Brader v. Brader

85 N.W. 681, 110 Wis. 423, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 193
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 85 N.W. 681 (Brader v. Brader) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brader v. Brader, 85 N.W. 681, 110 Wis. 423, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 193 (Wis. 1901).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed March 19, 1901:

Dodge, J.

1. One of the assignments of error most •strenuously urged is that the trial court refused to hold the plaintiff’s claim barred by the statute of limitations. Such refusal was predicated upon the view that such statutes do not run against a married woman upon claims against her husband. Were this question to be considered originally, it would seem clear that such position is not tenable. The terms of the statute of limitations are mandatory and •comprehensive that “ civil actions can only be commenced within the periods prescribed in this chapter ” (sec. 4206, Stats. 1898), and that “ actions must be commended within the periods respectively hereinafter prescribed after the cause of action has accrued ” (sec. 4219). Our statutes with reference [426]*426to the rights of married women have removed all disability, both of contract and suit, with reference to separate property, and have enabled the bringing of suits with reference thereto against the husband as well as another. Carney v. Gleissner, 62 Wis. 493. Hence it cannot be doubted that a cause of action accrues in favor of a married woman as against her husband at the same time and with the same completeness that it does against any one else. The limitation statutes make no exception in her favor, and, however wise exception might be on grounds of public policy, such wisdom is a matter for consideration by the legislature, and not for the courts, when the legislature has acted. However, a different view was taken in Second Nat. Bank v. Merrill, 81 Wis. 151, decided in 1891, where it was said definitely and unambiguously that statutes of limitation do not run against a married woman as between her and her husband. This was based upon considerations of public policy. “She ought not to be compelled to treat her husband as a stranger. Any other policy would beget disagreement and distrust.” Again, in Fawcett v. Fawcett, 85 Wis. 332, it was clearly intimated that this rule was recognized as established, and further citations offered in its behalf. We do not find that, the citations support the rule, but it is now ten years since it was definitely laid down as a judicial declaration of the force and effect of our statutes. During that time most valuable rights maj^ have reached such age that their destruction would result from a change of that rule, and property rights of great magnitude may have grown up in reli-1 anee upon it. The fact that the community, doubtless upon the advice of the profession, have relied on the immunity of married women from the bar of statutes of limitation is confirmed by the fact that a suit .with reference to an ordinary money demand by wife against husband has seldom been known in this court, numerous as are the transactions out of which such suits might grow. We feel constrained,. [427]*427therefore, without yielding assent to the reason of the rule of Second Nat. Bank v. Merrill, to decline now to depart from it. If it is not such as the legislature believes best, a change by that body is easy, and that, too, in a way to take effect m futuro and not ex post facto. We therefore decide that no error was committed in holding the plaintiff’s claims not barred by the statute of limitation.

2. Appellant assigns error upon the overruling of his objection to the competency of the plaintiff herself to give certain testimony on the ground that the same falls within the inhibition of sec. 4069, Stats. 1898, which, according to its terms, disables her to give testimony “ in respect to any transaction or communication by her personally with the deceased.” Among the questions, objections to which were overruled, are several which may be classed together, as resting upon the same principle. It having been testified that the deceased, Isaac G. Brader, superintended the auction sale of the plaintiff’s property, the following questions were propounded to her:

“Did you yourself receive any money or notes received on the sale of that property that day?” “ Q. Did any of the makers of notes then given ever pay any to you yourself?” “ Q. Was it [a certain note of a third person] paid to you? ” “ Q. Did you ever receive any money from Dryden on that note? ” “ Q. After you were married to Brader, did you personally ever receive from Trevett anything in payment [of Trevett’s note]?”

The trouble with these questions and their answers, uniformly in the negative, is that they were doubtless made the basis of argument to the jury for an inference that, if none of these payments of money or deliveries of notes were made to the plaintiff herself, the alleged payment of them to the deceased, Isaac G. Brader, was confirmed. Of course, the statute above cited has a clear and obvious purpose, which is to prevent the survivor to a transaction from benefiting by his own evidence thereto when the other party’s mouth is closed by death as to a different version, and tes[428]*428timony which with reasonable directness tends to establish that a transaction did or did not take place between the witness and the deceased is within the reason of the prohibition ; but the connection must be reasonably direct, and we think it cannot be said to exist in the case of the questions above put, which called for information merely as to the witness’s transactions with third persons. - Possibly the appellant might have been entitled to some instruction from the court that proof that Trevett, for instance, did not pay his note to the plaintiff, must not be taken as tending to prove that he did pay it to the deceased,— a fact to which the plaintiff would probably not have been permitted to testify; but the fact that counsel may argue, from transactions between the -witness and third persons, to an imaginary inference that certain acts were done by the deceased, is not enough to preclude her from testifying as to such transactions. Such was the extent of the evidence given under the questions above quoted.

Under the same objection to competency, it having appeared without objection that a wagon was sold to one Dryden at another auction, and a note drawn up by a third person in the presence of both plaintiff and her husband, the question was asked: “To whom was the note payable ? A. To my husband.” This was merely evidence as to the contents of a written paper, and seems not to be improper, within the rule of Page v. Danaher, 43 Wis. 221.

A further objection under this statute arose as follows: It having appeared that she owned a certain note against one Trevett, and that some business was transacted at Trevett’s house, there being present herself, her husband, Trevett, and others, which transaction she says she saw without in any way participating,” the question was put and answered over objection:

Q. State what that transaction was. A. It was settling that note that I had in my possession. Well, they had a final settlement of that note. They settled it up. Mr. [429]*429Brader took sheep, and there was some money coming, and it was paid over, and the note was all settled up. They exchanged, and Mr. Trevett paid Mr. Brader the money and the sheep, and Mr. Trevett received the note. Q. State whether or not, after this settlement with Trevett, you saw those sheep on this farm. A. I did. It was Mr. JBrader’s farm. He was carrying it on.”

The rule of the New York decisions was adopted by us in Wollman v. Ruehle, 104 Wis.

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Bluebook (online)
85 N.W. 681, 110 Wis. 423, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brader-v-brader-wis-1901.