*572After advisement the following opinion was delivered :
By Mr. Justice Cowen.I concur with the chancellor., that the debt in question was chargeable upon the wife’s interest in the Broadway house and lot. It is plain that the opinion of the vice chancellor would have been the same, had he not felt a difficulty in seeing that the Broadway property and factory made parts of one and the same trust estate. It appears to me that it is impossible to separate them. Originally, to be sure, the marriage settlement was confined to the Broadway property; but it is not denied that in pursuance of the very deed of settlement, that identical property was made instrumental in the purchase of the factory. A part was taken from the Broadway property and invested in the factory, by the trustees, with the consent of Dyett and his wife, the cestuis que trust. The factory, therefore, in the eye both of law and equity, became substituted for that portion of the Broadway property which was deducted in order to the purchase. In legal effect, it became a part of the Broadway property, subject to the same trusts, and to be read as a part of the original deed. Taylor v. Plumer, 3 Maule & Selw. 562, 575. In this sense the coal, being purchased by Mrs. Dyett for the benefit of the factory, is but another mode of saying that it was for the use of the original trust property, the house and lot itself.
I have supposed that Mrs. Dyett made the contract for the coal. I am aware that this is denied, and correctly, so far as her personal contract is1 in question. But the denial is carried farther, by saying that she never assented to the appointment of Livingston as agent of the factory, who it is agreed did assume to be agent, and as such to make the contract. It is sufficient, however, that the fact of her assent is not denied, but expressly admitted by the joint answer of Joshua Dyett and herself. It is said that such an answer is not to affect her interests, although she joined in it; that still it is but the answer of the husband % and this I agree is, in general, so. I am not aware, however, that the rule has ever been applied to a wife who is sued in *573respect to her separate estate. The bill is in the nature of an action at law against her for the recovery of a debt; and, although her person is not liable, she is proceeded against, in respect to her estate, as a feme sole. Having an estate, which she is capable of charging by her contract in the first instance as a feme sole, it seems to follow that her admissions, by way of answer or otherwise, are to be received in evidence against her, -A single woman sued at law may confess the action. Being liable as such in chancery, she may do the same thing as to the bill, and of course may admit any single fact tending to that consequence. Where her separate estate is completely distinct, and, as here, independent of her husband, she seems to be regarded in equity, as respects her power to dispose of or charge it with debts, to all intents and purposes as &feme sole, except in so far as she may be expressly limited in her powers by the instrument under which she takes her interest. Jaques v. The Methodist Episcopal Church, 17 Johns. R. 548, 585, and the cases there cited by Mr. Justice Platt. It follows, according to the same case, that she may deal with her husband by granting the estate to him, or appropriating the estate or its income to his benefit. She may, therefore, sue or be sued by her husband, or become a substantial party against or at the suit of others. With regard to the form of proceeding, it is true that she must sue by her prochein ami, or her husband may, by her consent, be joined with her against a third person. So he must be made a party defendant with her when she is sued ; but he is then merely a formal party j the subpoena must be served, not as in ordinary cases, on the husband alone, but on the wife, and if he be absent beyond the jurisdiction of the court, the formality may be dispensed with and the wife compelled to answer alone. Clancy’s Husb. and Wife, ch. 11, p. 358 to 365, of Am. ed. of 1828, arad the cases there cited. 2 Johns. Ch. R. 139. In common cases the subpoena is served on the husband alone, though the suit be against him and his wife ; and he then answers for both, Ferguson v. Smith, 2 Johns. Ch. R. 139 ; and according to the late cases of Hodgson v. Merest, 9 Price, 556, 563, and Elston v. *574Wood, 2 Mylne & Keene, 678, the answer amounts to no more, although the wife join in it. In that case an order may be obtained, for good cause, that she answer separately, and she becomes a substantial party to the'suit “ only from the time of the order.” Jackson v. Haworth, 1 Sim. & Stu. 161, 162. Carleton v M'Enzie, 10 Ves. 442. Then and then only can the answer be read against her as evidence; and although a joint answer put in by the husband admit the allegations in the bill,they must, according to Hodgson v. Merest and Elston v. Wood, be proved. In both these cases the admissions in the joint answer were rejected as. incompetent, and the decree against the wife proceeded on independent proof. For all this, I can see no reason except that she is but a formal party , a mere cypher, neither served with process, nor appearing, having no copies, notice, solicitor or counsel independent of her husband; every thing passing under his exclusive control. But the practice in such case, says Mr. Hoffman, is “ inapplicable where the wife’s separate estate is proceeded against. There she must be served with a subpoena personally; and if absent, an advertisement under the statute must be resorted to.” 1 Hoffm. Ch. Pr. 232. In Jones v. Harris, 9 Ves. 486, where the wife had not been served, Lord Eldon said 66 that where the service is upon the husband, not merely seized or entitled in right of his wife, and the plaintiff seeks satisfaction out of the separate estate of the wife, if she is considered a feme sole for other purposes, she must be so for that purpose also.” In Lillia v. Airey, 1 Ves. jun. 277, Lord Thurlow said, “ The husband is more a formal party than any thing else ; for the plaintiff really goes against the wife in respect to her separate maintenance.” Thus her case is entirely reversed. She is primarily, if not solely liable ; and like every other step in the defence, the answer is her independent act as a feme sole. It would not be denied that the joint answer of a partner would bind him, and she is more than a partner. We are to intend that she had full notice from the beginning, and that her solicitor and counsel have conducted the .suit- as- one really against her. The answer is signed by Jesse *575Ann Dyett, though sworn to by J. Dyett, her husband only. It purports throughout to be their joint and several answer, and fully admits the agency of Livingston. By signing the answer Mrs. Dyett has adopted that admission. It was therefore evidence against her in the particular cause as it would be in any other, and that, together with the other proofs, clearly fastens the debt upon her separate estate, to the extent decreed by the chancellor. The solicitor for the complainants had a right, as in other cases, to waive her oath to the answer ; and it is not to be tolerated that she should, after having led the complainants to act upon her answer at the hearing, without objection, for the first time in this court, as far as we can see, deny its legal force upon a defect of form which it was her business to avoid. Even if the objection be well founded, it should have been made below, where alone it could have been properly obviated. In Hodgson v. Merest, the answer being rejected, the cause stood over for proof upon terms, and the proof was finally obtained.
Livingston being the agent of Mrs. Dyett in respect to the factory, it follows, as we have seen, that a debt contracted by her is chargeable upon the whole of the trust estate, in which this is involved as a part.
It is obvious that the credit was not given for the coal to Joshua Dyett individually. There is full evidence not only that it was in fact furnished for the use of the factory, but the agent of the respondents might and probably did collect, from the face of the bill, that the whole was a factory transaction. I am not aware, however, that such knowledge was necessary. I take it to be sufficient that the debt was, in truth, contracted for the benefit of the trust estate. Upton v. Gray, 2 Greenl. 373.
The decree of the court of chancery should therefore be affirmed.
All the members of the court, with but one exception, concurring in this opinion, the decree of the chancellor was accordingly AFFIRMED.