The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
The questions presented in this case are new with us, and quite important in relation to the effect of a divorce a mensa et thoro, upon the condition and capacity of a married woman, who has obtained a decree of that nature against her husband. Can she maintain an action in her own name only upon any contract made with her before the marriage, and left unexecuted at the time when the divorce takes place ? Can she sue in her own name for any property which she may acquire after the divorce, or for her earnings by business, labor, &c., done during her state of separation ? Can she maintain an action against her husband; should he intermeddle with the1 property so acquired, or should he refuse to execute the decree by which alimony may be allowed to the wife ? In other words, is she to be treated as a feme sole, after such a decree, in all respects, or in any particular limited degree, so as to give her the right to maintain some actions and not others ? Our several statutes providing for such divorces are wholly silent on the subject. Our judicial decisions have touched only the question of enforcing the decree itself in relation to alimony. And the English cases have been confined to the discussion and adjudication of the rights and liabilities of married women separated by agreement iron their husbands by deed, in which a sufficient maintenance has been provided for them according to their rank and degree And here it is remarkable, that a unanimous decision of the whole Court of King’s Bench, in the year 1786, Lord Mansfield and justices dlshliurst, Grose and Buller composing the bench, was entirely overruled' by the unanimous voice of all the judges except Buller, who was absent, in the year 1800. It was settled in the first case, that a married woman living separate and apart from her husband under a settlement by which a competent maintenance was secured to her, was liable as a feme sole for debts incurred by her ; and in the latter case, presenting similar facts, that a plea in abatement of cover
There are several intermediate cases in which the Court of King’s Bench, under the chief administration of Lord Kenyon, and the Court of Common Pleas, seem to have been gradually undermining the decision of their celebrated predecessors ; suchas Compton v. Collinson, 1 H. Bl. 350, — Ellah v. Leigh, 5 T. R. 679, and Clayton v. Adams, 6 T. R. 604. In this uncertain state of the law on a subject of universal interest and of frequent recurrence, it was thought necessary to obtain a more solemn adjudication, which was done in the case of Marshall v. Rutton before cited. Thus the law is now clearly and unequivocally settled in England, that while the marriage subsists in law, a separation de facto, however solemnly made and strictly enforced by contract between the parties, viz. the husband and trustees for the wife, although an adequate fund is secured for her maintenance and support, the parties remaining in the realm, the wife can neither sue in her own name nor be sued for debts owing to or incurred by her, but that in either case a plea of coverture is a sufficient defence to the action. The hardship and injustice which might sometimes arise in the case of persons supplying the wite with necessaries, neither she nor her husband being liable af law, is mitigated in England by the power of the court of chancery over all trust funds. But at common law, while the marriage contract subsists, unless the husband is banished or has abjured the realm, the wife cannot be treated as a feme sole, saving however the custom of London, according to which, if a married woman trades by herself without the intermeddling of her husband, she may sue and be sued as a feme sole. Now without doubt the law is the same with us, in relation to the effect of a voluntary separation of husband and wife or the absence of the husband. The wife is still a feme covert and is to be treated as such in all judicial proceedings, for it will not be allowed to parties, by their own act, without, as it may be, any sufficient cause, to destroy the effect of that
The common law of England must be taken to be settled by the case of Marshall v. Rutton, not then declared as a new principle, but restored from the changes which great men had incautiously introduced into it. This common law is ours, and therefore in cases similar to those wherein decisions have taken place, we should undoubtedly adopt those decisions as the rule.
But the question which alone affects the present action in regard to the capacity of the plaintiff to sue, appears not to have been settled, and that is, the effect of a divorce a mensa et thoro. Such a divorce does not dissolve the marriage, though it separates the parties and establishes separate interests between them. By our statute the wife, after such a divorce, is not only free from the control of the husband, but all her interest in real estate is restored to her; alimony is allowed her out of the estate of her husband ; and she is left to procure her own maintenance by her own labor, where the husband is unable to afford any alimony ; which is the case in most instances of divorce of this nature. In addition to these burdens she frequently has to support young children, without any means but her own industry. Shall she not maintain an action even against her husband for alimony, which, though able, he may refuse to pay ? May she not sue those who trespass upon her lands, or the tenants who may withhold the rent, or for the earnings of her labor, or the specific articles of property she may have purchased with the savings of her alimony, her rents or the rewards of her labor ? If not, the law, instead of protecting her from the oppression and abuse of power of the husband, has merely released him from an inconvenient connexion, reserving to him the right to deprive her of all comfort and support.
The difficulty then is not in respect to the capacity of the plaintiff in this action to sue, but whether the promissory note which is sued is her property or the property of the husband. The note was made payable to her by consent of her husband, and it was given for the price of real estate belonging to her before the marriage. It is supposed to have been restored to her by the decree of the Court, which, after divorcing her from her husband, directs, “ that all the real and personal estate which came to the husband by his marriage with the plaintiff should be restored to her.”
It is a matter of much regret to find that the statute which gives jurisdiction to the Court, of the subject of divorces, contains no provision for restoration of personal property in the case of divorce a mensa et thoro. It provides that the wife shall be restored to all her lands, tenements and hereditaments, and that she shall have reasonable allowance of alimony out of her husband’s estate, having regard to the personal property which she carried to the husband. Beyond this the Court have no authority to make provision for a suffering wife. The legislature seems to have overlooked the case, which we find often happens, where necessary articles of furniture or other personal property remain in the possession of the husband, and where he may not be able to pay so much alimony as will enable the wife, who is driven from his doors by abusive or cruel conduct, to provide herself with such articles. The decree in regard to the personal property is void, and nothing can be claimed under it.
It remains therefore only to be inquired, whether the legal effect of the divorce is to deprive the husband of his power over a chose in action which would survive to the wife, in case of his death, if he had not reduced it to possession. The cases of Draper v. Jackson et ux. 16 Mass. R. 480, and Stanwood v. Stanwood et al. 17 Mass. R. 57, show that in case of his death, the security remaining in its present form, it would be the sole property of the wife.
The plaintiff therefore must be nonsuited.
See Harteau v. Harteau 14 Pick 186.
See a review of this subject and the comments on this case, in 2 Kent’s Comm (3d ed.) 157 to 161.
The l?w cm this subject has been altered since this decision, so that upon every divorce from bed and board the court may make a decree for restoring to the wife the whole, or such part as they shall think just and reasonable, of the personal estate that shall have come to the husband by reason of the marriage, or for awarding to her the value thereof in money, to be paid by the husband. Revised Stat. c. 76, § 28.
2 Kent’s Comm. (3d ed.) 135,
See Bursler v. Bursler, ante, 428, and n. 1
