Tiemeyer v. . Turnquist

85 N.Y. 516, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 118
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 21, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 85 N.Y. 516 (Tiemeyer v. . Turnquist) 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
Tiemeyer v. . Turnquist, 85 N.Y. 516, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 118 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The decision of the General Term, affirming the judgment entered upon the report of the referee, cannot be sustained, upon the ground on which it was rendered. It assumes as a fact that the purchase of family groceries, to recover the price of which the action was brought, was made by the wife, who is the defendant here, as the agent of her husband, and for the support and use of the family. It then decides that, by force of section 1 of the act of 1860, relating to the rights of married women, the property of the wife was made liable for the debt thus contracted; and such liability could be enforced by a personal action against her, ending in judgment and execution. This view of the case is erroneous, both as to the facts and as to the law. The referee found explicitly that the contract of purchase was made by the wife, on her own account and her own credit, and refused to find that she purchased as the agent of her husband. But, if that fact had been found, the legal conclusion asserted would not have followed. The section of the act of 1860 relied oh has no reference to, and makes no provision for, the liability of the wife in a personal action. Its plain scope and purpose is to free her property from the control of her husband, and the burden of his debts, and make it her sole and separate estate. *519 This is done with a single exception, and that is, as against debts contracted by her as the agent of her husband for the support of herself and her children.

As to such debts, the rule of a separate estate does not apply. In that case, her property is left exposed to be taken for the debt of her husband, as if the' statute had not been passed. But she is not made personally liable for the debt, for it is not hers, but the debt of the husband. It is not her contract, but his. She acts as his agent and binds him, not herself. The sole effect of the - provision is, not to, make her personally liable for her husband’s debt, for not a word of such grave import is contained in the statute; but merely that the shield and protection thrown over her property against the debts of her husband shall be withdrawn in a case where his debt has been contracted, his liability incurred, through her acting as his agent, and for the purpose of providing for her own support and that-of the children. Unless, therefore, we can find some other ground of liability, the judgment cannot be sustained, for upon the facts and the law referred to by the General Term the wife was not liable at all, and judgment should not have gone against her.

The facts found by the referee -were, in substance, the following : The wife was not engaged in any trade or business, and had no separate estate, except only her interest in a policy of insurance upon the life of her husband, taken out under the act of 1840, and payable, upon his death, to her if she survived him, but, if not, then to their children, of whom there were several. The husband applied to the assignor of the plaintiff for credit in the purchase of supplies for the family, but was refused because he was irresponsible and out of work. In' the emergency the wife intervened, and bought upon her credit, promising explicitly, to induce the sale to her, that she would pay the debt out of the proceeds of the policy of insurance when it should mature and be paid to her. By this means she obtained credit, the property was sold and delivered to her, and she used it, as she all the time intended, for the food and comfort of the family, including the husband. These findings *520 are not without evidence, and are conclusive upon this appeal, though the controversy upon the question to whom and upon whose credit the goods were sold was severe and close.

Upon this state of facts it was argued in behalf of the plaintiff that the wife who made the .contract of purchase had a separate estate, which consisted of her interest in the policy of insurance upon her husband’s life, and expressly charged that separate estate with the payment of her debt to plaintiff; that although that interest was contingent and depended upon her survival of her husband, it was nevertheless property, something of value, peculiarly and separately hers, and capable, but for statutory enactments, of being by her assigned and transferred; and, therefore, being possessed of a separate estate, and having expressly charged upon it the obligation sued upon, she became personally liable for the debt. (Manhattan B. & M. Co. v. Thompson, 58 N. Y. 80.)

It was contended, on the other side, that the interest of the wife in the policy of insurance was not, in any just sense, her separate estate; that by its very terms, and its inherent and essential character, it was not to be realized or transmuted into actual property until after the death of the husband, and when the question of a separate estate would have disappeared; that it was wholly contingent upon her life, and in case of her death before its maturity would go to her children, entirely unaffected by any act or contract of hers; that, even if it could be deemed a separate estate, it was not charged with the debt in question, because it could not be; that the policy was issued under the act of 1840, and was not assignable (Eadie v. Slim mon, 26 N. Y. 17; Barry v. Equitable Life Ass. Soc., 59 id. 587; Wilson v. Lawrence, 76 id. 585); that under the amendment of 1879 it is only assignable with the written consent of her husband; that the wife cannot.traffic with it or anticipate its proceeds, but it must be .kept intact as a provision for widowhood; and that the rule of the statute and of the courts, making it non-assignable and seeking to preserve it, becomes useless and a nullity if the wife may, in the life-time of her *521 husband, contract debts upon its faith, and so anticipate and absorb its proceeds.

The questions thus raised are interesting, and calculated to produce sincere debate. It does not, however, seem to us necessary to decide them, since we are of opinion that the defendant is liable upon her contract, irrespective of her interest in the policy of insurance, and disregarding that entirely,, and upon a ground differing both from that of the General Term and that of the referee. The latter states a true ground of liability, but sustains it in the end by a reference to the policy of insurance as constituting a separate estate in the wife. It has been long settled that a married woman is liable upon her contract when its consideration goes to the benefit of her separate estate. Besting upon that rule, the referee argues that the groceries bought of defendant enabled the husband to pay the premiums on the policy of insurance, and so served for its protection and went to its benefit. The facts were found in accordance with this theory, which, however, seems to us not beyond possible criticism, and requires for its support a direct adjudication that the policy of insurance constitutes a separate estate in the wife. We need not affirm or deny the proposition involved, since the view we take of the case is wholly independent of the doctrine stated by the referee.

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Bluebook (online)
85 N.Y. 516, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tiemeyer-v-turnquist-ny-1881.