First National Bank v. Leonard

59 P. 873, 36 Or. 390, 1900 Ore. LEXIS 16
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 59 P. 873 (First National Bank v. Leonard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Leonard, 59 P. 873, 36 Or. 390, 1900 Ore. LEXIS 16 (Or. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Chiee Justice Wolverton

after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.

The sole question presented is whether the said covenant for the payment of the debt constitutes such an undertaking on the part of the wife that a personal decree may be entered against her, enforceable against her separate property. The question is one susceptible of solution under the statutory provisions touching the rights and authority of a married woman to contract, and her ensuing liabilities. Our statute makes the following provisions as.bearing upon the controversy, viz.: Sess. Laws, 1893, p. 170 ; Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 2992 : “The property and pecuniary rights of every married woman at the time of her marriage, or afterwards acquired, shall not be subject to the debts or contracts of her husband, and she may manage, sell, convey, or devise the same by will to the same extent and in the same manner that her husband can property belonging to him.” Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 2997: “Contracts may be made by a wife, and liabilities incurred, and the same enforced by or against her to the same extent and in the same manner as if she were unmarried.” Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 2998 : “All laws which impose or recognize civil disabilities upon a wife which are not imposed or recognized as existing as to the husband are hereby repealed; provided, that this act shall not confer the right to vote or hold office upon the wife, except as is otherwise provided by law ; and for any unjust usurpation of her property or natural rights she shall have the same right to appeal in her own name alone to the courts of law or equity for redress that the husband has.” The section first quoted was originally adopted in 1878, but was amended in 1893 by eliminating therefrom the words “by gift, devise, or inheritance,” following the word “acquired.” The second section was adopted in [393]*3931878, and the third in 1880. As early as 1876 it was decided that the wife had the right to sell or mortgage her separate property for the payment of the husband’s debts, under the law then in force, touching the right to acquire and hold a separate estate : Moore v. Fuller, 6 Or. 272 (25 Am. Rep. 524). And again, in 1881, it was held that the mortgage of the wife’s separate property to secure the debts of the husband placed the property in the position of a surety or guarantor, and that it would be discharged by anything that would discharge a surety or guarantor personably liable : Gray v. Holland, 9 Or. 512. But in neither of these cases was the wife’s personal liability upon an undertaking to pay .the husband’s debts presented or determined. It may be remarked, in passing, that separate property acts do not, in themselves, enable a married woman to make personal contracts. This may be regarded as settled law : 14 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (1 ed.), 609. There can be no cavil touching the purpose of the sections of the statute alluded to. Under the common law, and even by earlier statutes, the wife was incumbered and hampered by many disabilities that did not subsist as it respects the husband, which grew out of the marriage relation. The design of the legislature undoubtedly was to remove these disabilities, and to'place the wife upon an equal footing, as it respects the control and management of her individual or separate estate and property, and as it pertains to the right, power, and authority to contract and incur liabilities, with like responsibilities and obligations and amenable to like remedies for their enforcement as the husband.

By Section 2992, Hill’s Ann. Laws, the wife is empowered and authorized to manage, sell, convey, and devise by will any property that she may have acquired from any source, in like manner and to the same extent that her husband can property belonging to him ; and [394]*394by section 2997 she may contract and incur liabilities, and the same may be enforced against her, as if she were unmarried, or occupying the position of a feme sole. A statute of similar import to section 2997, but not so strongly worded in favor of the wife’s right to contract and incur liabilities, has received construction in North Dakota : Colonial Mortgage Co. v. Stevens, 3 N. D. 265 (55 N. W. 578). It declares that “either husband or wife may enter into any engagement or transaction with the other, or with any other person, respecting property, which either might, if unmarried.” The case which required its interpretation arose by the wife’s signing a note as surety for and with the husband. To secure the note, a mortgage was given upon the husband’s homestead. In neither the note nor the mortgage did the wife attempt to charge her separate estate with the payment of the debt, nor was it claimed that she otherwise involved her separate property. An action was brought against her on the note, and the defense interposed was that she was a married woman at the time she executed it, and was, therefore, not liable. It was held, however, that the execution of the note by her was an engagement or transaction respecting property, and that she thereby became amenable to the same remedial processes for the enforcement her husband was subject to. This ruling is in accord with the construction of a like statute adopted in California. It was said in Goad v. Moulton, 67 Cal. 536, 540 (8 Pac. 65, 66), “A promissory note is an engagement respecting property, which a. married woman may make, though it can be enforced only as against her separate property : Marlow v. Barlew, 53 Cal. 456; Alexander v. Bouton, 55 Cal. 15. If Mrs. Moulton had been unmarried, she could have made a promissory note for the accommodation of her father without receiving any consideration for so doing, and the note so made, in the hands [395]*395of. one who received it for value, would, beyond question, have been valid, and binding upon her, though the holder knew how and why it was made. But the fact that she was married does not at all change the rule or limit her power in this respect. ” So, in Maryland, under a statute which made it competent for a married woman to bind herself by a covenant in all deeds of real estate made to her running with and relating to such estate the same as if she were a feme sole, it was held, construing it in pari materia with a preceding section, which specially gave a right of action against the wife, but for another cause, that an action could be maintained against her upon such covenant. A court of equity, in affording relief against the separate estate of a married woman, does not proceed against her in personam, but against the estate or property only. But, notwithstanding, the court decided that “the covenant creates a personal obligation, and the party making it is bound, not as a feme covert, but as if she were a feme sole. Any property that she may hold under the provisions of the code as her separate estate may be made liable for the satisfaction of any recovery that may be had on the covenant: ’ ’ Worthington v. Cooke, 52 Md. 297, 308.

As we have intimated, however, section 2997, by specific enactment, subjects the wife to the same remedies that it does the husband, and this is in accord with reason and justice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P. 873, 36 Or. 390, 1900 Ore. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-leonard-or-1900.