Ruhl v. Heintze

97 A.D. 442, 89 N.Y.S. 1031
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 97 A.D. 442 (Ruhl v. Heintze) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruhl v. Heintze, 97 A.D. 442, 89 N.Y.S. 1031 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

The plaintiff brings this action to recover certain trunks containing her personal wardrobe, or- their value, such trunks being retained by the defendant, a boarding-house keeper, who claims a lien upon the same for-the amount of a board bill aggregating something over $150. The answer alleges that the defendant, between the 11th day of May, 1903, and the 6th day of July, 1903, furnished to the plaintiff and to Jacob Buhl, her husband, at the request of the plaintiff and her said husband, accommodation, board and lodging for herself, the plaintiff’s . said husband and the plaintiff’s daughter, the agreed price of which was $200. Upon the trial the learned court below dismissed the complaint and gave judgment for the defendant for the amount of the counterclaim. The plaintiff appeals.'

The plaintiff was called as a witness in her own behalf, and testified to facts sufficient to establish her right to the return of the trunks, and upon cross-examination the defendant made her his witness to establish the alleged contract for board, lodging, etc. She testified in substance that her husband, Jacob Buhl, visited Mrs. Heintze, defendant’s wife, and engaged rooms and board, getting an option upon the rooms until Saturday evening at nine o’clock; that on the Saturday evening in question the plaintiff, accompanied by her husband and daughter, visited the premises, and on going to the door were told by Mrs. Heintze that the time had expired and that the rooms had been rented; that Mrs. Heintze, however, insisted on showing the rooms, and that the entire party visited them; that during the entire visit plaintiff’s husband conversed with Mrs. Heintze in German, which the plaintiff could not understand, and that she knew absolutely nothing of what arrangements were being made in reference to the price until after they had come downstairs and had gone out in front of the house, when plaintiff’s husband told her he had engaged the apartments with board for the three at twenty-five dollars per week; that during the time the plaintiff was in the rooms she told her husband, in response to an inquiry from him, that she would come to the apartments one week [444]*444from the following Monday, it appealing from the subsequent testimony that the plaintiff had been temporarily living apart from her husband, who was addicted to periodical drunkenness, and that the-conversation between husband and wife related to the question of whether she would return and live with him in these particular-apartments ; that she did take up her residence in- such apartments-at the time indicated, she and her daughter taking possession with their trunks one week before the husband; that, she did not at that-time,, or at any subsequent time, agree to pay the board and rent that she handed the checks with which the board was paid to Mrs. Heintze, and that these checks were made to her order by the company which employed her husband, it being explained that the* plaintiff’s husband being addicted to drink it was unsafe to give him the money, his brother, August Ruhl, apparently attending to this, detail, and the latter testified (though this was struck out on motion of the defendant, and over the objection of the plaintiff) that these* checks represented Jacob Rühl’s earnings and that they did not. belong to Mrs. Ruhl; that she did hot, at any subsequent time,, in consideration of being permitted to remain in the apartments,, agree to pay all of the board -then due and such as should subsequently accrue, and generally negatived the defendant’s theory that the plaintiff had contracted to pay for the board and lodgings-of the family. In this she was fully corroborated by her daughter, in so far as the original interview was concerned,, she insisting that the entire conversation relating to the terms of the contract was in German, which she could not understand, and that it was only after they had reached the ground in front of the house that her father told them the rate which had been agreed upon. When we-remember that the common-law duty of ahusband to support his family has not 'been changed by legislation* relating to married women, and that liability for necessaries, furnished to the family of a married man is presumptively and primarily upon the husband, unless the wife by express agreement charges herself personally with the same (Grandy v. Hadcock, 85 App. Div. 173, 174, and authorities.there cited), it would seem that the defendant had failed to establish any kind of liability on the part of the plaintiff. The presumption that the contract was that óf the husband, even if made by the wife, for board and lodg[445]*445ing, would be against the defendant; board and lodging are necessaries, and where the defendant had notice that the plaintiff had a husband, she was bound to assume that she was contracting with him for the support of his family unless the plaintiff undertook in express terms to assume the burden which the law casts upon the husband. It appears without contradiction that plaintiff’s husband went to Mrs. Heintze before the visit of. the family to the premises on Saturday evening, and secured an option upon the rooms; this contract, while without consideration, was with Mrs. Heintze, acting as agent for the defendant; it was notice to her of the fact that she was dealing with Mr. Ruhl, the head of the family, and when she subsequently permitted the family to occupy the rooms and accepted pay for them, she consummated the contract originally made with Mr. Ruhl,. unless Mrs. Ruhl positively undertook the duty of paying for the support of the family. It appears without contradiction that she had no money of her own, and that she had no resources other than the money furnished her by her husband in the manner which was explained in the evidence, so that the strong inference is raised that she never undertook a responsibility which she had no means of carrying out.

But the defendant called Mrs. Heintze, and she testified that when the plaintiff and her husband appeared after the witness had given the option to Mr. Ruhl, the plaintiff, her husband and daughter looked over the rooms, and that while the conversation between the witness and Mr. Riihl was carried on in Herman that Mr. Ruhl explained to Mrs. Ruhl and lie made out $25, the large front and large back room with board for the three; and Mrs. Ruhl said now I take the rooms and we will be here Monday, the 6th of October and she came Monday the 6th of October.” This is the substance of her testimony on which it is sought to establish the plaintiff’s liability for the support of Jacob Ruhl’s family, though there is some testimony that subsequently when the witness asked Mrs. Ruhl to pay for the board and lodging the plaintiff promised to pay all that was due and all that was subsequently to become due; but this is denied, and we are persuaded that the plaintiff did not intend to enter upon any agreement to answer for the debts of her husband, and if she did, the promise was without consideration and was void under the Statute of Frauds (Laws of 1897, chap. 417, § 21), [446]*446as it was: not in writing, signed by the party to be charged. (Maxon v. Scott, 55 N. Y. 247, 249.)

The plaintiff urges on this appeal that the defendant having made her his own witness lie is bound by her testimony, under the rule that a party may not impeach his own witness.

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Bluebook (online)
97 A.D. 442, 89 N.Y.S. 1031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruhl-v-heintze-nyappdiv-1904.