Court Opinion

ID: 6582246
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:39:13.710119+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:19.796719
License: Public Domain

Beardsley, J.
The defendant is the wife of Henry Tyler, defendant in the next preceding case of J. D. Blakeslee v. Henry Tyler, which was brought to recover the penalty for placing obstructions upon a highway. She acted with him in placing the obstructions upon the highway, and is sued for the recovery of the statutorjr penalty. The finding of facts, and of the defendant’s claims, in the trial of the former case, are made part of the record in this case, and the court finds the following additional facts specially applicable to this case:—
“ On May 24th, 1886, the plaintiff having thrown out said bars, the said Henry Tyler and his wife, the defendant, immediately went toward them together, and she, being more active than her husband, ran-ahead of him and reached the bars first, upon which he, being near, said to her—‘Put them up,’ which she proceeded to do in part, until he came up, when they together put up the remainder of the bars. No other request or command was made by him to her, and *399she was subject to no actual coercion by her husband in doing what she did toward replacing the bars. The title to the land easterly from the bars and adjacent thereto was in the said Margaret Tyler. Upon the foregoing facts the plaintiff claimed that this action was for a tort, and could be sustained under the provisions of the Revised Statutes, p. 117, sec. 9, against the wife alone, without the joinder of the husband as a party to the action. The defendant claimed that the provisions of the statute had no applicability to this case, as this Avas an action to recover a penalty under a penal statute, which was not qualified by the statute. The defendant also claimed that the direction given to the defendant by her husband on the 21th of May, to put up the bars in question, Avas such coercion as exempted her from any liability in this action.” The court ruled adversely to the claims of the defendant and this ruling is assigned for error.
The statute referred to (Gen. Statutes, p, 117, sec. 9) is as folloAvs :—“ Actions may be sustained against a married woman upon any causes of action which accrued before her marriage, and upon any contract made by her since her marriage, upon her personal credit, for the benefit of herself, her family, or her separate or joint estate, and for any tort committed by her Avithout the actual coercion of her husband, and her property attached and taken on execution in the same manner as if she Avas unmarried, and her husband shall not be liable on any such causes of action.”
Tavo questions arise under this statute: Was the act of the defendant a tort ? If so, did her husband compel her to commit it ?
In Canfield v. Mitchell, 48 Conn. R., 169, Avhich like this Avas an action upon the statute, and brought upon the same statute, it Avas decided to be a civil action. Judge Swift says that “this form of action is a species of action on the case.” 2 Swift's Dig., 589. The only classification of civil personal actions recognized by law, is that of actions upon contracts and actions for torts. 3 Black. Com., 117. “ All acts or omissions which the law recognizes as the sub*400jects of its provisions and application, are either contracts, torts or crimes.” 1 Hilliard on Torts, 2.
The statute gives to ail individual this remedy, to recover a penalty for his own benefit as well as that of the public, for the wrongful act of the defendant, and thereby in effect stamps the act as a tort. This being so, and the tort being of such a nature that those committing it are severally liable for the penalty (Curtis v. Hurlburt, 2 Conn. R., 309), the defendant is liable, though she acted in concert with her husband, unless he actually coerced her to commit it. The court finds that he did not coerce her, and this finding is conclusive, unless it is inconsistent with the facts upon, which it rests.
We think that it is fully justified by the facts. It is apparent that the statute quoted was designed to make radical changes in the civil rights and liabilities of the wife in respect to her torts as well as contracts. By the common law she was for the most part protected from liability for her torts, as well as responsibility for her crimes committed in the presence of her husband, by the presumption that she acted -by his coercion. This presumption in many, if not in most cases, probably rested upon a slender basis of fact, but generally prevailed, owing to the inherent difficulty of proving that it was not well founded.
The statute abolishes this presumption in respect to torts, and requires the wife to prove for her justification that her husband in fact compelled her to commit the tort for which she is sued.
The facts found fall far short of showing such coercion. The bars in question served to inclose the land of the defendant ; the plaintiff had taken them down and the defendant and her husband started together to put them up. Her husband said to her, “ Put them up ” ; but this was said when she was running towards the bars in advance of him, and was evidently mere language of encouragement. There is no reason to believe that she would have stopped short of doing what she intended, if he had said nothing. If it had appeared that the wife put up the bars in conse*401quence of what was said by the husband, the question would still arise, whether she was coerced to do so within the meaning of the statute.
There is no error in the judgment appealed from.
In this opinion the other judges concurred; except Car-renter, J., who dissented.