The question involved: Where the statutory law of North Carolina prescribes the method and manner in which an action may be brought in this State and this Court has held the statute to be constitutional, and where the provisions of the statute have been complied with, will this Court hold that the plaintiff is not entitled to the damages recovered on the ground that she is not a resident of this State ? We think not.
There is no contention made by defendant that the statute as to service of summons on nonresident motorists was not complied with. N. C. Code, 1939 (Miehie), sec. 491 (a).
In Alberts v. Alberts, 217 N. C., 443 (444), speaking to the subject: “In York v. York, 212 N. C., 695 (699), it is said: ‘In this jurisdiction a wife has the right to bring an action for actionable negligence against her husband, Roberts v. Roberts, 185 N. C., 566 (567) ; Shirley v. Ayers, 201 N. C., 51 (55); Jernigan v. Jernigan, 207 N. C., 831.’ We think that although plaintiff is a nonresident and the action transitory, the doors of the courts of this State are open to her to determine her rights. Howard v. Howard, 200 N. C., 574; Steele v. Telegraph Co., 206 N. C., 220; Ingle v. Cassady, 208 N. C., 497 (498).”
The Alberts case, supra, cites many authorities from other jurisdictions sustaining the right of nonresidents to sue.
The defendant contends: “A nonresident married woman living with her husband is not entitled to the privileges of separate property rights as conferred upon resident married women by our State Constitution and statutes enacted in connection therewith.” We cannot so hold.
Article X, sec. 6, of the Constitution of the State of North Carolina, reads as follows: “The real and personal property of any female in this State acquired before marriage, and all property real and personal to
In 1913, the Legislature enacted the following statutory provision, known as the “Martin Act”: “The earnings of a married woman by virtue of any contract for her personal service, and any damages for personal injuries, or other tort sustained by her can be recovered by her suing alone and such earnings or recovery shall be her sole and separate property as fully as if she had remained unmarried.” N. 0. Code, 1939 (Michie), sec. 2513.
In Crowell v. Crowell, 180 N. C., 516, the Martin Act was upheld and a recovery had against a husband in tort for personal injuries by infecting her with a lothsome disease. At pp. 523-4, it is said: “It must be remembered that there is not, and never has been, any statute in England or this State declaring that ‘husband and wife are one, and he is that one.’ It was an inference drawn by courts in a barbarous age, based on the wife being a chattel, and therefore without any rights to property or person. It has always been disregarded by courts of equity. Public opinion and the sentiment of the age as expressed by all laws and constitutional provisions sincé have been against it. The anomalous instances of that conception, which still survive, in some courts are due to construing away the changes made by corrective legislation or restricting their application. Whether a man has laid open his wife’s head with a bludgeon, put out her eye, broken her arm, or poisoned her body, he is no longer exempt from liability to her on the ground that he vowed at the altar to ‘love, cherish and protect’ her. Civilization and justice have progressed thus far with us, and never again will ‘the sun go back ten degrees on the dial of Ahaz.’ Isaiah, 38 :8.”
The Martin Act is broad and comprehensive as to the right of the wife to sue the husband in tort for personal injuries. The defendant contends that this right given by the Constitution, supra, is applicable to “any female in this State” and the Martin Act goes beyond the purview of the Constitution. This contention is too technical and attenuated. The plaintiff was injured' by the negligence of her husband, as charged in the complaint, in Orange County, N. C., on or about 17 August, 1937. Her cause of action arose in this State when she received the injury and at the time she was a “female in this State,” and the Martin Act was applicable. The Constitution says nothing about nonresidents in the State. May it be said to the glory of North Carolina that the courts of this State are open to all, rich and poor alike, and law and justice, tempered with mercy, are sought to be administered. The great writer Paul, in his Epistle to the Hebrews, ch. 13, vs. 2, which has come down through the ages, said: “Be not forgetful to
Affirmed.