Fenske v. Epperly

282 S.W. 81, 222 Mo. App. 38, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 150
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 282 S.W. 81 (Fenske v. Epperly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fenske v. Epperly, 282 S.W. 81, 222 Mo. App. 38, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 150 (Mo. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

ELAND, J.

— This is a suit seeking to subject certain personal property of the wife to a judgment for a debt created by her husband for necessaries for the wife and family. There ivas a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff and against defendant, sub *39 jecting tlie personal property mentioned in tlie petition to the payment of the debt in the sum of $315. Defendant has appealed.

The suit was originally brought against the defendant, Fannie C. Epperly, and her husband, Ilarlace D. Epperly, but before the filing of the answer by the wife the suit Aims dismissed as to the husband. The suit Avas for $315 for rent of the house in AAdiich defendant and her husband and family lived. The lease of the house was not signed by defendant but by her husband, the debt being that of-the husband alone. The answer consisted of a general denial. At the tidal defendant objected to the introduction of any testimony and at the conclusion of plaintiff’s testimony offered a demurrer to the evidence, AAdiich Avas overruled. Defendant stood upon her demurrer, resulting in judgment being rendered against her.

. It is insisted by the defendant that the petition did not state facts sufficient -to constitute a cause of action and that the court erred in refusing to sustain her demurrer to the evidence and in overruling her motions for a neAV trial and in arrest of judgment. It is agreed between the parties that the sole question involved is Avhether a married woman can be sued alone, without her husband being joined Avith her as a party defendant, on a debt of the husband created for necessaries furnished the Avife and family and a judgment rendered against the separate personal property of such married Avoman, and such property sold to pay said debt.

The determination of this question involves the construction of section 7328, Revised Statutes 1919, AAdiich provides, among other things, that all real and personal property belonging to a woman at her marriage or AAdiich comes to her • during coverture by gift, bequest, inheritance, etc., shall not be liable to be taken by any process of laAV for the debts of her husband with a proviso that such property shall be subject to execution for any debt of the husband created for necessaries for the Avife or family and Avith a further proviso enacted in 1895, which, is hereinafter set forth. Throwing some light on this point is tlie history of section 7328, Avhich Avas first enacted in 1875. In the ease of Gabriel v. Mullen, 111 Mo. 119, decided in 1892 and one from AAdiich both parties hereto seem to gain much comfort, it was held that it was unnecessary in bringing a suit of this nature to join the Avife with the husband as a party defendant. In discussing this question the court stated, 1. c. 122, 123—

“Prior to this enactment the Aidfe’s personalty in possession became answerable upon her marriage for all her husband’s debts of every nature.

“When the Legislature saAv fit to create a statutory separate estate in such property and A^est it in her, free of liability ‘to be taken by any process of laAV for the debts of the husband,’ it had *40 the power to determine, as it did, the extent of the new estate, by. providing that such property should remain (as it had been) ‘subject to execution’ for the particular class of debts indicated.

“This court has already held that a wife, owning a sole and separate equitable estate, might, nevertheless, charge her husband for necessaries for her support. [Miller v. Brown (1871), 47 Mo. 508.]

“In view of his personal liability for such necessaries, the Legislature no doubt considered it proper and just that her personal property as well as his should continue liable therefor. So it placed the limitation mentioned upon her separate ownership of it.”

And at page 130 the court said that of this statute — ■

“. . . the wife’s personalty is pronounced ‘subject to execution for the debt or liability of her husband,’ created for such necessaries, just as it had been before the separate statutory estate in such property came into existence.”

In 1895 (see Law's of 1895, p. 222) the statute -was amended by inserting the last proviso, as it now appears therein, which reads as follow's:

“. . . that before any such execution shall be levied upon any separate estate of a married woman, she shall have been made a party to the action, and all questions involved shall have been therein determined, and shall be recited in the judgment and execution thereon. [R. S. 1909, sec. 8309.]”

This proviso was undoubtedly enacted on account of the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Gabriel v.. Mullen. Tn that case, in discussing the question‘whether the Avife Avould be deprived of her “day in court” by allowing her property to be taken for a debt created by the husband for necessaries furnished the family Avithout her being joined Avith her husband as party to the suit, the court stated that she had her day in court under section 7323, Revised Statutes 1919, permitting her. to sue in her oaatl name and AA'ithout joining her husband, and that if her separate estate Avas seized under execution in a suit against her husband alone, she could sue and raise the issue as to whether the judgment was for necessaries in seA'eral Avays; “by replevin or by notice to the officer of her claim, and an action upon his bond, or against him alone for trespass; perhaps, in other forms.” That case involved a suit in replevin brought by the Avife to recoArer possession of her mare from the constable Avho had seized the animal by virtue of a levy of an execution upon a judgment against plaintiff’s husband.

In the Gabriel case it Avas held that prior to the enactment of the statute of 1875, “the wife’s personalty in possession became answerable upon her marriage for all her husband’s debts of every nature” and that in enacting that statute the Legislature created *41 a. separate estate in the property of the wife free from liability for the husband’s debts save that the wife’s personalty should be subject to debt for necessaries furnished the family; that the statute left the wife’s separate estate, so far as those debts were concerned, the same as it wa.s before the enactment of the statute. In other words, the wife Avas given a separate estate in her personal property with the limitation that- it should be subject to the debts of the husband made in the acquisition of necessaries furnished the AArife and family. In the respect of being able to control the personal property of the Avife in this manner, the husband’s rights Avere the same as at common laAV.

AY'e think that the amendment of 1895 did not change the statute in this respect but merely pro Added that the Avife should be made a party to the action so that “all questions involved” should be determined, that is, not only the question of the personal indebtedness of the husband to the plaintiff but the issue that the Avife could theretofore have raised in a separate suit, that is to say, the question as to whether or not the debt created by the husband Avas really for necessaries furnished for herself and family. As the statute of 1875 gave her a separate personal estate free from the debts of her husband, except those for necessaries, she, of course, has a right to contest that question. In the case of Moran v. Muntz, 175 Mo. App.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kent v. Knight
98 S.W.2d 318 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 S.W. 81, 222 Mo. App. 38, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fenske-v-epperly-moctapp-1927.