First Nat. Bank of Chicago v. Mitchell

84 F. 90, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2661
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 3, 1898
DocketNo. 435
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 84 F. 90 (First Nat. Bank of Chicago v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bank of Chicago v. Mitchell, 84 F. 90, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2661 (circtdct 1898).

Opinion

TOWNSEND, District Judge.

Action on a guaranty, heard upon complaint and answer and an agreed statement of facts. The defendant is a resident -of Connecticut, and a married woman, having been married in 1857, and having resided continuously at Bristol, Conn., since that time. Defendant’s husband, G-. H. Mitchell, was a member of a co-partnership, Morse, Mitchell & Williams, doing business at Chicago. At the request of her husband she signed a guaranty, which was taken by him to Chicago, and there delivered to the plaintiff. The guaranty was dated at Chicago, and had been signed by the members of the firm there before it was sighed by the defendant. Plaintiff claims that, although defendant did not personally leave the state of Connecticut, yet as the written contract was dated at Chicago, and was delivered by her husband at Chicago, and was to be performed there, defendant must be taken to have made the contract at Chicago, and, as in Illinois a married woman is allowed to [91]*91contract for all purposes, defendant could so contract in Illinois, and is bound by the guaranty. After this suit was brought defendant made an assignment in insolvency. The plaintiff presented the claim herein involved to the commissioners on her estate, and it was allowed by them, and the case was taken by her trustee in insolvency by appeal to the superior court, and upon reservation to the supreme court of errors of Connecticut, where precisely the same facts were presented and passed upon. The court there held that defendant, being a married woman, had no capacity to make any such contract; that to sign the guaranty in Connecticut, and authorize her husband as her agent to deliver the guaranty at Chicago, was to enter into a contractual relation in Connecticut which she had no capacity to do; that, therefore, she could not, while in Connecticut, authorize her husband to take the guaranty to Chicago and deliver it; and that, therefore, it was never delivered by her.

Before considering the legal propositions involved in this decision, the question arises whether this court will enforce against a married woman, who has always resided in Connecticut, a coniract made by her by a writing sent to another state, she not personally leaving the state of Connecticut, which the highest court of Connecticut lias pronounced invalid and unenforceable in that state. In Milliken v. Pratt, 125 Mass. 375, the facts were practically identical; the guaranty in that case having been taken by the husband to the state of Maine. The court held that the contract was made in Maine, and valid in Massachusetts, saying:

“If the contract is completed in any staio, it makes no difference, in principle, whether the citizen of this state goes in person or sends an agent, or writes a letter across the boundary line between the two states.”

In finally deciding the question, however, the court lay stress upon ihe fact that at the time of the trial of the case the wife could have legally made the contract in Massachusetts, saying:

“The question, therefore, is whether a contract made in another state, which a married woman was not at the lime capable of making under the law of this commonwealth, but was then allowed by the law of that state to make, and which she could now legally make in this commonwealth, will sustain a case against her in our courts.”

And Milliken v. Pratt also seems to hold that the guaranty made in Maine, as above stated, would not be enforceable in Massachusetts if Massachusetts had not consented to such enforcement, saying:

“As the law of another state cannot operate nor be executed in this state by its own force, but only by the comity of this state, its approbation and enforcement here may be restricted by positive prohibition of statute. A stale may always by express enactment protect itself from being obliged to enforce in its courts contracts made abroad by its citizens which are not authorized by its own laws. * * * It is possible, also, that in a state where the common law prevails in full force, by which a married woman was deemed incapable of binding herself by any coniract whatever, it may be inferred that such an utter incapability, lasting throughout the joint lives of husband and wife, must be construed as so fixed by the seitled policy of the state, for the protection of its own citizens, that, it could not be held by the courts of that/ state to yield to the laws of another state in which she might undertake to contract.”

In Bell v. Packard, 69 Me. 105, a married woman sent a contract to Maine, where she could have legally made it, and the supreme [92]*92court of Maine held that the contract was made in Maine, and was valid and enforceable there.

In Bowles v. Field, 78 Fed. 742, a married woman residing in Indiana, while transiently in Ohio, gave a note as surety for her husband. The laws of Indiana allowed married women to contract for all purposes, except as especially provided, and among the exceptions was a contract for suretyship. The court held that, having a general power to contract, this particular limitation could have no extraterritorial force. The court said: “It is not charged that she went to Ohio, and executed the notes as surety for her husband, for the purpose of evading the law of her domicile.” This seems to be an intimation that, if she had not had a general power to contract, and had remained in Indiana, the contract would not have been enforceable.

The common law, which makes the contract of a married woman invalid, must still be accepted as the general rule for those states which have not made exceptions by statute. The three cases cited above, holding the contract of a married woman valid, are in states where a woman has the general power to contract, and it is implied in two of those decisions that the state of her domicile would have had the power to protect a married woman from the result of her contract made while personally present in such state, if it had chosen to do so.

It may be admitted that, as stated by Judge Story in his Conflict of Laws, § 103, in regard to incapacity incident to coverture, “the law of the place where the contract is made or the act is done now governs.” And that, as stated in Scudder v. Bank, 91 U. S. 406, “the validity of a contract is to be determined by the law of the place where it is made.” Yet I do not think this principle has yet been carried so far in any decided case as a judgment for the plaintiff in this case would require.

The capacity of citizens of a state, so long as they actually remain within the borders of the state, would seem to be a matter of local law, to be controlled by the laws of the state, and not to be evaded by the simple device of sending or mailing a letter to some other state.

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Related

First Nat. Bank of Chicago v. Mitchell
92 F. 565 (Second Circuit, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
84 F. 90, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-chicago-v-mitchell-circtdct-1898.