The law seems to be settled that when the wife is left by the
husband without maintenance and support, has traded as a
feme
sole, and has obtained credit as such, she ought to be liable
for her debts, and the law is the same whether the husband is
banished for his crimes or has voluntarily abandoned the wife.
By the laws of Maryland, a
feme covert who has been
abandoned by her husband is not permitted to marry a second time
until her husband shall have been absent seven years and shall not
have been heard of during that time.
By those laws, a married woman cannot dispose of real property
without the consent of her husband, nor can she execute a good and
valid deed too pass real estate unless he shall join in it. The
separate examination and other solemnities required by law are
indispensable, and must not be omitted. A deed therefore, executed
by a married woman of real property acquired. by her while a
feme sole trader while she was abandoned by her husband,
is void.
A bill had been filed by Daniel Rhenner, the appellee, against
Daniel Rhea and Elizabeth, his wife, and William Erskine, an
infant, the son of Elizabeth Rhea, by a former husband, Robert
Erskine.
Page 26 U. S. 106
MR. JUSTICE DUVALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellee, who was complainant in the court below, filed his
bill in equity in the year 1822 in the circuit court against Daniel
Rhea, and Elizabeth his wife, and William Erskine, an infant son of
said Elizabeth. The bill alleges that Elizabeth Rhea, formerly
Erskine, was indebted to the complainant in the sum of $300 for
goods sold and delivered; that being pressed for payment, she, with
the defendant, Rhea, with whom she then lived, agreed that if
allowed further time, they would secure the debt by conveying to
Rhenner a lot of ground, No. 165, in Beatty & Hawkins' addition
to Georgetown which was the property of said Elizabeth and which
had been conveyed to her by the name of Elizabeth Erskine.
That Rhea, together with the said Elizabeth, by their deed
Page 26 U. S. 107
bearing date May 13, 1819, conveyed to the complainant the lot
of ground before mentioned for the purpose of securing the debt
with interest, and stipulated that if the debt was not paid in two
years, it should be held in trust with power to sell the same and
apply the proceeds, &c.
The bill further states that the said Daniel and Elizabeth, a
few days before the date of the deed to the complainant,
viz., on the tenth of May, 1819, but after the agreement
to convey to the complainant, fraudulently conveyed the same
premises to the defendant Erskine, an infant son of said Elizabeth,
in fee in consideration of natural love and affection; that he, the
said Rhenner, had at a considerable expense, at the request and
with the knowledge and approbation of the defendants, erected
improvements on the lot and put a tenant in possession of the same,
but that the defendant, by collusion, soon after obtained
possession of the same and still keep it, claiming to hold it under
the deed to the infant. The bill concludes with praying that the
deed to William Erskine may be declared void and that the property
may be sold to pay his claim, &c.
The defendant, Daniel Rhea, in his answer admits that his wife,
before his intermarriage with her,
viz., in May, 1819, was
the wife of one Robert Erskine and was engaged in carrying on
business for herself; that he did agree to join and did join her in
the conveyance to the complainant and in that to her son; that he
had no title or interest in the premises; that the property
belonged in May, 1819, to Elizabeth Erskine, who was a married
woman, and he denies all the other allegations in the bill.
Elizabeth Rhea in her answer avers that she was married to
Robert Erskine in January, 1812; that after her marriage, in the
absence of her husband, one Adam Mayne conveyed to her the premises
mentioned in the bill of complaint; the deed bears date on 7 April,
1817; that her husband Erskine left her in the year 1814, and she
believed he was alive in May, 1819, and that she was not at that
time the wife of Daniel Rhea; that in July, 1821, Erskine having
then been beyond seas more than seven years, she married Daniel
Rhea, having received no support from her former husband since he
left her.
The answer of the infant is put in by his guardian in the usual
form, submitting to the protection of the court without admitting
or denying any of the facts alleged in the bill.
In this state of the proceedings, the court decreed a sale of
the lot before mentioned for payment of the claim of the
complainant and appointed a trustee to make the sale under the
terms prescribed in the decree, reserving the claim of the
complainant for proof on it and further order. From this decree
Page 26 U. S. 108
there was an appeal, and the cause is now before this Court for
its decision. The question submitted by the arguments of the
counsel is whether the contracts and engagements of Elizabeth Rhea,
made in the absence of her first husband and prior to her marriage
with the defendant Rhea, are obligatory, and to what extent a woman
who has been abandoned by her husband may contract debts for which
she is personally liable.
The law seems to be settled that when the wife is left without
maintenance or support by the husband has traded as a
feme
sole and has obtained credit as such, she ought to be liable
for her debts. And the law is the same whether the husband is
banished for his crimes or has voluntarily abandoned the wife. It
is for the benefit of the
feme covert that she should be
answerable for her debts and liable to an action in such a case;
otherwise she could not obtain credit, and would have no means of
gaining a livelihood. A decision to this effect by the Court of
Common Pleas in England is reported in 1 Bos. & Pull. 359. In
delivering the opinions of the court, Mr. Justice Buller refers to
the case of Lady Belknap, whose husband was exiled. She was
permitted to sue in her own name. The husband of Lady Sandys was
banished by act of Parliament during life, and it was decreed in
her case, that she might in all things act as a
feme sole
and as if her husband was dead, and that the necessity of the case
required she should have such power, 1 Vernon 104. And the same
reason applying where the husband had abjured the realm, the wife
in that case was allowed to sue as a widow for her dower. In such
case, she has been permitted to alien her land without her husband,
and is exempted from the disabilities of coverture. It has been
uniformly considered that banishment or abjuration is a civil death
of the husband. In the case of
Gregory v. Paul, reported
in the 15th volume of Mass., all these cases are reviewed by the
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts and the law recognized. In
the case under consideration, there was a voluntary abandonment of
the wife by the husband without having furnished her with the means
of support. In his absence, she traded and dealt as a
feme
sole, and is liable for her debts. When the deeds for the lot
aforementioned was executed, her husband had been absent five years
only; she continued under a coverture, and was the wife of Robert
Erskine, her first husband. There is no evidence that she was at
that time married to Daniel Rhea, and if the marriage had been
proved, it would have been illegal and unavailing. A
feme
covert who has been abandoned by her husband is not permitted
to marry a second time with impunity until her husband shall have
been absent seven
Page 26 U. S. 109
years and shall not have been heard of during that time. But by
the laws of Maryland which must govern in this case, a married
woman cannot dispose of real property, without the consent of her
husband, nor can she execute a good and valid deed to pass real
estate unless he shall join her in the deed.
The separate examination and other solemnities required by law
are indispensable, and must not be omitted. The deeds executed by
her and Daniel Rhea in May, 1819, are therefore inoperative and
void.
The circuit court decreed in this case upon the bill annexed and
exhibits, without further testimony. They do not in themselves
contain sufficient matter for a decree.
It does not appear that any evidence was taken on commission or
otherwise, to establish or disprove the material allegations in
their bill.
The record being thus defective, this Court cannot make a final
decision. The decree of the circuit is
Reversed and the record remanded for further
proceedings.