Court Opinion

ID: 3674242
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:21:38.384024+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:21:41.597548
License: Public Domain

This is an action brought to recover a balance alleged to be due to the plaintiff from the feme defendant, E. W. Sanderlin, who is the wife of the co-defendant, G. W. Sanderlin. The complaint alleges among other things that the feme defendant employed the plaintiff at a salary of $400 per annum as overseer upon a farm which was her separate property, and that upon a settlement made between the plaintiff and G. W. Sanderlin, as agent for his wife, a balance was found to be due the plaintiff for which he had brought this action. Upon the cause coming on to be heard, the feme
defendant demurred to the complaint, for that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The Court sustained the demurrer and rendered judgment dismissing the action. In this we see no error.
Section 1826 of The Code is as follows: "No woman during her coverture shall be capable of making any contract to affect her real or personal estate, except for her necessary personal expenses, or for the support of her family, or such as may be necessary in order to pay her debts existing before marriage, without the written consent of her husband, unless she be a free trader as hereinafter allowed." This was the act of 1871-72, ch. 193, sec. 17.
At common law the contract of a married woman was void, but it was held in equity that she might have an estate settled to her separate (3) use, and, that although she had no power to bind herself personally, she might with the concurrence of the trustee specifically charge her separate estate, and the courts of equity would enforce the charge against the property. But her contract, in order to create a charge must refer expressly, or by necessary implication, to the separate estate as a means of payment, this being in the nature of an appointment or appropriation. Knox v. Jordan, 58 N.C. 175; Frazier v. Brownlow,38 N.C. 237. Since the adoption of the Constitution of 1868, she has or can have the legal as well as the equitable estate, but this of itself does not give her the unrestricted disposition of her property. Its only effect was to do away with the necessary concurrence of the trustee by vesting in her the legal title. Her common law disabilities still continued. The act of 1871-72, now sec. 1826 of The Code, is restrictive, and not enabling. Its effect is to require the written consent of the husband, instead of the trustee, in all cases not specifically excepted. This consent of the husband does not give validity to all contracts, but simply to such as before the statute she might have made without his consent. Pippen v. Wesson, 74 N.C. 437; Huntley v. Whitner,77 N.C. 392; Arrington v. Bell, 94 N.C. 247; Rountree v. Gay, 74 N.C. 447;Hall v. Short, 81 N.C. 273; Dougherty v. Sprinkle, 88 N.C. 300;Flaum v. Wallace, 103 N.C. 296, 304. In Farthing v. Shields, 106 N.C. 289, quoted and approved in Wilcox v. Arnold, 116 N.C. 708, this Court *Page 3 
said: "It is well settled by the uniform decisions of this Court that, except in cases mentioned in the Code, sections 1828, 1831, 1832, 1836, afeme covert is, at law, incapable of making any executory contract whatever. Accordingly it has been determined that The Code, section 1826, requiring the written consent of the husband in order to affect her real or personal estate, did not confer upon her (even when such written consent was given or when the liability was for her personal           (4) expenses, etc.), the power to make a legal contract. Its object was to require the written consent of her husband in order to charge inequity her statutory separate estate, on the same principle which requires the consent of the trustee when the separate estate is created by deed of settlement." In the case at bar, there is no allegation that the contract was made with the written consent of the husband, and in fact it does not appear that there was any written contract at all; nor is it alleged that the wife was in any way dependent upon the income from the plantation for the necessary support of herself and family. On the contrary, it states that the husband holds a position under the government of the United States and that the wife resides with him. The case is therefore clearly distinguishable from that of Bazemore v. Mountain,121 N.C. 59, which, while receiving the full approval of the Court, carries the doctrine in that direction as far as we feel at liberty to go. In the words of Chief Justice Smith in Clark v. Hay, 98 N.C. 421,425, "A wider latitude of construction would take away the protection which the law gives to women under the disability of marriage, and imperil their estates."
The feme defendant is entitled to the just protection given to her by law, and the judgment is therefore
Affirmed.
FAIRCLOTH, C. J., did not sit on the hearing of this appeal.
Cited: Weathers v. Borders, 124 N.C. 619; S. v. Robinson, 143 N.C. 623. *Page 4 
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