Curry v. Shrader
Curry v. Shrader
Opinion of the Court
This suit 'is against husband and wife, upon a note made by the wife -whilst sole. Upon the trial, it appeared' that some time after the suit was commenced, the husband had received in right of his wife money and notes to an amount greater than'the debt sued for, but at the commencement of the suit had received nothing. At common law the husband became liable for the debts of the wife, contracted before the marriage, whether she brought to him property or not. The marriage alone bound the husband, during the coverture, to the payment of her debts. But by an act of our Legislature passed in the year 1846, it is provided, “ That the property of the wife at the time of the marriage, or which she may receive by descent, bequest or gift, shall not be subject .to the -debts or liabilities of the husband contracted or incurred before the marriage; nor shall the husband be liable to pay the ante-nuptial contracts or liabilities of the wife, further than the property received by the wife; but such property received by the wife, shall be liable to her-debts, notwithstanding the termination of the coverture.” See Pamph. Acts of 1845-6, p. 24, § 6.
Under the influence of this statute, it is clear that to charge the husband with the debts of the wife, contracted before the marriage, it must appear that he has received property or effects in right of his wife sufficient to pay them;f and he cannot be fiharged with the debts of his wife contracted dum sola, beyond
But it is contended that the marriage does not extinguish the liability of the wife, and there is no mode of obtaining a judgment at law against her, except it be jointly against her and husband. We see the difficulty arising out of the statute, presented by this view, and feel the necessity of adopting some mode, or of laying down some rule, by which a creditor may obtain a judicial recognition of a debt against a married woman, when the husband is not liable for its payment. But it is not and will not be necessary in this case to decide the question, or prescribe the remedy that must be adopted in such cases. It may, however, be observed, that the remedy must be either against her alone at law, or a bill in equhy must be filed, on the ground that there is a legal right, but no legal remedy to enforce it. The latter course, in my judgment, is the proper remedy; but as it is not necessary to decide the point, the court prefers that it should remain an open question, until it becomes indispensably necessary to decide it.
Let the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded,.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CURRY & GROCE v. SHRADER & WIFE
- Status
- Published