Yale v. Dederer
This text of 21 Barb. 286 (Yale v. Dederer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The rule is well settled at law, that a married woman cannot bind herself personally by any contract, in regard to her separate property, and no action at law can be [291]*291maintained against her upon such contract. (Beard v. Webb, 2 Bos. & Pull. 93. Marsall v. Rutton, 8 T. R. 545. Van Derheyden v. Mallory, 1 Comst. 462.) The rule, however, is different in equity, and I will proceed to state briefly, the principles which are deducible from the cases in courts of equity, without going into an examination of the cases themselves. As regards her separate property, a married woman is regarded as a feme sole, having the general power of disposing of it. Her separate property, however, is not in equity liable for the payment of her general debts, or of her general personal engagements. If therefore, during her coverture, she contracts debts generally, without doing any act indicating an intention to charge her separate estate with the payment thereof, courts of equity will not entertain jurisdiction to compel payment of such debts out of her separate estate. (2 Roper on Husb. and Wife, 235 to 238, ch. 21, 2. Greatley v. Noble, 3 Mad. 94. Anguillor v. Anguillor, 5 id. 418. Duke of Bolton v. Williams, 2 Ves. jun. 138, 150, 156. 4 Bro. Ch. 297. 9 Ves. 498. 2 Story’s Eq. Jur. § 1398.) The separate estate will, however, in equity, be held liable for all debts, incumbrances and other engagements which she has expressly or by implication charged thereon. (2 Story’s Eq. § 1399, and cases.) There has not been entire uniformity of opinion amongst those who have administered the equity jurisprudence of Great Britain and this country, as to what circumstances, in the absence of any positive intention to charge her separate estate, shall be deemed sufficient to create such charge. It is agreed, on all hands, that there must be an intention to charge her separate estate; otherwise the debt will not affect it. The fact that the debt has been contracted during coverture, either as principal or surety for her husband, or jointly with him, seems ordinarily to be held prima facie evidence to charge her separate estate, as will be seen by reference to the following cases and authorities: (Hulme v. Tenant, 1 Bro. Ch. 16, 21, note 1. Crosby v. Church, 3 Beavan, 489. 1 Craig & Phil. 48, 52, 54, 55. 22 Wend. 526. 2 Story’s Eq. 1398 to 1400, 1401. 15 Ves. 558. 17 id. 365. 9 id. 497, note (a.) 4 Sim. 82. 3 Myl. & Rus. 209. 1 Sandf. Ch. 26. [292]*29220 Wend. 570, 15 Barb. 558. 1 Comst. 462. 4 Russ. 112, 3 Mad. Ch. 387, 79, 94. 2 P. Wms. 145. 2 Ves. sen. 193. 2 Ves.jun. 138. 9 Ves. 486. 5 Mad. Ch. 414. 2 Beav. 363, 9 Ball & Beatty, 49. 2 Roper on Husb. and Wife, 243, ch. 21, § 3. White's Eq. Cases, 324 to 344. 49 Law Lib. N. S. p. 355 to 378. Bell on Law of Prop., Law Lib. vol. 51, N. S. 513, &c. ch. 7.) These cases hold that if the wife have separate property, and joins with her husband in giving a promissory note, even as surety for him, she thereby charges her separate estate, in equity, with the payment thereof. The doctrines upon which courts of equity have attained the result that the separate estate of a married woman was chargeable in equity, where there was no intention expressed to create a charge, are somewhat artificial in their texture, and can hardly be said to be uniform or consistent. The liability, however, in such cases, of her separate property, in equity, to pay such debts, is too well settled to cavil about the consistency of the reasons by which the courts have arrived at the result. This history of the law and the result of the cases are well stated in Bell on the law of property, (Law Library, vol. 51, p. 513, &c. ch. 7.) I therefore direct that a judgment be entered for the plaintiff for the relief demanded in the complaint,
Mason, Justice.]
The following is the judgment entered in pursuance of the above decision, as approved by the court: This action having heretofore been brought on to be heard upon the pleadings and the evidence taken therein, and Henry R. Mygatt having been heard of counsel for the plaintiff, and Selah Squiers, Esq., having been heard of counsel for the defendant, and the court having duly considered the said, pleadings, evidence and arguments, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed as follows:
First. That there is justly due at this date, to the plaintiff, on the promissory note made to the plaintiff, for nine hundred and ninety-eight dollars, with interest, on the 26th day of December, 1853, by the defendants Nicholas A. Dederer and Eliza Ann Dederer his wife, the sum of one thousand one hundred and ten dollars and seventy-two cents, and that the same be declared an equitable lien upon the personal and real separate estate of the said Eliza Ann Dederer, and that the personal estate be first applied to the payment thereof, and if not sufficient for that purpose, then the real estate.
[293]*293Second. That the said Eliza Arm Dederer, by joining with her said husband in the said promissory note, charged her separate estate with the payment thereof, and that the said one thousand one hundred and ten dollars and seventy-two cents, with interest from this date, and the plaintiff’s costs, to be adjusted by the clerk of this court, with interest thereon from the date of said adjustment, and the sum of sixty dollars in addition thereto, in pursuance of section 308 of the code of procedure, be paid from the personal and real estate of the said Eliza Ann Dederer, by the receiver to be appointed in this action,
■Third. It is hereby referred to "William N. Mason, of said county of Chenango, as a suitable referee to take an account of the separate estate, both real and personal, of the said Eliza Ann Dederer, and of the income thereof, and the situation and possession thereof, and report the same to this court.
Fourth.
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21 Barb. 286, 1855 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yale-v-dederer-nysupct-1855.