Johnson v. Briscoe

79 S.W. 498, 104 Mo. App. 493, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 508
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 16, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 79 S.W. 498 (Johnson v. Briscoe) 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
Johnson v. Briscoe, 79 S.W. 498, 104 Mo. App. 493, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 508 (Mo. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

This controversy is over the purchase price of a gold watch which was bought by the defendant’s wife from the plaintiff, a dealer in general merchandise in the town of Argola, in Lewis .county. A long account, ranging over a year or two and made up of items of merchandise purchased and payments made by the defendant, was filed. The defendant paid for all the items of the bill except the watch. He refused to pay for that, asserting that it was bought by his wife and without authority.

The defendant is a farmer in moderate circumstances ; worth four or five thousand dollars. He had been married sixteen years when this litigation arose and had two daughters. So far as the evidence discloses he and his wife got along without trouble; his provision for his family of food, clothing, comforts and conveniences was like that of other farmers of the vicinity and suitable to his estate and social degree. As we gather, the defendant and his family are people of average means and station, of respectable conduct and enjoy the esteem of [496]*496their neighbors. Briscoe had been dealing with Johnson for several years and Mrs. Briscoe was in the habit of buying household supplies, clothing and such other articles as the family needed, on her husband’s credit; all of which he had paid for without complaint until the watch was bought. There was no testimony to show that Mrs. Briscoe’s purchases had included, previously, jewelry or other articles of an ornamental kind. A farmer who lived near the defendant’s home was permitted to testify, against the objection of the defendant, that his daughters carried watches. A great deal of testimony was introduced to show the circumstances of the defendant and the station in life occupied by his family, the purport of which has been stated above.

Under the instructions given to them the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff and the defendant appealed.

This instruction will illustrate the rule for ascertaining the defendant’s responsibility, given to the jury:

“If you find from the greater weight of the evidence that the watch purchased by defendant’s wife of plaintiff, and charged to defendant, was necessary and proper to equal her in adornment to her neighbors or the women generally of her neighborhood of her condition •and standing in life and society, then it would be a necessity in the meaning of the law and your verdict should be for the plaintiff, otherwise it should be for the defendant. The question is not what defendant would consider necessary and would willingly provide. The question is under all the circumstances and surroundings, and associations, was the purchase reasonable for the wife of one circumstanced, situated and surrounded as defendant had surrounded, circumstanced and placed his wife; was it reasonably necessary for her comfort and pleasure, under the style or mode of life adopted and chosen by her husband.”

It is impossible to collect from the books a theory of the husband’s liability in cases like this and a rule [497]*497of decision applicable under all circumstances. The power of a wife to pledge her husband’s credit is rested sometimes on his legal obligation, arising from the conjugal relation, to provide her with necessaries. Sauter v. Scrutchfield, 28 Mo. App. 150; Cunningham v. Reardon, 98 Mass. 538; Raynes v. Bennett, 114 Mass. 424; Arnold v. Allen, 9 Daly 198; Cromwell v. Benjamin, 41 Barb. 558; Reeve, Domestic Relation (4 Ed.), 114. In other cases the courts have preferred to found the wife’s power on an agency, express, implied or presumed, by virtue of which she may bind the husband to pay for articles she buys on his credit. Jolly v. Rees, 15 C. B. 628; Montague v. Benedict, 3 B. & C. 631; Debenham v. Mellon, 6 App. Cases 24; Lane v. Ironmonger, 13 M. & W. 368; Seaton v. Benedict, 5 Bing. 28; Reid v. Teakle, L. R. 13 C. B. 627; Atkins v. Curwood, 7 C. & P. 756; Freestone v. Butcher, 9 Car. & P. 643; Harshaw v. Merryman, 18 Mo. 106; Reese v. Chilton, 26 Mo. 598; Shelton v. Hoadley, 15 Conn. 535; Shelton v. Pendleton, 18 Conn. 417; Fredd v. Eves, 4 Harr. 385; Sawyer v. Cutting, 23 Vt. 486; Compton v. Bates, 10 Ill. App. 78. Each theory appears to be properly applied to cases presenting facts of a certain character and to be inapplicable under other circumstánces. If a husband refuses to provide for a wife, casts he? oft or notifies merchants not to sell her goods on his credit, she may, nevertheless, supply herself with necessaries at his expense; but she can not be said to do so as his agent or by his authority except as a legal fiction. But if the two are living together in the family relation, she may possess either actual or ostensible authority to make purchases in his name, and to the extent she has such apparent or real authority he will be bound by the contracts she makes. Obviously, the instance of a wife dwelling apart from her husband, or of one living with a husband who refuses to support her, and the instance of a wife and husband living amicably and co-operating in the [498]*498transaction of family affairs, present situations entirely unlike and call, therefore, for the use of different principles of law to determine whether and how far the husband’s credit may be pledged by the wife. Take this case: The defendant and his wife were dwelling together contentedly, so far as appears, and he was providing for the wants and comfort of his family, including herself, to their satisfaction, or, at least without complaint. There was no proof that she had ever asked him to get her a watch, or that he was unwilling to get her one. There may be a good reason why, at a particular time, it is inexpedient for a man to purchase such an article, useful but not indispensable, though he may be perfectly willing to purchase it when his affairs permit. He certainly ought to have something to say about what debts he will incur, if he is providing for his family according to his means. Nor is it conclusive of his duty that wives of persons of his fortune and station have watches. That fact by no means determines that he has been so remiss in not providing one for his wife that she may get it on his credit, as a thing of necessity. The cace is very different when a man’s neglect is a source of distress to his wife, whether she has been abandoned or is living with him. With facts like those we have before us, we think the power of a wife to pledge her husband’s credit must rest on an agency, either'express or implied. Everything Mrs. Briscoe bought from the defendant was sold to her on the assumption, not that she was unsuitably provided for, or was suffering; but as one having authority to pledge her husband’s credit for such articles as she was accustomed to buy. The better decisions declare the law to be that when husband and wife are living together, with the family relation undisturbed, and he is making such provision as excites no comment among their friends and no complaint from her, the question of her right to pledge his credit for any purchase, depends on her actual or ostensible authority, and is to be determined by the rules of the law [499]*499of agency. This was the conclusion of very eminent judges in dealing with the subject in cases similar to this one and of recent date, and in which the decisions were reviewed for the purpose of settling the law for the realm of England. Debenham v. Mellon, 6 App. Cases 24; Jolly v. Rees, 15 C. B. 629.

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.W. 498, 104 Mo. App. 493, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-briscoe-moctapp-1904.