply to suits between husband and wife, and it never could apply to such cases at law or in equity. It was unnecessary, therefore, to mention them as an exception to a rule which never covered and never could cover them without rendering them impossible.
The object of the section in mentioning suits between wife and husband was not to enact an exception in this respect to the general rule of joinder, which was unnecessary, but to recognize a distinct class of cases to which the rule never did and never could apply, and to enable the wife in such cases to sue and appear by attorney or agent instead of next friend, as in the revisions of 1855 and 1865.
V. I will be pardoned for referring in this connection to a construction placed upon our statute of conveyances which goes strongly to support the exception to our Practice Act, upheld by us in this case. It is provided in sections 669, 670, that a married woman can convey her real estate by joining with her husband in the deed or power of attorney containing the conveyance. 1 R. S. 1879, §§ 669, 670. This is in the nature of an enabling statute, and no exception is mentioned or intimated. Yet it has been held that a married woman whose husband was an alien residing in a foreign country, could make a deed without joining with her husband in the act. Zallagher v. Delargy, 57 Mo. 37.
VI. I do not deem it necessary in this case to review the instructions relating to the trespass in detail. The judgment is so moderate that I am satisfied they placed the issues fairly before the jury.
The plaintiff has filed during pendency of this appeal, a copy of a record showing that since the judgment below she has obtained a decree of divorce. In view of what we have decided it is unnecessary for us to consider the retrospective effect of this decree upon the case. It will make it safe for the defendants to pay the judgment recovered against them.
The judgment is affirmed.