Peck v. Marling's Adm'r.

22 W. Va. 708, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 94
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 22 W. Va. 708 (Peck v. Marling's Adm'r.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peck v. Marling's Adm'r., 22 W. Va. 708, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 94 (W. Va. 1883).

Opinions

GREEN, Judge:

The principal question involved in this case is whether the county court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the replication of the plaintiff to the plea of the defendant, that his intestate was, at the time of making the contract sued on, a [711]*711married woman. Tlie plaintiff in error claims that the replication alleged substantially, that she was then living separate and apart from her husband. Admitting for the present for argument’s sake that this is the correct interpretation ,of this replication, ought the county court to have sustained the demurrer to it ? It may be regarded as settled law in 'this State, that the plea of coverture, when the, contract was made, is a good plea in bar to any action brought on any contract. (Stockton v. Farley, 10 W. Va. Rep. and also Carey & Co. v. Burruss Pitzer, 20 W. Va. 571.) We are now to determine whether a replication to such a plea, that she was at the time the contract was made living separate and apart from her husband, is good. It is well settled in this State .by the decisions, that a married woman living with her husband is in all eases utterly incapable of making any contract, which a court of law would regard as binding upon her. Such a contract is absolutely null and void as against her in a court of law.

The question now is: Would the fact, that, when the contract was made, she was living separate and apart from her husband, vary the case and render such contract valid against her in a court of law? At common law her contract would in a court of law be regarded as invalid and null as against her, when made while living separate and apart from her husband, precisely as it would be if she were living with him; and the only question to be considered is whether this legal incapacity to make any contract binding on her, which the common law imposed on every married woman, has beeii removed in this State by statute-law. If it has been so removed, it must have been by section 13 of chapter 66 of the Code of West Virginia, pages 449 and 450, which is as follows: “A married woman living separate and apart from her husband may in her own name carry on any trade or business; and the stock or property used in such trade, and the issues and profits thereof, together with her .own earnings, realized from such trade or business, shall be her sole and separate property, and shall not be subject to the control of her husband nor liable for his debts.” ■

Does this .section remove the incapacity, which the common law imposed on a married womaii living separate, and [712]*712apart from her husband to make any contract binding on her ? If it does, a common law court should recognize as valid against her a contract made by a manned woman when living separate and apart from her husband, otherwise, it should not. This section does not expressly remove such incapacity from such married woman. ■ Does it do so by implication.? We ought not in interpreting a statute of this description to extend the fair meaning of the language of the statute, so as to include in it a removal of such incapacity of a married woman to contract, so universally recognized by the common law, when such purpose is not expressed in the statute, unless the implication of the removal of such incapacity is obviously necessary to carry out the clearly expressed objects of the statute. This we understand is the spirit, which pervades the West Virginia decisions above referred to.

It remains then to consider, whether the expressed objects of section 13 of chapter 66 of our Code would be practical!)' defeated, unless we construed this section as impliedly removing the incapacity of a married woman living separate and apart from her husband to make contracts, which would be recognized by the conxmou law courts as valid againsther. This section expressly authorizes her in her own name, when living separate and apart from her husband, to carry on any trade or business. Can she practically do this, unless the common law courts recognize her contracts made in carrying on such trade or business as valid and binding on her? It seems to me obvious, that she can not. If, for instance, she was engaged- in the very common business of buying and selling on credit goods, wares and merchandise or live-stock or provisions or meats, could she practically carry on such a business or many other kinds of business, if the common law courts refused to recognize her contracts as valid and binding on her? Who would deal with her if in every instance, where she did not comply with a contract of purchase, a chancery suit had to be brought to enforce against her separate estate any debt she might contract in her business? If engaged in business she could make contracts every day; and if these contracts were all deemed invalid in the common law courts against her, the practical effect would be to prevent any person from dealing with her in'her business; and thus [713]*713she would be practically prevented from carrying on such trade or-business, tliougb expressly authorized to do so by this statute. ¥e feel therefore compelled to construe this statute as impliedly removing from married women living separate and apart from their husbands the common law incapacity or disability of making contracts binding on them; and to hold that contracts made by such married women must be recognized as valid against them by the common law courts; and that if sued upon them in a common law court, they could not successfully rely upon their coverture, when the contracts were made as a bar to their liability on them.

These views are sustained by the spirit of the decisions generally in other States. Thus in Frecking v. Rolland, 53 N. Y. 422, 425, where the statute expressly authorized a married woman to carry on a trade or other business, the power to make contracts in relation to the business comes by implication from such statute. Andrews, judge, says in this cause: “ The statute of March 2, 1860, provides that a married woman may carry on any trade or business and perform any labor 'or services on her sole and separate account, and the earnings thereof shall be her sole and sepárate property. The power of a married woman to make contracts relating to her separate business is incident to the power to conduct it. It cannot be supposed, that the Legislature, while conferring the power upon a married woman to enter into trade or business on her own account, intended that her common-law disability to bind herself by contract should continue as to contracts made in carrying on the business, in which she was permitted to engage. The power to engage in business would be a barren and useless one disconnected with the right to conduct it by the means usually employed.” See also Adams v. Honness, 62 Barb. 336, in which this statute received the same construction.

In Plumer v. Lord, 5 Allen 460, under a precisely similar statute in Massachusetts it was held, that a married woman could under this statute enter into partnership in business with a third person, which would be recognized in a law-court as binding on her.

These were common law suits, in which these views were [714]*714expressed, and with other decisions construing statutes, which authorized married women generally to carry on business, confined her legal capacity to make a contract binding on her to be inferred from such statutes, to contracts made in carrying on such business.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Martufi v. Daniels
129 S.E. 709 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1925)
Rogers v. Daniel
1923 OK 588 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1923)
Kittle v. Kittle
102 S.E. 799 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1920)
Spangler v. Vermillion
92 S.E. 449 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1917)
Marshall v. McDermitt
90 S.E. 830 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1916)
Wick v. Beck
171 Iowa 115 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1915)
Meaher v. Mitchell
92 A. 492 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1914)
Matheny v. Farley
66 S.E. 1060 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1910)
Zent v. Sullivan
91 P. 1088 (Washington Supreme Court, 1907)
Mynes v. Mynes
35 S.E. 935 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1900)
Naumer v. Gray
28 A.D. 529 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)
Williamson v. Cline
20 S.E. 917 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1895)
Thorn v. Sprouse
20 S.E. 676 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1894)
Trapnell v. Conklyn
16 S.E. 570 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1892)
Pickens's Ex'rs v. Kniseley
15 S.E. 997 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1892)
White v. Foote L. & M. Co.
1 S.E. 572 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1887)
Kennaird v. Jones
9 Gratt. 183 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1852)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 W. Va. 708, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peck-v-marlings-admr-wva-1883.