Federlicht v. Glass

81 Tenn. 481
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 81 Tenn. 481 (Federlicht v. Glass) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federlicht v. Glass, 81 Tenn. 481 (Tenn. 1884).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion .of the court.

On August 2, 1880, Isaac Hart conveyed to his. daughter, the defendant Sarah M. Glass, wife of the defendant, J. M. Glass, a stock of goods, consisting' principally of ready-made clothing, in store at Chattanooga, to her sole and separate use, with power to dispose thereof as she might see proper, any property acquired with the proceeds to be for her like sole and separate use. From the execution of this conveyance until November 25, 1881-, when the present bill was filed, the defendant, Sarah M. Glass, by her husband, as her agent, or perhaps more accurately, the husband in the name of his wife, and ostensibly as her agent, continued to carry on business at Chattanooga with the goods thus conveyed and 'other goods bought to supply the place of those sold. The purchases of new stock were made from various Eastern houses, and among others from Federlicht & Sons of Baltimore, and the Star Suspender Company, who are the complainants in this bill. The purchases from the former were made by the husband about April 1, 1881,. amounting to $566.86, for which the husband gave a note in his wife’s name in the ordinary form of a promissory note, payable at sixty days. On March 12, 1881, the other complainant, the bill says, sold to “J. M. Glass or S. M. Glass” goods to the value [483]*483of $77.75. Each of the complainant companies- brought a separate suit at law on the debt thus created against the defendant, Sar.ah M. Glass, but dismissed the same upon the defendant pleading in defense her coverture. The complainants then joined in filing the present bill..

The bill stated the foregoing facts, but was complicated by the assumption of conflicting hypotheses,, and by seeking contradictory relief. Its main object was to assert the liability of the husband tó the complainants for their respective debts, and to reach the stock of goods on. hand by impeaching the conveyance of Hart to his daughter upon the ground that the stock of goods conveyed was in reality the property of the husband, for which no consideration- was paid by the wife, and that the business had been subsequently conducted in the name of the wife for the fraudulent purpose of protecting the goods from the creditors of the husband. This aspect of the case has been abandoned, as conceded by the learned counsel of the complainants, for want of proof to charge the husband with the debt, or to establish the alleged fraud.

The ease is_ before us upon the alternative aspect of the liability of the wife to the complainants, and of the property attached, and of the sureties on the replevy bond by reason of such liability. Upon this branch of the case it is clear, and is conceded, that the contracts of sale were repudiated by the wife by the plea of coverture to the actions at law, and that she cannot be charged personally with the debts of the complainants: Jackson v. Rutledge, 3 Lea, 626, 629. It [484]*484is equally clear, and is conceded, that there is nothing in the contracts stipulating for or creating a lien on the wife’s separate estate: Ragsdale v. Gossett, 2 Lea, 729, 736. All that can be claimed, or is claimed for the complainants is that they may, through the equity created by the facts- against the wife, subject the goods attached if they can be found, or hold the parties to the replevy _ bond, other than the wife, liable thereon for the value- of the goods attached.

After , the principal prayer of the bill, the complainants add: But if they are mistaken in this, then they charge that the circumstances before stated are such as to make Mrs. Glass a trustee for complainants and persons who sold said goods and other goods under similar circumstances; that the stock of goods so obtained are a trust fund which a court of chancery will take into custody and apply to the payment oí the debts ■ contracted in their purchase.” The substance of this charge is that upon repudiating the ■contract of sale by pleading her coverture, the married women would hold the goods as the property of the vendors, and would be required by a court of •equity to turn them over to the owners, or the court would take the goods into custody and apply them, or their proceeds, to the payment of the debts contracted in their purchase. We think this is undoubtedly good law." The contract of sale being invalid •or repudiated the title to the goods would be in the vendors respectively, and they might bring replevin or file a bill in equity for their recovery. Chancery would compel the return of the property if in the [485]*485possession or under the control of the feme. • The law has been so declared in the casé of an infant who had pleaded his infancy in defense of a bill filed to recover the price of personal property: Nichol v. Steger, 6 Lea, 393, affirming same case, 2 Tenn. Ch., 328. The same law would be equally applicable iu the case of a married woman. If, therefore, the complainants had sought by this bill to reach their goods, and had attached them, their equity would have been clear. A.nd, under the present bill, if the property attached, which is now the only property subject to be reached by the decree, had been the goods of the complainants, or either of them, there would have been no difficulty in administering relief pro tanto. Unfortunately for the complainants, there is not a particle of proof in the record to show that any of the goods of the complainants were levied on by the attachment, or were in the possession or under the control of the defendants, or either of them. On the contrary, it distinctly appears that the articles levied on consisted of ready-made clothing of a particular description, and that the articles alleged to have been sold by the complainants were of an entirely different description. No relief can therefore be granted on this ground.

The chancellor, going beyond the bill, holds that the wife, by disaffirming the contracts of sale, “thereby made herself liable as trustee to account for the value of said goods.-” He thereupon gives a nominal decree against the defendant, Sarah M. Glass, in favor of each complainant company for its debt, the execution to be . only levied “ on the stock of [486]*486goods attached, if they can be ' found.'’'’ He then, renders a decree against her, her husband and a surety-on the replevy bond, for the penalty of the bond, to be satisfied by the payment of complainants’ debts. The execution on this decree is to run generally against the last two parties, but as to the married woman is only to be levied on the property attached, if found. He does not, it will be noticed, give any personal judgment against the married woman at all, nor declare any lien in favor of complainants on her separate estate, and yet subjects her separate estate, other than the goods of the complainants, to the complainants’ debts. A woman’s separate estate cannot, however, be subjected to her debts unless expressly charged upon it by her in the mode prescribed by law. But here, as we have seen, there is no charge on the separate estate by contract, nor a fortiori by the invalidity or rescission ,of that contract. And the property ’ attached, as we have also seen, was no part of the goods of the complainants. The property attached could not therefore be reached by the complainants as their property, for it was not theirs, nor as the separate property of the feme, for they had no lien on such, property.

The replevy bond in this case was signed by the wife, the husband, and a third person as surety.

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Bluebook (online)
81 Tenn. 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federlicht-v-glass-tenn-1884.