23 Miss. 264 | Miss. | 1852
delivered the opinion of the court.
Howland filed his petition in the circuit court of Harrison county, under the mechanics’ lien law, to subject certain real property, situated at Pass Christian, to the payment of a debt due to him for materials furnished and labor performed as a mechanic. The agreement, in execution of which the work was done and the materials furnished, was entered into by the petitioner, with Job G. Selph, and Mrs. Sarah H. Selph, his wife.
The legal title to the real estate, which it is the object of the petition to charge, is held by R. L. Dixon, to whom it was conveyed in 1845, in trust for the sole and separate use of Mrs. Selph and her heirs.
The proceedings in the case were at law; the suit was brought and conducted throughout as a common law suit. The defendants filed a demurrer to the petition, which was overruled. A verdict and judgment were rendered in favor of the petitioner, from which the defendants sued out a writ of error to this court.
The main question in the case is, Whether the contract of Selph and his wife, as stated in the petition and admitted by
As a general rule, at common law, a married woman is incapable of binding herself or her separate property, by her contracts. She is not liable, personally, for any debt; nor is her separate estate in general chargeable in equity for her general debts, or her general personal engagements. 1 Brown, Ch. R. 18, note; Gardner v. Gardner, 22 Wend. 526; 2 Story, Eq. Jur. § 1400.
But it is contended, that by the statute passed February 28, 1846, amendatory of the act for the protection and preservation of the rights of married women, Mrs. Selph was vested with ample authority, by separate agreement, or joint contract with her husband, to bind herself and her separate property at law for the payment of the demand of the petitioner.
The original statute prescribed the mode in which a feme covert might alienate her separate property, and directed that it should not be done otherwise. No express power was given to her to contract in reference to her separate estate for any other purpose. This provision was repealed by the act of 1846; and express authority was conferred upon femes covert to contract either separately or jointly with their husbands, for certain specified purposes, and'by such contracts to subject the proceeds and income of. their separate estates. The language of the statute in .reference to this subject is, “ That all contracts for the purchase of supplies for the plantation and slaves, or for the slaves' alone, owned by any married woman, made by the husband and wife, or by either of them, either express or implied, shall be obligatory upon the husband and wife, and may be enforced against the proceeds and income of the separate property of such married woman.” The feme covert is vested also with the power to contract for the hire of her slaves, or for the employment of an agent or overseer, for their management and control.
It is not pretended that Mrs. Selph was vested with authority, either at law or in equity, by the terms of the deed to Dixon, to charge her interest in 'the property; and assuming
The provision referred to is contained in the following words: — “All suits upon contract, in relation to or affecting the separate property of the wife, either real or personal, shall be prosecuted or defended in the joint names of the husband and wife, and may be prosecuted in the courts of common law jurisdiction, in all cases in which said courts would have jurisdiction of the subject-matter in controversy between unmarried persons.’-’
The position contended for is, that the contracts of femes covert, in respect to their separate estates, may be enforced at law, under the statute in all cases where the same contracts would be recognised and enforced in courts of equity. This position, as it is applied to the case at bar, is based upon another assumption ; which is, that according to the doctrine of this court, a married woman is, as to her separate property, in all respects a feme sole.
The reverse of this doctrine is recognised in Doty v. Mitchell, 9 S. & M. 435. It is there held, that a married woman, in respect to her separate estate, is a feme sole only so far as she is constituted such by the instrument conferring the estate, and hence in the disposition of such estate, that she is restricted to the -particular mode or manner prescribed by the instrument under which she holds. But it is unnecessary to invoke the rule recognised in Doty v. Mitchell to determine this question.
The statute designates the particular modes in which a married woman may alienate her separate property, real and
Upon this construction of the statute Mrs. Selph had no power to.contract in the form and for the purposes alleged in the petition. Her contract, being void at law, could not be enforced by this proceeding. The demurrer should have been sustained and the petition dismissed, which is ordered by this court.