Johnson v. Parker
Johnson v. Parker
Opinion of the Court
At the.trial of this cause before the Middle-sex Circuit Court, the judge reserved, and has certified to this court the question whether the land of a married woman is liable in law for the work and labor done, and materials furnished, in the erection of a house upon it by her husband, with her acquiescence and without her consent in writing.
The plaintiff, seeking to charge the land of Mary J. Parker, who is the wife of John Parker, brought his action against the husband, as builder, and the wife, as owner of the land. He does not attempt to charge the curtesy of the husband, nor any estate he may have in it, but the fee of the wife, and treats her, in the claim of lien filed, as if she were feme sole.
If, in fact, she were a single woman, no lien could attach to her land without her consent in writing, pursuant to the 4th section of the act providing for mechanics’ liens, and if no such consent were given, her land could not have been charged. But it is insisted that she, in fact, being married, no such consent was necessary • that the erection of the building by her husband with her verbal acquiescence is sufficient to charge it.
If this proposition can be maintained, the very object of the act for the better securing the property of married women may be defeated. That act provides that the real and personal property of any female married after its passage, or property acquired by her after her marriage, shall not be subject to the disposal of her husband, nor liable for his debts. But if it can be charged by such lien, then it may be subject to the disposal of the husband, and made liable for his debts. By building upon it, he would subject it to the payment of the debts by him thereby contracted, and to a sale by judgment and execution, and thus dispose of it at his pleasure.
The acquiescence of the wife cannot divest her of her
A deed of a married woman, signed, sealed, and delivered without due acknowledgment, divests her of no right; and surely her mere verbal assent to the building of a house by her husband should not be allowed as a mode of alienating her lands.
It is insisted that, unless such lien be allowed, the mechanics’ lien law would be a nullity as to the lands of married women ; that the husband cannot be regarded as the owner, and the wife cannot give the consent contemplated by the statute, nor make a contract with her husband.
If this be true, it proves the more clearly the former proposition. If a formal assent in writing will not bind the wife, her mere verbal assent cannot prejudice her.
But the difficulty suggested arises from the disability incident to the coverture; and if the plaintiff cannot charge the land as the estate of the husband, nor obtain the lawful consent of the wife, he is, of course, without this form of remedy. But he would be in like condition, if he had done the work or furnished the materials for a house on the land of a minor or a lunatic. No consent could be there given ; and if he build without it, he must find some other way of securing payment for his work and materials.
I am of opinion that the lands of Mary J. Parker are not liable, and that the Circuit Court should be so advised.
Cited in Washburn v. Burns, 5 Vr. 21.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Martin Johnson v. John Parker, builder, and Mary J. Parker, owner
- Status
- Published