Capital Traction Co. v. Rockwell

17 D.C. App. 369
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 1901
DocketNo. 1028
StatusPublished

This text of 17 D.C. App. 369 (Capital Traction Co. v. Rockwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capital Traction Co. v. Rockwell, 17 D.C. App. 369 (D.C. Cir. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Morris

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The appellee, Ida I. Rockwell, is a married woman; and this is a suit instituted by her in her own name without the joinder of her husband to recover compensation for injuries to her person alleged to have been sustained by her through the negligence of the appellant. The declaration, after the statement of the circumstances of the injury, alleged that, in consequence thereof, she suffered great pain of body and mind and was hindered from transacting her [374]*374lawful affairs and business, and compelled to expend considerable sums of money in the endeavor to be cured of her wounds. To this declaration the defendant, here the appellant, pleaded the plaintiff’s coverture in abatement of the suit. The plaintiff demurred to the plea; and the demurrer was sustained. From the order sustaining the demurrer the defendant was allowed a special appeal to this court. The question, therefore, which is presented for our determination, is whether, under the law now in force in this District, a married woman may sue in her own name, without the joinder of her husband, to recover compensation for personal injuries sustained by her through the negligence of another person.

The question is not without difficulty. Under the former Married Woman’s Act in force here, that of April 10, 1869, carried into the Revised Statutes for the District as sections 727, 728 and 729, it was held by the Supreme Court of the District in general term, in the case of Snashall v. Railroad Co., 19 D. C. Rep. 407, that a married woman could not maintain such a suit in her own name. And in the case of Howard v. Railroad Co., 11 App. D. C. 337, we applied the rule of that case, although not entirely satisfied with the reasoning by which it was supported. But the case of Howard v. Railroad Co., although it did not come before us until 1897, arose and was instituted, like the Snashall Cáse, under the act of 1869. We can not regard either one of them as throwing much light on the application of the Married Woman’s Act now in force, that of June 1, 1896 (29 Stat. 193). Nor, in view of the varying terms in which similar statutes in other States are expressed, can we find any great amount of illustration in the judicial decisions which have been founded upon them.

The act of June 1, 1896, was undoubtedly a very great enlargement of the provisions of the act of April 10, 1869. The act of 1869 secured to the married woman the control and disposition of her separate estate derived to her in any [375]*375other way than by gift or conveyance from her husband, and gave her the right to contract and to sue and be sued in regard to it independently of her husband. But, as was pointed out in the case of Wills v. Jones, 13 App. D. C. 497, it was very far from the emancipation of married women from all the restraints and disabilities of the common law ; and it was the purpose of subsequent legislation to remove some or all of these disabilities. This was sought to be accomplished by the act of June 1, 1896.

This later act authorizes the married woman, in addition to the provisions of the act of 1869, to acquire property to a qualified extent by gift or conveyance from her husband; to bind herself and her separate estate for necessaries purchased by her or furnished at her request for her family; and to carry on any trade, business, occupation, or profession, by herself or jointly with others, and to perform any .labor or services on her sole and separate account; and it declares that her earnings from any or all these sources should be her own sole and separate property, and might he used and invested by her in her own name. It then re-enacts in the same identical words the section 729 of the Revised Statutes to the effect that a married woman may contract, and sue and be sued in her own name in all matters having relation to her sole and separate property, in the same manner as if she were unmarried; ” but it adds this clause, which was not in the act of 1869, “ and her husband shall be joined with her when the cause of action is in favor of or against both her and her husband.”

Notwithstanding that the power to contract, and to sue and be sued, conferred by the act of 1896, is in the identical words of the corresponding provision of the act of 1869, omitting consideration of the last clause, it is very clear that its scope is greatly wider than it was under the act of 1869, for the reason that the married woman’s power to acquire property and to enter into business is greatly enlarged, and the right of suit • is necessarily co-extensive [376]*376with the right of property and the right to transact business. Of this enlargement we had an illustration in the case of Wills v. Jones, 13 App. D. C. 497, in which we held that, under the act of 1896, a married woman conducting a business in her own right was entitled to maintain a suit in her own name for a libel published against her with respect to that business.

Now, if the declaration in the present case alleged that the plaintiff was carrying on a business on her own account, as by the statute she was authorized to do, and that through the negligence of the defendant she was so injured in person as that she was incapacitated from attending to such business and was thereby pecuniarily damaged, it would be difficult, in our opinion, to distinguish this case from that of Wills v. Jones. It would seem to make no difference whatever in principle whether a married woman was injured in her business by a libel published concerning her in regard to it or by a personal injury which prevented her from conducting it. The injury in either case would be an injury to her in her business, and consequently an injury against which she would have the right to protect herself by suit in her own name. Is it of any consequence that in this declaration she has not distinctly and positively alleged that she was engaged in the conduct of any business which was damaged in consequence of the personal injury sustained by her ? And is it of any consequence whether she was actually engaged in business at all as a preliminary to suit and recovery in her own name ?

The answer to the first of these questions would seem not to be difficult. While it is true that the plaintiff in her declaration does not state positively that she was engaged in business which was damaged by the injury which she suffered, she does state that, in consequence of the injury, she was damaged in the transaction of her lawful business; and as the only lawful business which she could properly carry on was that which she was authorized by the statute to [377]*377transact, we do not see what good purpose could be sub-served by a more distinct or minute allegation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 D.C. App. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-traction-co-v-rockwell-cadc-1901.