Reed v. Crissey

63 Mo. App. 184, 1895 Mo. App. LEXIS 168
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 4, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 63 Mo. App. 184 (Reed v. Crissey) 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
Reed v. Crissey, 63 Mo. App. 184, 1895 Mo. App. LEXIS 168 (Mo. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

This is a suit in equity. The petition alleges that one Nelson Robeson departed this life testate, first naming the defendant, Orissey, in his last will, as executor thereof. It further alleges that the wife of the testator, D. J. S. Robeson, survived him; and'.that she, long prior to his death, was afflicted with an ovarian tumor, which had so grown and enlarged as to endanger her life; and that being so afflicted, it became necessary to save her life that the said tumor should be removed; that the testator, her husband, then living, although in duty bound to do so, absolutely refused and neglected to provide for her any such medical and surgical treatment as were necessary in and about the having said tumor removed, that her life might be spared.

It is further alleged that the wife of the testator, while so afflicted and suffering from such ovarian tumor, as a means of saving her life, was compelled to visit the city of-’ Chicago, in the state of Illinois, and place herself under the treatment of a certain physician and surgeon, skilled in the treatment of diseases such as she was afflicted with, and was by such physician and surgeon treated and cured of her said ailment.

It is further alleged that the testator’s wife incurred large expenses in and about her said treatment and cure, by way of doctor’s bills, hospital dues, attendance of nurses, board and medicine.

It is further alleged that the plaintiff, at the request of the testator’s wife, advanced to her, for the express purpose of' being used, and which was actually used by her in the payment of doctor’s bills, hospital dues, attendance of nurses, board and medicine — all of which were actual necessaries for her in her said condition [189]*189and which she could not there obtain upon the credit of her husband, the testator, — the sum of $500.

It was further alleged that no part of said sum of money had been repaid plaintiff, and that he had nó adequate remedy at law to recover from the estate of the said testator the moneys so advanced by him. .

The prayer was that the plaintiff be subrogated to the rights of the several persons, to whom the money so advanced was paid for necessaries, and that upon a final hearing of the cause the court ascertain the amount which plaintiff should be allowed, including interest, and that the amount so found be certified to the probate court for allowance and classification, etc.

The answer, besides containing a general denial, admitted that the said D. J. S. Robeson was the wife and widow of the testator, and that she was afflicted and sick, as charged in the petition, but set forth, as a defense, that the testator provided for her all necessary medical and surgical treatment, and, on being informed that it was necessary for a surgical operation to be performed for and upon her, he offered'to procure and have such operation performed by skillful and competent surgeons; but that she declined his offer .and refused to submit to such operation and against his will and protest she went to the city of Chicago to have the operation performed; that on her departure she agreed with the testator that the latter. should not be in any way responsible for the treatment she should receive, or any expense she should incur, during her absence, and that she would be responsible and pay the same.

It is further alleged that all the necessary expenses incurred by the wife in her said trip to Chicago, and. while there and for necessary treatment, were actually paid by the testator, or by the wife out of money belonging to him.

[190]*190The reply was a general denial. There was a trial, resulting in a decree for plaintiff, to reverse which decree the defendant has appealed.

It was objected by the defendant at the trial that the plaintiff was not a competent witness, under the statute, section 8918, since the other party to the contract in issue and trial was dead. This objection would be valid, did not the fact appear that the wife of the testator, in contracting the debt, in respect to which this action was brought, was his agent. The wife, with whom the debt was contracted, being, at the time of the trial, still living, the plaintiff was a competent witness to testify in respect to the contract. Orr v. Rode, 101 Mo. 387; Ward v. Ward, 37 Mich. 253.

Defendant further objects that Mrs. Robeson, the wife of the testator, was not a competent witness to testify in relation to the transaction which gave rise to the present suit. Section 8922, Revised Statutes, provides that no married woman shall be disqualified as a witness in any civil suit or proceeding, prosecuted in the name of or against her husband, in any business transaction, where the transaction was had and conducted by such married woman as the agent, of her husband. Under the provisions of this enabling statute, in all matters of business transactions which are conducted by a married woman as the agent of her husband, she is made a competent witness to testify in relation to such transaction, in any suit in the name of or against her husband. If she be a competent witness in a suit in the name of or against her husband, in respect to such transactions, she is likewise a competent witness in such an action by or against his executor or administrator.

It remains to inquire whether Mrs. Robeson, the wife of the testator, was his agent in the business transaction, by which, at her request, the plaintiff lent her said alleged sum of money, for the purpose of being [191]*191used in payment of her doctor’s bills, hospital dues, attendance of nurses, board and medicine, which were actual necessaries for her in her condition at that time ; for, if she was such agent, then she was a competent witness to testify in respect to such transaction, in an action by the plaintiff against her husband or his representative.

A husband is liable for necessaries furnished his wife. Necessaries, it is said, consist of food, drink, clothing, washing, physic, medical attention, instruction and a suitable place of residence. Sauter v. Scrutchfield, 28 Mo. App. 150; Schouler’s Domestic Rel., sec. 61; St. John's Parish v. Bronson, 40 Conn. 75.

A wife, in purchasing necessaries, is by operation of law the agent of her husband in that transaction and is a competent witness against him in a suit for such necessaries. Sauter v. Scrutchfield, supra; McKinney v. Guhman, 38. Mo. App. 344. And whatever may be the rule of the common law, equity allows one who has lent money to a distressed wife, with which to procure necessaries, to stand in the stead of the persons supplying the same, and to recover of the husband the amount actually paid by the wife out of the money so lent her. The lender is only bound in such ease to see that the loan is properly applied. Harris v. Lee, 1 P. Wms. 482; Walker v. Simpson, 7 W. & S. 83; Kenyon v. Farris, 47 Conn. 510; Ziegler v. David, 25 Ala. 127; Doan v. Soutten, 9 L. H. Equity Cases, 151; Jennen v. Morris, 3 De G. & Jones, 45.

So that it results that, in cases where the husband neglects to provide necessaries for the wife, she is, by operation of law, his agent, as well where she borrows money for the purpose of providing such necessaries, as where she directly purchases the same on the credit of her husband. In either case the law arms her with the power to bind the husband. And, being the agent [192]

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Bluebook (online)
63 Mo. App. 184, 1895 Mo. App. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-crissey-moctapp-1895.