210 N.W. 395 | Minn. | 1926
To prove the claim plaintiff offered in evidence the ledger sheets of plaintiff's assignor, the Powers Mercantile Company. Defendant objected to their admission in evidence on the ground that the foundation required by G.S. 1923, § 9876, had not been laid. The objection was overruled and an exception noted.
We need not determine whether the ruling was correct. The wife of the defendant testified that she had received statements of the account from the mercantile company, that the statements showed the articles delivered and were correct and covered the several items of plaintiff's claim. This testimony was not contradicted and was sufficient to establish the claim independently of the ledger.
On December 19, 1922, defendant served a notice on the mercantile company reading as follows:
"This is to notify you that on and after this date I will not be responsible for bills contracted for, unless under my personal signature.
"C.D. Hibbard."
The goods in question were sold after the receipt of the notice, were ordered by defendant's wife with whom he was living, and consisted of provisions furnished to and used by defendant's family.
Defendant offered to show that he furnished his wife with sufficient money to pay for necessary supplies for the family table. The offer was rejected and the principal assignments of error relate to this ruling.
Section 8620, G.S. 1923, provides in part that, where husband and wife are living together, they shall be jointly and severally liable for all necessary household articles and supplies furnished to and used by the family. In view of the statute and the undisputed *504
evidence as to the nature of the supplies and the use made of them, we think the court was right in rejecting the proffered evidence. Commenting on the statute in Kosanke v. Kosanke,
"Although this statute makes both husband and wife liable to third parties for such necessaries, it does not relieve the husband from the duty to support the family which has rested upon him from time immemorial, and as between husband and wife the duty to furnish such necessaries still rests upon the husband."
In Bergh v. Warner,
Order affirmed. *505