Mitchell v. Smith
Mitchell v. Smith
Opinion of the Court
I. The appellants assign as error the conclusions of law upon the facts found.
In McCormick & Bro. v. Holbrook, 22 Iowa, 487, the defendant, a married woman, was the owner of a farm on which she and her husband resided; she was also the owner of the personal property on the farm. She sent a written order, signed by her, to the plaintiffs, requesting them to manufacture and ship for her use one of their light two-wheeled mowers, to be paid for at a subsequent date at the price then current. The mower was manufactured .and shipped according to order. Upon these facts it was held that she was liable on the contract as being one relating to her separate property. So in Richmond v. Tibbles, 26 Iowa, 474, it was held, that a married woman is liable on her covenants in a deed for her own lands, the same being a contract in relation to her separate property within the meaning of section 2506 of the Revision. In the former case, the court base the decision mainly upon the fact that the wife was the owner of the farm, and that she purchased the mower “ with direct reference to her farming operations, as an implement of culture, and in the same sense that she would buy seed-corn or wheat, all of which,” say the court in that case, “ would come' within the meaning of the first clause of section 2506, viz.: Contracts made hy a wife in relation to her separate property, or thosepurporting to bind herself only, do not bind the husband.”
The present case is a stronger one than McCormick v. Holbrook. Here the wife was the owner of the farm, and most of the personal property. She and her children -resided thereon, and conducted the business. Her husband was most of the time away from the farm, employed in other business. The horse, for the purchase of which the note was made, was needed for the purpose of carrying on
It is argued, however, tbat tbe purchase of the horse was by tbe husband, and not by tbe wife. Tbe finding of facts makes it apparent that the husband negotiated for the horse, for and on behalf of his wife, who was present, and that after doing so he said to her, “ Are you willing to pay a certain price (naming it) for the horse ? ” to which she assented, clearly showing that it was the wife that was purchasing and was to pay for the horse. The plaintiff was present when this occurred, and understood that the wife was buying and was to pay, and it was to her he gave the credit, her husband being insolvent. To hold that this is not a contract by the wife in relation to her separate property, and upon which she is not hound, would be in conflict with the letter and spirit of the statute, and would enable her to perpetrate a palpable fraud upon the plaintiff, who parted with his property in good faith, the use and benefit of which she has and still enjoys.
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Mitchell v. Smith et ux.
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