Cunningham v. Fontaine

25 Ala. 644
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 25 Ala. 644 (Cunningham v. Fontaine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cunningham v. Fontaine, 25 Ala. 644 (Ala. 1854).

Opinion

GOLDTHWAXTE, J.

The original judgment entry in this case recited, that the defendants had demurred to the declaration, and a judgment in favor of the defendants on the [648]*648demurrer. Upon this judgment a writ of error was sued out, during the pendency of which a motion was made in the court below to amend the judgment nunc pro tunc, so as to show that the demurrer was to the second and third counts, and not to the declaration generally. This motion was granted, the judgment amended, and the record as amended brought up by certiorari. It is urged on the part of the plaintiff in error, that the judgment nunc pro tunc is not properly before this court but under our decisions this position is not tenable. In Horne v. Moore, 5 Ala. 234, the service of a writ had been accepted by the defendant, but the acknowledgment of service was not entered on the record. The omission was corrected by motion in the court below, while the writ of error was pending ; and it was held, that the amendment, when made, related back and sustained the judgment. In several other cases, it appears to have been the practice of this court to recognize amendments made in the judgment of the court below, during the pendency of the writ of error (Brown v. Torver, Minor’s Rep. 310 ; Evans v. St. John, 9 Porter 181; Heflin v. McMinn, 2 Stew. 492); and as the judgment entry could be amended only so as to speak the truth, and upon evidence of the highest and most conclusive character, and as it relates back and stands in the place of the first judgment, we see no hardship or injustice in recognizing it in this court as the true judgment, which in legal effect it really is..

Regarding the record as presenting the amended judgment for the consideration of the court, the only question is as tq the sufficiency of the second and third counts of the declaration,

The second count js framed under, and jp reference to, the seventh section of the act qf the 1,3th February, 1850, (Sess. Acts 1849-50, p, 65,) which is in these words ; 51 That for all articles of family supply, or used in the family, which are suitable to the estate and condition in life of the family of such husband and wife, and for which the husband would, by the common law, be liable, the husband shall bo severally, and the husband and wife jointly, liable and suable at law ; and the separate estate of the wife, secured to her under the provisions of this act, or of the act to which this is an amendment, shall be subject at law to all debts, contracts and engagements for such articles, by suit against her and her husband.” The act [649]*649to which this is an amendment was passed on the 1st March, 1848, and contains no provision which it is necessary for us to consider in reference to the points presented in this case.

In the case of Henry and Wife v. Hickman, at the January term, 1853, (22 Ala. 685,) it became necessary for us to examine the section of the act above cited. The question in that case arose, as it does in this, on a demurrer to a declaration against husband and wife, on a demand arising out of the purchase of family supplies; and we held, that to render the declaration good, “ it must distinctly appear by it that the wife has a separate estate which is sought to be charged, before any liability appears against her, and before she can have a standing in court." The declaration in that case contained no such averment, and the demurrer was sustained. The count in this declaration, which we are now considering, contains an averment, “ that, at the time said articles were furnished, said defendant (then the wife of the said B. B. Fontaine, as aforesaid) was possessed of a separate property, separate and apart from the estate of her said husband, and which came to her after the first day of March, 1848.” Does this averment satisfy the demands of the statute, and the decision of this court under it, in the case of Henry and Wife v. Hickman, supra1!

It evidently was not the intention of the Legislature to charge every kind of separate estate which could legally be created in the wife, with the payment of such debts, but only those which are secured to her by the acts of 1848 and 1850, and which she received and enjoyed under their provisions. The language of the act of 1850, upon this subject, is much too plain for misconception. Its words are, “And the separate estate of the wife, secured to her under the provisions of this act, or of the act to which this is an amendment, shall be subject at law to all debts, contracts, and engagements for such articles, by suit against her and her husband.” A separate estate created by deed or will, either before or after her marriage, cannot, with any propriety, be said to be secured by these acts, whether such estate was created anterior or subsequent to their passage ; and this, for the obvious reason, that these estates are not such as, without the statutes, the husband would have taken in his own right, and as she has received none of the benefits of these acts, she should not be [650]*650made to bear the burthens imposed by them on. those who do receive such benefits. If she holds her separate estate under the provisions of a deed or will, and the sanctions of the law as it stood before the passage of the act of the 1st March, 1848, it can only be charged in such manner, and with such debts, as the law then existing prescribed and sanctioned. The remedy here resorted to was unauthorized by the law, as it then stood, for such demands as are here sought to be recovered.

The remedy given by the act of 1850 is in derogation of the common law, and, consequently, must be strictly pursued. In order to enable the plaintiff to recover, he must prove, that the articles furnished were family supplies, that they were furnished during the coverture, and - .sod in the family, and further, that the wife had a separate, estate secured to her under the act of 1848 or 1850. On the pica of non assumpsit, the defendant would be entitled to a verdict, without producing any proof, unless all these facts were made out by the plaintiff; or upon a demurrer to the testimony, if either had not been proved, she would be entitled to a judgment. This being the case, it is obvious that a declaration, which does not aver the existence of all of them, is fatally defective; for it is a familiar rule of practice, that the allegata et probata must correspond. Proof that the defendant had received a separate estate since the 1st March, 1848, without showing that it was secured to her by that act, or the act of 1850, would not authorize a recovery ; for it would not necessarily follow from the fact that she had received a separate estate, that such estate was secured to her under these acts — it may have been settled on her by will or deed, and held and enjoyed by her entirely independent of these statutes. We hence conclude, that a declaration which merely avers that the wife possessed a separate estate, held in her own right, without the further averment that it was secured to her by the act of 1848 or 1850, (as the fact may be,) is fatally defective, and justly obnoxious to a demurrer. Such is the case here, and our opinion is, the demurrer to this count was rightly sustained.

In the ease of Henry and Wife v. Hickman, supra, the' declaration contained no averment whatever that the wife had a separate estate, and the general language employed by the [651]

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Bluebook (online)
25 Ala. 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunningham-v-fontaine-ala-1854.