Haas v. Shaw

91 Ind. 384, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 381
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1883
DocketNo. 9619
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 91 Ind. 384 (Haas v. Shaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haas v. Shaw, 91 Ind. 384, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 381 (Ind. 1883).

Opinions

Howk, J.

— In this case the appellants, the plaintiffs below, on the 20th day of October, 1880, filed their complaint against the appellees, in substance, as follows:

“ The plaintiffs Benjamin Haas, Barnhard Weis and Adolph Haas, partners, trading under the name and style of Haas & Weis, complain of Daniel J. Shaw and Eliza L. Shaw, as partners, trading under the name and style of Shaw & Co., and say that the defendants, as such partners, are indebted to the. plaintiffs in the sum of $828.41, for personal property sold and delivered by the plaintiffs to the defendants, as such partners, at their instance and request, the particulars of which are set forth in an account filed herewith, leaving due and unpaid said sum of $828.41, with interest due thereon from the 4th day of October, 1880. Wherefore,” etc.

It may be fairly inferred, we think, from the itemized account filed with the complaint, that the goods were sold and [386]*386delivered, as alleged, during the year 1880, although the dates are not stated with much accuracy.

With their complaint the appellants also filed an affidavit wherein they stated, among other things, that the “ defendants, and each of them, have sold, conveyed and otherwise disposed of their property, subject to execution, with the fraudulent intent to cheat, hinder and delay their creditors; and that the defendants, and each of them, are about to sell, convey and otherwise dispose of their property, subject to execution, with the fraudulent intent to cheat, hinder and delay their creditors.”

The appellees severed in their defence. The appellee Eliza L. Shaw answered the complaint in a special paragraph, to which the appellants’ demurrer, for the alleged insufficiency of the facts therein to constitute a cause of defence, was overruled by the court. They then replied specially, and to this reply the demurrer of Eliza L. Shaw, for the want of sufficient facts, was sustained by the court. The appellee Daniel J. Shaw answered the attachment proceedings in a special paragraph, to which the appellants’ demurrer, for the alleged insufficiency of the facts therein, was overruled by the court. They then replied specially, and to this reply the demurrer of Daniel J. Shaw, for the want of facts, was sustained by the court. The appellants duly excepted to each of these rulings, and declined to reply further to either of the separate answers-of the appellees. Thereupon the court rendered judgment that appellants take nothing by their suit against Eliza L. Shaw, that she recover of them her costsj and that as to her their attachment be discharged; that the appellants recover of Daniel J. Shaw the debt in suit and costs; and that the personal property, described in Daniel .1. Shaw’s answer, was exempt from sale, under the attachment proceedings.

The first error complained of by the appellants in this court is the overruling of their demurrer to the separate answer of Eliza L. Shaw to their complaint. In her answer she alleged,, in substance, that before and at the time of the supposed sale [387]*387and delivery of the personal property mentioned in appellants’ complaint, she was, hitherto had been, and then was a married woman and the wife of her co-appellee Daniel J. Shaw during all that time.

It is manifest, from our statement of this case, that the question of the sufficiency or insufficiency of this answer depends, for its proper decision, upon the construction which must be given to the provisions of an act entitled “An act concerning married women,” approved March 25th, 1879. This act took effect and became a law on the 31st day of May, 1879, and continued in force during all the time covered by the account in suit, and until the 19th day of September, 1881. Prior to the taking effect of the above entitled act of March 25th, 1879, married women in this State were protected by the disabilities imposed on them by the common law, and were incapable of binding themselves by an executory contract. Thus, in O’Daily v. Morris, 31 Ind. 111, this court said: “ It is a rule of the common law, too familiar and well settled to need the citation of authorities, that a femme covert is incapable of binding herself by an executory contract, and that all such contracts made by a married woman, whether in writing or by parol, are absolutely void at law. There is nothing in the legislation of this State in relation to married -women, changing this rule of the common law, at least so far as it applies to such contracts at large.” So the law remained, and so it was continuously construed by this court, until the taking effect of the aforesaid act of March 25th, 1879. Thomas v. Passage, 54 Ind. 106; American Ins. Co. v. Avery, 60 Ind. 566; Liberty Tp. Draining Ass’n v. Watkins, 72 Ind. 459; Pierce v. Osman, 79 Ind. 259; Eberwine v. State, ex rel., 79 Ind. 266; Parks v. Barrowman, 83 Ind. 561.

The first statutory innovation- upon this common law rule is the above entitled act of March 25th, 1879; and while the provisions of the act must be liberally construed, according to their true intent and meaning, yet, as they are in derogation of the -common .law rule, they are not to be enlarged by [388]*388construction beyond the plain meaning of the language used by the law-making power in their enactment. Pott. Dwarris, 257; Schwarm v. Osborn, 59 Ind. 245; Logan v. Logan, 77 Ind. 558. After the act took effect and became a law, a married woman in this State was emancipated from the disabilities imposed on her for her own protection by the common law, to the precise extent, and no further, contemplated and expressed by the General Assembly in the language of the statute. In other words, the common law rule still prevailed, after the taking effect of the act, except as such rule was abrogated or modified by the plain intent of the statute.

With this prefatory statement, we will now set out so much of the above entitled act of March 25th, 1879, as seems to us to have any bearing upon the proper decision of the question presented by the alleged error of the trial court in overruling the appellants’ demurrer to the separate answer of Eliza L. Shaw. Omitting the enacting clause, section 1 provided that “A married woman may bargain, sell, assign and transfer her separate personal property the same as if she were sole.”

“Sec. 2. A married woman may carry on any trade or business, and perform any labor or service on her sole and separate account. The earnings and profits of any married woman, accruing from her trade, business, services or labor, other than labor for her husband or family, shall be her sole and separate property.”

“ Sec. 3. A married woman may enter into any contract in reference to her separate personal estate, trade, business, labor or service, and the management and improvement of her separate real property, the same as if she were sole, and her separate estate, real and personal, shall be liable therefor on execution or other judicial process.”

“Sec. 8. A husband shall not be liable for any debts contracted by the wife in carrying on any trade, labor or business on her sole and separate account, nor for improvements made by her authority on her separate real property.”

“Sec. 10. A married woman shall not mortgage or in any [389]

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91 Ind. 384, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haas-v-shaw-ind-1883.