The wife, it appears, had a separate estate, both real and personal, of her own, amounting to $50,000. In 1851, with the approbation of her husband, she bought out the stock of a firm in Elmira, and set up, and has ever since continued, the business of a hardware merchant in her own name, her husband, by her appointment, acting as her agent in making purchases as well as sales.
The goods in question were sold in 1854, after Mrs. S. had been carrying on business in the manner described for about three years. They were charged by the plaintiff, in his books, to “ J. F. Scribner, agentalthough the purchase, was in fact made by one Cole, a clerk in the store of Mrs. S., and as her agent, he taking the goods to the store, where they were received as part of the stock in trade to be disposed of in the usual course of business.
Does such a purchase bind the husband 1 Or is the remedy against—and exclusively against—the wife 1
The general rule undoubtedly is, that where a wife, although in her own name, makes an executory contract, with the consent of her husband, the transaction binds him, and not his wife. Equity, however, makes an exception in the case of married women, who have separate property—treating them, to the extent of such property, as single women. (Jaques agt. The Methodist Church, 17 Johns. Rep. 548.) The statutes of 1848 and 1849 confirm, and in some degree extend, the exception, making all the property of married women, whether real or personal, and whether settled on them or not, their sole and separate estate, “as if they were single females.”
One of the essential attributes of property, as. recently held by the court of appeals in the so-called liquor cases, whether such property be the property of single males or single females, is the right of sale and exchange. And is not a purchase made by a wife, in respect of her separate estate, a mere contract in effect to exchange so much of that estate for the goods pur*503chased1? And if so, is it not a contract, which, under both the statute and the equity rule, she has the power to make 1 The contract may not bind her personally, but it must, it would seem, bind her personalty. How elsé can she be said to possess and enjoy the right, not only of holding, but of disposing of her property “in the same manner and with the like effect as if she were unmarried.” To buy the property of another, as already suggested, is one of the modes by which the purchaser, to the extent of the stipulated price, disposes of his own.
Although, however, the wife, as a necessary incident to the exercise of her right, may contract a qualified obligation, does it necessarily follow that the husband is in no case bound 1 Can a husband carry on business in the name of his wife, buying and selling “as her agent,” and himself “having charge of the store,” and participating directly or indirectly, as we are bound to presume, in all the gains, without incurring any liability 1 The old equity rule certainly did not go that length. And the new statute, as we all know, and as its title imports, was enacted not to diminish the liabilities of married men, but “ for the more effectual protection of the property of married women” —its leading feature being to secure to married women “ the sole and separate enjoyment of their property, and to their husbands the sole and separate enjoyment of their debts. In the session of 1853, the legislature, it is true, corrected in part this seeming anomaly; but the correction, in express terms, was confined to debts contracted before marriage.”
Where a wife, then, during marriage, contracts a debt with the consent and approbation of her husband, and especially where, as in this case, she contracts it with the direct agency and participation of her husband, the creditor, as it seems to me, has the election of suing both, or one—both, if he wishes to reach the wife’s property; one, the husband alone, if it is desired to bind him personally.
Judgment for plaintiff for $110.86, with interest from 15th April, 1854, and costs of suit»