Francis v. Dickel & Co.
Francis v. Dickel & Co.
Opinion of the Court
This suit was brought by George A. Dickel & Company against Thomas Francis and his wife, Mrs. Thomas Francis, as partners, doing business under the firm name of Thomas Francis, for the recovery of a bill of merchandise. Mrs. Francis filed pleas of the general issue, no partnership, and that she was a feme covert, being the wife of Thomas Francis.
Upon these pleas the parties went to trial, and the jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs against Mrs. Thomas Francis for the amount of the debt sued.
The legal effect of the verdict was to find that she was not a partner of Thomas Francis, but engaged in business for herself, and the sole owner thereof, with liability for the debts.
Being dissatisfied with this verdict, she moved the court for a new trial, upon the statutory grounds, and because the judge charged the jury, substantially, that if Thomas Francis was an employé only, and that the business was Mrs. Francis’, and she contracted the account sued on, that then they might find a verdict against her alone. Also because the judge charged, notwithstanding she was
The testimony in the record is conflicting, though there was enough to support the verdict against Mrs. Francis’s pleas denying her liability. The questions, therefore, which control the case are of law.
This suit was against husband and wife as partners; the wife made the issues of non assumpsit, no partnership, and that being a married woman living with her husband, and not a free trader, she was not liable.
By section 1783 of the Code, the wife is declared to be a feme sole as to her separate estate.
In the case of Huff vs. Wright, 39 Ga., 43, it was declared by this court that husband and wife are no longer a unit, one person in law, with all the property vested in the husband as the head of the family, but so far as property is concerned two distinct persons, with separate and distinct rights. In a word, the common law rule upon this subject no longer prevails in this state. Every married woman is, as to her property, a feme sole, with power to purchase, hold and convey property, contract and be contracted with, sue and be sued as a feme sole.
This, under the new order of things, being the status of married women as to their property, rights and liabilities, why may not this wife be sued as a man could be sued, and made to respond precisely in the same manner, as to all contracts upon which she could bind her estate? We see no reason.
The allegation in the declaration was, that as partners they were indebted the amount claimed ; Mrs. Francis pleaded the general issue, and no partnership ; had there been a replication necessary, it would have been that the debt was due and owing, and that defendants were liable as partners. If the proofs then offered, showed that the debt was due, not by them as partners, but by one of them only, the testimony would have been demurrable under the pleadings, and could, upon objection, have been excluded until amendment had been made. None, however, was made, the jury passed upon the liability, and found the debt due by the defendant making the issues, and not by them as partners.
Was this misjoinder of parties as partners amendable? By §§3484,3485 of the Code, it is.provided that the names of partners, either as plaintiffs or defendants, which are omitted in the declaration, may be amended by adding the proper party instanter, and likewise, where two or more persons sue or are sued in the same action, the plaintiff may amend his declaration by striking out one or more of such defendants, and proceed against the remaining defendant or defendants. This was not done, and on the issue of no partnership the jury found that none existed. This finding was right on the testimony; and in the opinion of some of the members of the court for the further reason, that it is very doubtful whether husband and wife can form a partnership at all.
Conceding, then, that there was no partnership, can there be a recovery against one of them thus charged individually in this action ?
We think that the principle that there can be such a recovery was ruled by this court in the case of Wooten & Company vs. Nall, 18 Ga., 609. That was a suit brought
This ruling is, we think, conclusive of this case, and covers the errors of law alleged to have been committed by the judge in his charge.
Judgment affirmed.
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