Quilty v. . Battie

32 N.E. 47, 135 N.Y. 201, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 413, 90 Sickels 201, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1608
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 32 N.E. 47 (Quilty v. . Battie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quilty v. . Battie, 32 N.E. 47, 135 N.Y. 201, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 413, 90 Sickels 201, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1608 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Maynard, J.

The plaintiff has recovered against both defendants, who are husband and wife, for injuries resulting from the bite of a vicious dog.

The liability of the wife is disputed on the grounds that she is a married woman; that the dog belonged to her husband, and that she is not responsible for the trespasses committed by it. There is no conflict in the evidence upon any material point affecting her liability. She had been the owner of the premises where the dog was kept since December, 1887. They formerly belonged to her husband, and when she acquired title the dog remained there and was fed and cared for by her. It was shown to have had vicious propensities to her knowledge, and on one occasion she interfered to protect it when a person whom it had attacked attempted to strike it in self-defense. She bore the expenses of the household, and, with her husband, constituted the entire family. There is no proof in the record that he had any property there except the dog, or that he had the care or management of his wife’s property, or was in possession of it as her tenant, or assumed *204 to control or direct her with respect to the domestic animals which should be kept upon the place.

As stated in Addison on Torts (D. & B. ed. 230), it is not material in actions of this character whether the defendant is the owner of the dog or not. It is enough for the maintenance of the action that he keeps the dog, and the harboi’ing a dog about one’s pi’emises, or allowing it to be or resort there, is a sufficient keeping to suppoi’t the action. As soon as such an animal is known to be mischievous it is the duty of the pei’son whose premises it fx-equents to send it away or cause it to be destroyed.

The ti’ial judge chai’ged the jury, in substance, that if the dog was vicious and Mrs. Battie knew it, and, with such knowledge of its viciousness, kept and harbored it upon her premises, she was liable for the injury which plaintiff had sustained.

It is not denied that this instruction was unexceptionable unless the defendant was relieved from liability because of the fact that the dog was the property of her husband, and that he lived with her in the house and upon the premises where it was harbored and kept. A vicious domestic animal, if permitted to run at lai’ge, is a nuisance, and a person who knowingly keeps or kax'bors it, and thus affords it a place of refuge and pi'otection, is liable for the maintenance of a nuisance, and for all the damages directly resulting from it.

The question, therefore, presented by this appeal, when plainly stated, is whether a married woman, under the laws of this state, has not such freedom of control over her own x-eal property that her husband can, without her consent and against her will, establish and maintain a nuisance upon it %

The foirm in which it hei-e arises most favorable to the appellants is upon their request for an instruction to the jury that the husband is the head of the family and controls what domestic animals shall be admitted to the. household or kept about the house, to which the trial judge responded: “I so charge where the husband is the owner of the property, but where the wife is the owner of the property I decline to charge that.”

*205 The Married Woman’s Act of 1848 (Chap. 200, amended by chap. 375 of 1849) empowered Mrs. Battie to take and hold this real property to her sole and separate use, and to convey and dispose of it and its rents, issues and profits in the same manner and with like effect as if she was unmarried, and declared that it should not be subject to the disposal of her husband or hable for his debts. There does not seem to be much room for doubt as to the scope and object of this legislation. It effectually removes the common-law disability of the wife which deprived her of the possession and control of her property during coverture, and, to that extent, it extinguished the common-law rights and powers of the husband. Because it is in derogation of his common-law privileges it is to be rigidly applied and not extended by implication beyond its strict letter; but it is also a remedial act, and as to its clearly expressed subject-matter it should have a liberal construction. Full and absolute ownership of all property which the wife might have or acquire, with all its incidents, privileges and burdens, was 'evidently conferred upon her by this statute. In the acquisition and enjoyment of such property she shall be deemed to be an unmarried woman. Marital control of it was completely abrogated; not a trace of it was permitted to remain.

Her husband is thus placed upon the same footing as a stranger, and has no greater authority than a stranger to impose a burden upon her separate estate, or to restrict or embarrass her in the exercise of exclusive dominion over it. Afterwards came the act of 1860 (Oh. 90, amended by ch. 172 of 1862), which materially enlarged her rights and powers, and, among other things, provided that her property should, notwithstanding her marriage, be and remain her sole and separate property, and might be used, collected and invested by her in her own name, and should not be subject to the interference or control of her husband. Horwas she left powerless to enforce these newly acquired rights. Section 3 of the act of 1862, subsequently incorporated into section 450 of the Code, provided that in all matters relating to her separate *206 property she might sue and be sued, as if she were sole. She has the same remedies to prevent or restrain her husband from unlawfully interfering with her property, as she has against any other person. If he keeps upon her premises a ferocious animal, she has the same authority of law to protect herself against this infringement of her property rights as against a like trespass by a neighbor. In Minier v. Minier (4 Lans. 421) the General Term of the third department held that the wife could maintain ejectment against her husband, and Judge Parker, in his opinion, says that it is both logical and reasonable to construe the acts of 1860 and 1862 as entitling her to bring just such a suit against her husband in relation to her property as she may bring against any other person.” And as to her, property, he further says : “ The relation of husband does not affect it; as to it, the parties are strangers to each other.”

In Baum v. Mullen (47 N. Y. 579) Ohief Judge Church, in commenting upon the effect of the act of 1862, says that with respect to her own property the wife “ is to be treated as unmarried. All the rights of an unmarried woman are conferred upon her, and all correlative obligations are imposed. The statute has declared equality of rights, and equality of obligations and duties, and courts have no alternative but to enforce both. The wife is liable in the same manner, and to the same extent for frauds or torts committed in the management of her property, as she is upon contracts relating to it.”

In Rowe v. Smith (45 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.E. 47, 135 N.Y. 201, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 413, 90 Sickels 201, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quilty-v-battie-ny-1892.