By the Court,
Ingalls, J.From the facts found by the referee it appears that the marriage between Edwin Smith and Charlotte A. Smith occurred as early as 1835. In 1849 she received, as legatee under the will of her mother, $2400, of which $2000 was in a note of her husband. Edwin Smith failed, and made an assignment preferring his wife as a creditor to the amount of $2300. ,In 1850 a mercantile business was commenced at Schaghticoke conducted by Edwin Smith as agent, in which business Mrs. Smith embarked a capital of $1000, under a verbal arrangement with her husband by which he was to receive for his services, board and clothing. The purchases were made chiefly upon credit, and the proceeds of the business, not absorbed in the support of the family, were devoted to the business. Edwin Smith made the purchases and sales, and had the actual possession and control of the property, and business. Goods and money were taken from the store and devoted to the support of the family, and no account whatever was kept between Smith and his wife. The whole transaction was previous to 1860. The business was continued till 1858, when the stock of goods was levied upon and sold by the sheriff by virtue of executions issued upon judgments recovered by the creditors of Smith. Under an assignment of Mrs. Smith’s supposed cause of action, this action was brought by the plaintiffs, to recover the value of the goods sold. Upon this state of facts, the referee reported in favor of the defendant, and directed judgment accordingly. I think no error was committed by the referee in thus. disposing of the cause. The money furnished by the wife received by her as the cred*572itor of her husband under his assignment, and the profits arising from the trade, in part the result of the work and labor of the husband, became commingled, and constituted one fund, and all in the possession of and under the control of the husband, without a solitary act or transaction between the parties, save the use of the word agent, and the verbal agreement that Smith was to receive board and clothing for his services, to indicate that the parties themselves regarded the business as her’s. Money and goods were drawn from the store and devoted to the support of the family, and no account kept between Smith and his wife. To hold, under these circumstances, that the property was beyond the reach of the creditors of the husband would, in Bay judgment, be establishing a precedent wholly unauthorized by law. In Sherman v. Elder, (24 N. Y. Rep. 381,) Allen, J. at page 383, says: “In regard to the rest of the property, that which was used by the husband as merchandise in the business carried on by him in the name of the wife, whether a part of the goods were the property of the wife before marriage or bought subsequently by the husband on credit or with the profits of the'business, and the earnings and accumulations of the husband in the business, I agree with the court below that they must be considered the property of the husband and liable to his debts.” In the last mentioned case the marriage was in 1850. (Lovett v. Robinson, 7 How. Pr. Rep. 105. Gage v. Dauchy, 28 Barb. 622.)
The decision of the referee is not in conflict with the statutes of 1848 and 1849, “for the more effectual protection of the property of married women.” Had Mrs." Smith received the money bequeathed to her by the will of her mother, and held it to her sole and separate use, it could not have been reached by the creditors of the husband; but where in direct violation of the letter and spirit of those statutes she embarked that money in trade under the control of her husband, commingling it with the avails of his labor, which, as much as his money, belonged to his creditors, she deprived herself *573of the shield provided by those statutes, and subjected it to the claims of his creditors. The plaintiffs can assert no rights which Mrs. Smith, their aossignor, did not possess. By accepting the transfer they assumed the risk of the controversy.
[ÁLBANy General Term, March 7, 1864.The judgment should be affirmed with costs.
Peckham, MilUr and Ingalls, Justices.]