Levy v. Davis

125 Tenn. 342
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 125 Tenn. 342 (Levy v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Levy v. Davis, 125 Tenn. 342 (Tenn. 1911).

Opinion

Mu. Justice Green

delivered tlie opinion of the Court.

Referring to the hill herein, in so far as it relates to the questions discussed in this opinion, its averments are:

Prom March, 1909, until the spring of 1910, ■ Mrs. James Davis was engaged in the mercantile business in Clarksviile. She was a married woman, living with her husband. During this period, while living with her husband and while engaged in trade, she became indebted to the complainants for goods bought from them for use in the conduct of her business.

Prior to this time her husband took out a policy of insurance in her favor for |2,000. He has since died. For the satisfaction of their claim against her for goods sold to her while she was in business, the complainants seek to reach the proceeds of this policy of insurance, and have filed their bill, making Mrs. Davis and the insurance company defendants.

A demurrer to this bill was filed, one of the grounds of which was:

“The bill shows that the debts alleged in the bill as owed by the defendant are general debts, and that the funds sought to be reached and subjected to the satisfaction of said alleged general debts- are. derived from, and are the proceeds of, a life insurance policy on the life of the deceased husband of this defendant, in which policy she was named as the beneficiary.
“Said life insurance is exempt to her, under the statute laws of the State of Tennessee, is her separate prop[345]*345erty, under the laws of this State, and is not liable to the satisfaction of the debts claimed in the bill.”

This demurrer was sustained by the chancellor, and from his decree an appeal was taken to this court.

It should first be observed that the debts to which the proceeds of this policy are sought to be subjected are the debts of the wife, and not the debts of the husband. Therefore the funds collected from the policy are not exempt, under sections 4231 and 4232 of Shannon’s Code. These statutes merely provide that the proceeds of a policy on the husband’s life shall be exempt from his debts, and have no reference to the debts of the wife herself.

So that, if the sum realized from this policy is exempt from these debts of Mrs. Davis, it must be so held, because said fund is her separate estate, and not by force of the statutes relating to insurance on the husband’s life.

It may be conceded that the interest of Mrs. Davis in this policy is her separate estate. This question has been considered several times by this court, and it has been uniformly held that such a policy of insurance on the life of a husband, payable to the wife, is her separate estate. Hughey v. Warner, 124 Tenn., 725, 140 S. W., 1058, and cases there cited.

These mercantile debts of Mrs. Davis were incurred by her while engaged in business, without any special contract on her part to bind her separate estate for the payment thereof. It is insisted, therefore, in her behalf, that under the well-settled rule in this State this fund, [346]*346being her separate estate, cannot be beld liable for these debts, in the absence of an express contract by her to this effect.

Undoubtedly, if she bad not been engaged in mercantile or manufacturing business, or bad sbe contracted a general indebtedness otherwise than in such business, her separate estate could not be subjected to its payment without an express agreement on her part that it might be so held. This principle is too familiar to require citation of authority.

It remains, however, to consider in this case the effect of chapter 82 of the Acts of 1897. That act is as follows:

“An act to be entitled an act to define the liability of married women on their contracts, when engaged in the mercantile or manufacturing business.
“Section 1. Be it enacted by the general assembly of the State of Tennessee, that when married women are engaged in the mercantile or manufacturing business in their own names, or by an agent, or as partner, they shall be liable for the debts incurred in the conduct of such business, as if they were femme sole, and no plea of coverture shall avail in such cases.”

This act, it will be seen, declares that a " married woman engaged in business shall be liable for the debts created in such business, as if a femme sole. It is said that, regarding her as femme sole, she could not hold property as a separate estate, and all the property to which she had title would accordingly be liable for her mercantile debts, whether such property was acquired as a general estate or to her separate use.

[347]*347To the contrary, it is urged on behalf of Mrs. Dayis that, properly construed, this act has no such meaning as complainants ascribe to it. It is insisted that the intention of the act Avas only to take aivay the defense of coverture from a married woman engaged in the mercantile or manufacturing business; that the act prevents her from purchasing goods and escaping liability for their value because she is a married woman; that judgment can be rendered against her by reason of the act; but that such judgment stands on the same plane as any other judgment which might have been obtained against her in the absence of the statute, had she failed upon suit to interpose a plea of coverture. We are referred to the cases holding that judgments against married women cannot be satisfied out of their separate estates, unless the claims upon which the judgments were based were charges against such separate estate. Woodfolk v. Lyon, 98 Tenn., 269, 39 S. W., 227; Chatterton v. Young, 2 Tenn. Ch., 771; Jordan v. Keeble, 85 Tenn., 417, 3 S. W., 511.

This is a plausible construction of the statute, but we cannot agree that it is the true construction. In fact, such a construction omits from the statute an entire phrase, to wit: “As if they were femme sole

Learned counsel for Mrs. Davis interpret the act as if it read, married women “shall be liable for the debts incurred in the conduct of such business, . . . and no plea of coverture shall avail in such cases.” They do not take into account the important words, “as if they were femme sole ” used to indicate the character of lia[348]*348bility imposed upon married women engaged in business.

Tire act undoubtedly renders a married, woman engaged in business liable to judgment for her mercantile debts. It has been so held in Persica v. Maydwell, 102 Tenn., 207, 52 S. W., 145. Sucb, however, is not the extent of the act, unless we elide the pointed phrase heretofore referred to. It is the duty of the court, in construing a statute, if possible, to give every word and phrase some meaning. Doty v. Telephone, etc. Co., 123 Tenn., 329, 130 S. W., 1053. There is no justification in authority or reason for omitting or excluding a phrase such as this one, in determining the meaning of this statute.

The act is entitled, “An act to define the liability of married women” as to certain contracts of theirs; that is to say, the purpose of the act is to declare in what manner, and how, married'women shall be held in reference to certain of their obligations.

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125 Tenn. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levy-v-davis-tenn-1911.