The report of the referee is fairly supported by the evidence in .reference to the note in question. It was dated October 1, 1872, ;and-was given by L. S. Carpenter, who is the defendant’s intestate, to Hannah Carpenter, his wife, who is the plaintiff’s intestate, for ■$500. It was proven that Hannah Carpenter had separate property, -and that on September 80, 1872, L. S. Carpenter received from •one Henderson $1,200. $500 of this was deposited to the bus-hand’s' credit in the bank, and $700 was drawn in cash. The next day this note was given. There was proof given tending to show that the husband had paid some money for the wife, not to a large .amount. It is a fair inference that the accounts of the parties were ■settled when the note was given, especially as the $700 received hy the husband was a much larger amount than would pay all his -claims against his wife. Besides, there is no proof showing any •open account upon the husband’s books against his wife, except for a small balance of $21.60, which forms no part of the dispute in ■this case, but as to which no proof was given to establish it as a •claim against the wife.
I think the referee erred in not allowing to defendants against the .note the $285, for the board of Mary Murphy. She was Mrs. ■Carpenter’s niece. She was sick and feeble. She went into the family of the intestate of the defendants upon the request of his wife, and upon her promise to pay her husband half her board after •deducting what she could earn. One witness states that the contract was for Mrs. Carpenter to pay one-half the board to her husiband, and that Mrs. Murphy was to pay the other half by her work for him. There is nothing in the marital relation which, in equity, prevents a wife making a contract like this. This proceeding includes both legal and equitable claims. The husband’s claim against the wife was as good, so far as the marital relation affected the ■question, as that of the wife against the husband. The referee finds that there was no agreement by which the wife bound her *18separate estate. The law on this subject is not yet fully settled. A wife is bound when she in terms charges her separate estate. She= is bound when the contract is for the benefit of the separate estate,, without any reference to her separate estate being made in the contract. Her separate estate is benefited when she, by the contract, creates it. It is benefited when it adds to it, and when, by the-contract, she defends and preserves it. The true rale would -seem to be that a married woman should be deemed to benefit her separate estate by the performance of every contract she makes. That, she should be left free to determine when to make a contract, and that she should be able to enforce it, andbe bound to have it enforced against her, simply because she had made it the same as if she was. unmarried. Under the cases there being no contract to bind the-separate estate, the claim is probably not to be upheld. It seems,, however, that it should be 'upheld as a payment. The contract was-made after the note was given; no-interest was paid upon the note after its date. There seems to be no charge on the deceased husband’s books, or among his papers, referring in any way to this-board. There does not seem to have been any demands made by the wife for the interest or principal on the note of her husband in his lifetime; both parties are dead, and there is no better proof than an inference to be drawn from the acts of the’parties, which seems to justify the conclusion that the board was, by mutual consent, applied, in fact, upon the note. Such an inference would b& just as between the parties.
Judgment modified by deducting $285, with interest thereon from November 20,1875, and affirming it in other respects, without, costs on this appeal.
Dykman, J., concurred in the result. Present — Barnard, P. J., Gilbert and Dykman, JJ.Judgment modified by deducting $285, with interest from October .20, 1875, and affirmed as to residue, without costs on this appeal.