The opinion of the court was delivered, by
Woodward, J.The question in this cause was, whether the purchase-money that was paid to John E. Marshall for the house and lot in controversy, was the separate property of Mrs. Caroline E. Schaffer. The purchase was negotiated by her husband, Charles E. Schaffer, but the articles of agreement, dated 22d of March 1849, and the deed, dated 1st of April 1850, were both made in the name of the wife. The purchase-money stipulated for in the articles was $1100, of which $500 were payable May 20th 1849, and $600 on the ,1st of April 1850. Marshall’s deposition was taken, and he therein states expressly that Challes E. Schaffer bargained with him for the house, and paid him a large part of the purchase-money by surrender of notes, judgments, and accounts, which he (Schaffer) held against him (Marshall); and that the cash payments were made in money which Schaffer said he borrowed of his wife. Marshall explains how the wife’s name was used, and the confusion and embarrassment with which she pretended to furnish part of the money. It is impossible to read his deposition, and doubt that the purchase was made and paid for by the husband, and her name used in the title papers to shield the property from his creditors. He was largely indebted at the time, and the present contest is with two of his creditors.
To meet and repel such damaging proofs, the defendants should have come into court well furnished with evidence, for, since the cases of Gamber v. Gamber, 6 Harris 363, and Keeny v. Good, 9 Id. 355, the rule has been uniformly held, that in case of a purchase by a wife after marriage, rigid proof is required from her that she paid for it with funds which were not furnished by the husband. Evidence that she purchased amounts to nothing, unless it be accompanied by clear and full proof that she paid for the property with her own separate funds.
With such a rule of law against her, Mrs. Schaffer opposed nothing to the deposition of Marshall, except the testimony of her two sons’, one of whom swore that in the year 1836 or 1837, they were visited by an uncle, who, before he left, went to his trunk and took out a bag of gold, and placed it in his mother’s lap, and said, “ Here, take this and buy a house for your children.”
The witness says that he learned from the conversation at the time, that it was a thousand dollars or more, and that he saw it poured out into Ms mother’s lap, and that she took it away. He *365afterwards borrowed small sums of his mother, but does not know whether they were part of the gold he saw in her lap. He was born in 1826. -
The other son, C. W. Schaffer, testified to nothing of import- - anee, except that his father had the use of the money that was poured into her lap in 1836, and, so far as the witness knew, never gave his mother a note for it. The witness settled the last payment with Marshall with paper and money which he received for the purpose from his mother, but he does not know where she got the money; thinks it was not the money he saw in her lap.
Now, if the fullest effect be given to this evidence, it amounts to no more than this : that before the Married Woman’s Act of 1848 was passed, Mrs. Schaffer received $1000, which went into her husband's possession, and became his own exclusive property ; and that when the final payment to Marshall was to be made in 1850, she produced from a room in her husband’s house, the money and papers to complete the payment. The $1000 in gold had long ceased to be her property, and where is the evidence that any other funds ever accrued to her ? There is none. Her possession of the money which rvent to Marshall on the last payment, was, of itself, no evidence of her ownership. This was very distinctly ruled in Topley v. Topley, 7 Casey 328, and Black v. Nease, 1 Wright 433; the case, therefore, was utterly destitute of evidence of her ownership of the purchase-money, and ought not to have been submitted to the jury on that question. Instead of the high, satisfactory, and rigid proof which the law requires, this married woman failed to furnish any evidence that deserved to be considered proof of the only point in issue. It was error to submit a question of ownership of the wife without evidence. There are some minor questions of evidence on the record which are not worth noticing, for the one error we have pointed out is decisive of the cause.
The judgment is reversed.