43 Fla. 142 | Fla. | 1901
It appears from the abstract that on August 1, 1895, appellees filed their bill against appellants in the Circuit Court of DeSoto county, alleging that on June 1, 1894,
In O’Neil v. Percival, 20 Fla. 937, S. C. 51, Am. Rep 634, it was held that the mechanics lien law of 1877 (Chap. 3042) did not apply to tire separate statutory property of married women. It is there said that it has been held from an early date in this court, and indeed in the courts of nearly every State in the Union, that a statute authorizing in general terms an executory contract which can result in a personal judgment either at law or in equity does'.not embrace a married woman, unless such is the manifest clear intent of the legislature; that she must at least be given the general power to contract under some statute — either a general law giving this power or under the terms of the lien law; that she was in no manner alluded to in the statute of 1877, unless she was embraced in the term “owner;” that in States where she has no general power to contract granted to her or where she is not invested with the power of a feme
Section 2 Article 1^11 Constitution of 1885 provides that “a married woman’s separate real or personal property may be charged in equity and sold, or the uses, rents and profits thereof sequestrated for the purchase money thereof or for * * * * labor and material used with her knowledge or assent in the construction of buildings or repairs or improvements upon her property” * * * . This section does not create a lien upon the property to secure the demands named. Iti merely authorizes' courts of equity to charge the property with the payment of certain demands, and until proceedings for that purpose are begun, there is nothing in this section of the constitution nor in any statute in force which denies to the married woman the right to sell and convey her property, in the manner pointed out by other statutes permitting her so to do. If the sale and conveyance are made in good faith, that is with no intention of defrauding, hindering 01 delaying persons holding such demands, the property in the hands of the purchaser will not be liable to be charged with the payment of such demands. As appellees had no lien upon the property sought to be subjected at the time it was sold to Fiala, either under the mechanics lien law or any other statute, or under the section of the constitution quoted, his title was superior -to their demand, and the court erred in deciding otherwise. The bill alleges that the title to the property was vested in the wife, Sco
The remaining consignments of error need not be considered.
The decree of the Circuit Court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.