1. At common law a husband and wife were, in legal fiction, one and the same person, and under that legal fiction the wife had no right of action against the husband for torts committed against her person or property by the husband, whether committed before or during coverture.
Carmichael v. Carmichael,
2. “To ‘maintain’, as defined in Webster’s International Dictionary 2nd ed., is ‘to carry on; to keep possession of; to hold or keep in any particular state or condition; to support, sustain, uphold, keep up; not to suffer to fail; to preserve or continue in’ a certain condition.”
Stanley v. City of Macon,
3. Under the foregoing rules of law, where the defendant, in a personal injury action brought against him by an unmarried woman, made a motion for a summary judgment on the ground that subsequent to the commencement of the suit he and the plaintiff had intermarried and were living together as man and wife, which ground was supported by the defendant’s sworn affidavit and to which the plaintiff made no counter-showing, the trial court did not err in sustaining such motion and in dismissing the action, since under the undisputed facts, the plaintiff was no longer entitled to maintain the action. See: Anno. 43 ALR2d 632, 642; 1 CJS 134, Abatement and Revival, § 98 n. 17; 41 CJS 880, Husband and Wife, § 396a;
4. While we recognize the rule that where the attorney for the plaintiff has been employed on a contingent fee basis, his client cannot, without his consent, settle or dispose of the' case after suit has been filed, so as to defeat the attorney’s lien for fees which would attach to any recovery by the plaintiff, the cases such as
Coleman & Newsome v. Ryan,
Judgment affirmed.
