Hageman v. Vanderdoes

CUNNINGHAM, J.

The plaintiff testified that the defendant Laurabel Hageman owned a large amount of prop*318erty, giving a general description of the real estate, thus: “She owns the ground where her home is on, ten acres near the Indian school; she owns some land in the Lincoln addition; she owns nearly the whole block where Mr. Hageman has his shop; she owns a house on First avenue and Van Burén; a $2,000 automobile is something too.” “Q. Have you any knowledge >of the value of this property you have described? A. Yes, sir. Q. What is it ? A. Between $200,000 and $300,000.” Upon cross-examination the witness was asked, “What did you say about $200,000 or $300,000”? after she had been asked if she had not testified that the block was worth that sum, and had denied that she had so testified, to which question she answered: ‘ ‘ That I thought she was worth that much approximately. Q. You don’t know it, do you? A. No, I don’t know the fact certainly.” She admitted that she did not know what mortgages were on the property, that she was not in the real estate business, nor was she acquainted with the real estate values in the city. Counsel thereupon moved: “Then I move to strike out all the testimony given with reference to the $300,000 she testified to this defendant being worth.” The court stated in ruling on the motion: “It may stand for what it is worth.” The witness upon further cross-examination stated that she heard the defendant state many years ago that the ten acres upon which her house is situate was worth $1,000 per acre. She knew that a building and loan association built the house but did not know how much of a mortgage they held on the property. She did not know of her own personal knowledge what any of the property was worth. What she knew of the value of the property was what people had told her.

The motion made upon the trial to strike the testimony of plaintiff relating to the value of the defendant’s property was confined to “all the testimony given with reference to the $300,000.” The assignment of error is broader 'than the motion and complains that the court erred in denying the motion “to strike out the testimony of the defendant in error . . . placing a valuation upon the property of plaintiff in error.” The defendant’s financial condition was one of the issues in the ease made by the pleadings, and the witness gave as her opinion of the approximate worth of defendant’s property described as $200,000 or $300,000. She had not qualified *319to give expert testimony upon that subject, but she had made the statement without objection, and until the motion was made no objection to such evidence was apparent, and then no objection was raised to any part of such testimony other than relating to the $300,000, and that was permitted to stand for what it was worth. When no objection was made to the testimony relating to the $200,000 as the approximate worth of defendant’s property, it is not apparent that defendant’s cause was prejudiced by the order of the court permitting the testimony relating to defendant’s property as worth $300,000 to stand for what it was worth.

Clearly, the ruling, if error, was without prejudice under the conditions exhibited by the record. Especially is this the case where the defendant has offered no evidence in rebuttal, as appears here.

At the close of plaintiff’s evidence in chief, counsel for defendant George Hageman'moved for a nonsuit as to such defendant, for the reason that the evidence discloses that at the time of the assault this defendant was not present; that he knew nothing of the assault; that he took no part in the assault; that his wife and codefendant was over the age of eighteen years; that she was living separate and apart from this defendant; that she was possessed of a separate property. Both the codefendant wife and the plaintiff objected upon different grounds. The court granted the motion. Whereupon the codefendant wife moved for a directed verdict in her favor, for the reason her husband had been dismissed from the case, and because the case cannot continue in the absence of a necessary party, and that the husband is a necessary party. This motion was denied and the case proceeded. Upon these rulings error is predicated. Whether the husband is a necessary party largely depends upon the question whether the husband is liable for damages resulting from a tortious assault made by his wife in his absence, and without his knowledge and consent.

The rule at common law is that the husband is liable for the torts of his wife committed during coverture. 21 Cyc. 1350, and note 71. To this rule of the common law both parties agree. Has that rule been adopted in Arizona, and does it obtain now? is the question raised for our consideration. The common law so far only as ‘it is consistent with, and *320adapted to, the natural and physical conditions of this state, .and the necessities of the people, and not repugnant to, or inconsistent with, the Constitution of the United States, the ■Constitution and laws of this state, or the established customs of the people of this state, is adopted and directly made the rule of decision in all courts of the state by section 8 of chapter 10, Laws of Arizona of 1907.

In .defining the term ‘ ‘ common law, ’ ’ as employed in a like worded statute of Nevada, in Reno Smelting, Milling & Reduction Works v. Stevenson, 20 Nev. 269, 19 Am. St. Rep. 364, 4 L. R. A. 60, 21 Pac. 317, the court says the term was employed in the same sense in which it is generally understood in this country, and the intention of the legislature was to adopt only so much of it as was applicable to our conditions. “The common law of England is not to be taken in all respects to be that of America. Our ancestors brought with them its general principles, and claimed it as their birthright; but they brought with them and adopted only that portion which was applicable to their situation.” Van Ness v. Pacard, 27 U. S. (2 Pet.) 137, 7 L. Ed. 374. “The common law,” says Chancellor KENT, “so far as it is applicable to our situation and government, has been recognized and adopted as an entire system by the Constitutions of Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey and Maryland. It has been assumed, by the courts of justice, or declared by’statute, with the like modifications, as the law of the land in every state. It was imported by our colonial ancestors as far as it was applicable.” 1 Kent’s Commentaries, 473. The authorities agree upon the meaning of the adoption of the common law and the .extent to which it is adopted by such statutes, and citations of authorities would be superfluous. Unless the common-law rule of liability of the husband for the torts of his wife is consistent with or adapted to the necessities of the people and not repugnant to, or inconsistent with, the Constitution and laws of this state, or to the established customs ■of the people of the state, then the rule was never adopted ,as the rule of decision by the courts of the state.

It is argued that a cardinal rule of the common law is that when the reasons for the rule have ceased, the rule itself ■ceases, and without doubt such is the common law. That is ■only another way to express the elasticity of that great sys*321tem of laws. That rule presupposes that another rule was in force and was the common law at one time, but those conditions have changed by legislation, by established custom, or from other causes, so that the reasons for the establishment of the given rule are no longer in existence, and as a consequence such rule no longer exists. '

We will pass the question whether the rule of the common-law liability of the husband for the torts of his wife, committed by her in the absence of, and without the knowledge or consent of, her husband, was adopted as a law of this state with the common-law system, as applicable to the necessities of the people of the territory and the state. We will concede for the purposes of this decision that the hardy pioneers, early settlers of this territory, like our colonial ancestors, brought with them from civilization to this, then wild and •dangerous region, the same liabilities and burdens they (some of them, at least) supposed they were leaving behind. We have in mind no established custom of which we are inclined to take judicial notice that can be said to be repugnant to, or inconsistent with, the rule of liability under consideration. Neither is it clear that the necessities of the people of the state require the abolition of such rule; we are therefore concerned with the Constitution and laws of the state and their effect upon this common-law rule deemed to have accompanied the early settlers as their habits, their weapons and their clothes accompanied them.

We may say at the outset that no provision of the state’s' Constitution expressly abolishes this rule of liability, or directly recognizes its existence. It will be necessary to examine the statutes upon the subject.

Paragraph 1302, Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1901, requires that, when a married woman is a party, her husband shall be joined with her, except when the action concerns her .separate property, and when the action is between her and her husband, whereupon she may sue. or be sued alone. This was the law since the organization of the territory of Arizona. Ariz. Comp. Laws 186A-71, c. 48, sec. 7.

All property owned or claimed by the wife before marriage, and that acquired by gift, devise or descent after marriage, and the increase, rents, issues and profits, as also the earnings *322and accumulations of herself and her minor children in her custody while she has or may have lived separate and apart from her husband, is made her separate property. Ariz. Rev. Stats. 1901, pars. 3102 and 3103.

If she is of the age of 18 years or upward, she has the sole and exclusive control of her separate property, and is not liable for the debts, obligations or engagements of her husband, and she may contract, sell, transfer, mortgage, convey, devise or bequeath her property in the same manner and with like effect as if she were unmarried. Ariz. Rev. Stats. 1901, par. 3105, re-enacted from see. 3, c. 32, Ariz. Comp. Laws 1864-71.

During coverture the husband has the sole right of disposal of, and the control over, the community property (Ariz. Rev. Stats. 1901, par. 3104), with the right of the wife to contract-debts for herself and children upon the credit of her husband in which case she and her husband must be sued jointly (Ariz. Rev. Stats., par. 3109, and Ariz. Rev. ■ Stats. 1901, par. 1304).

The wife may be sued alone when the action concerns her separate property, and when the action is between herself and her husband. In all other cases her husband must be joined; and she must be joined with her husband in actions to recover debts contracted by the wife upon the credit of her husband for necessaries for herself and children.

The laws relating to the rights of married persons first enacted in Arizona have been but slightly modified since the organization of the territory to the present, as will appear from an examination of chapter 32, Compiled Laws of 1864-71, including amendments thereto, page 306, and chapter. 48, sections 7 and 8, concerning proceedings in civil cases.

The disabilities of the wife resulting from the marriage state, as known-to the common law, have never been recognized by the law-making power of Arizona in their entirety, because, doubtless, that power has considered that all of the common-law disabilities of married women are not applicable to the conditions and necessities of the people of Arizona. Such disabilities as ever did obtain in Arizona largely disappeared with the enactment of the Compiled Laws of 1864-71, and those remaining have since been abolished with the lone exception, if that be an exception, indicated in paragraph 1302, Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1901, requiring the hus*323band to be made a party •with, the wife when she is sued, except in certain cases specified. If it be considered that such is a disability, such disability cannot be considered a common-law disability, except in a modified form, because paragraph 1303 provides that, where the wife is sued with her husband, she may defend for her own right. When the husband and wife are sued together, if the wife may defend for her own right, as the statute provides, which undoubtedly she may, the husband may separately defend for his own rights, although sued with his wife. But it is clear, where the husband and wife are sued together, but their rights conflict, each may defend in the same manner as any other defendants, joined as parties, would defend for their separate rights.

This action does not come within any of the exceptions specified in paragraph 1302 of the Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1901, that exempts the husband from becoming a party to the action in which the wife is made a party; .therefore the husband was a proper party defendant.

The plaintiff in error contends that the court erred in dismissing the defendant husband from the case when the plaintiff closed her evidence in chief, and refused to dismiss this plaintiff in error, his wife, also. The action was one of tort against several defendants, and before plaintiff is entitled to recover she must show a joint tort against the defendants, by the common-law rule. 23 Cyc. 811. But this rule has been changed by statute. Paragraph 1429 of the Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1901 provides that: “Judgment may in a proper case be given for or against one or more of several plaintiffs, or against or for one or more of several defendants or interveners.”

The term “proper case” in the statute has reference to such a case made by the evidence as will not support a joint liability, as alleged, but will support a liability and judgment against some of the defendants, in which event we have a proper case where a judgment may be given against one defendant and in favor of another defendant, notwithstanding that they have been properly joined as defendants in an action.

If the evidence is sufficient to charge the defendants with a joint liability or joint tort, then the court erred in dismiss*324ing the action as to one of the joint tort-feasors, and this is the real ground for the contention of plaintiff in error. It is not claimed by defendant in error that defendant George Hageman in any manner aided, encouraged, participated in, consented to, or was presént at the time or place, or had any previous knowledge of the tortious assault. The only claim made is that George Hageman was the husband of the plaintiff in error, and as such husband, the common-law rule of his liability for the voluntary torts of his wife not having been abrogated, the fact of this marital relation having been admitted is conclusive that the husband and wife are jointly liable, and that the plaintiff must recover, if at all, against both. We have held above that in this class of actions the statute requires the husband to be made a party with his wife.

If the common-law rule of liability obtains in this state, there is great force in the position taken by plaintiff in error. In order to arrive at a clear understanding of this question and to reach a proper conclusion, it becomes necessary to inquire : First, if the common-law rule is in force in this state; and, second, if such rule is not in force, what bearing the statute requiring the husband to be joined with his wife has upon the husband’s liability to the judgment to be rendered against the wife in such a case.

The question whether the married women’s law—statutes investing the wife with a separate property, and with the exclusive control and enjoyment of the same, and her right to sue and the liability to be sued in her own name and without the joining of her husband in all matters concerning her separate property, and such statutes not touching the subject of the wife’s voluntary torts—has the effect to relieve the husband from liability for such torts has been frequently before the courts. The weight of authority holds that the common-law liability of the husband for the voluntary torts of the wife is abrogated, so far as concerns torts connected with her separate property, by married women’s statutes, which, in general, confer upon the wife the ownership and management of her own property, free from the control of her husband, without expressly touching the subject of liability for her torts. We cite Quilty v. Battie, 135 N. Y. 201, 17 L. R. A. 521, 32 N. E. 47, in illustration.

*325Upon the question of the liability of the husband for the voluntary torts of the wife which do not concern her separate property, the authorities are in some conflict. In the greater number of states the courts have held the married women’s laws have not had the effect to relieve the husband from his common-law liability for such torts of his wife. Henley v. Wilson, 137 Cal. 273, 92 Am. St. Rep. 160, 58 L. R. A. 941, 70 Pac. 21, and the cases cited in L. R. A. and Am. St. Rep. are sufficient to illustrate the view taken by such courts. Upon the other side of the question, Illinois, in Martin v. Robson, 65 Ill. 129, 16 Am. Rep. 578, and in Hagebush v. Ragland, 78 Ill. 40, holds that such statutes do relieve the husband from such liability, when such laws have not expressly touched upon the subject of her voluntary torts, but they have invested her with the control and management of her separate property without the husband’s interference. The Illinois decisions have been followed in Norris v. Corkill, 32 Kan. 409, 29 Am. Rep. 489, 4 Pac. 862; Lane v. Bryant, 100 Ky. 138, 36 L. R. A. 709, 37 S. W. 584; Culmer v. Wilson, 13 Utah, 129, 57 Am. St. Rep. 713, 44 Pac. 833; and in Schuler v. Henry, 42 Colo. 367, 14 L. R. A., N. S., 1009, 94 Pac. 360.

In Martin v. Robson, supra, the leading case upon the side of the question now under consideration, Mr. Justice THORNTON, speaking for the court, in the course of an able opinion, said: “The intention of the legislature to abrogate the common-law rule, to a great degree, that the husband and wife were one person, and to give to the latter the right to control her own time, to manage her separate property, and contract with reference to it, is plainly indicated by these statutes. While they do not expressly repeal the common-law rule that the husband is liable for the torts of his wife, they have made such modification of his rights and her disabilities as wholly to remove the reason for the liability. ... A liability which has for its consideration rights conferred should no longer exist when the consideration has failed. If the relations of husband and wife have been so changed as to deprive him of all right to her property, and to the control of her person and her time, every principle of right would be violated, to hold him still responsible for her conduct. If she is emancipated, he should no longer be enslaved. ... So long as the husband was entitled to the property of the wife *326and to her industry, so long as he had power to direct and control her, and thus prevent her from the commission of torts, there was some reason for his liability. The reason has ceased. The ancient landmarks are gone. The maxims and authorities and adjudications of the past have faded away. The foundations hitherto deemed so essential for the preservation of the nuptial contract, and the maintenance of the marriage relation, are crumbling. The unity of husband and wife has been severed. They are now distinct persons, and may have separate legal estates, contracts, debts, and injuries. . . . His legal supremacy is gone, and the scepter has departed from him. . . . Her brain and hands and tongue are her own.” And says Judge FREEMAN, in his note to Henley v. Wilson, 92 Am. St. Rep. 169: “We may add that she alone should he responsible for them.” Further commenting upon this question in an able note to Henley v. Wilson, Judge FREEMAN, after referring to the effect of statutes upon the question (92 Am. St. Rep. 170), has this to say: “Some further reason must be sought than the diversity of the statutes of different states. We certainly should have expected a different conclusion from the California court, not only because of the extent to which the rights of married women have been enlarged under the laws of that state, but because the rule laid down in many of the older cases has expressly been corrected by statute.”

Judge COOLEY (1 Torts, 197, 13th ed.) says: “In the recent changes in the common law effected by statute in the several states, whereby married women have been given an independent power to make contracts and to control property, it is not very clear how far the law of torts has been modified. We should probably be safe in saying that, so far as they give validity to a married woman’s contracts, they put her on the same footing with other persons, and, when a failure to perform a duty under a contract is in itself a tort, it may doubtless be treated as such in a suit against a married woman. ... In Illinois it has been decided that under the new statutes the husband is not liable for a slander of the wife in which he did not participate, though the statutes on the subject, which were supposed to have changed the common law, were silent as regards her torts, and only purported to secure •to the woman her property and earnings and the full control *?and enjoyment thereof. This is, perhaps, a sound conclusion. Certainly the reasons on which the new legislation proceeds are such as should leave the wife to. respond alone for her torts, for they assume that she is fully capable of controlling her own actions, and can and will act independently of her husband. ’ ’

The states in which the like women’s laws have been enacted, and the courts have held such laws have not served to relieve the husband from the common-law liability for the voluntary torts of his wife, as a general rule such courts have followed that other common-law rule in the construction of such statutes, viz., that, these statutes being in derogation of the common law, they must be strictly construed. Such rule was kept in mind in Morgan v. Kennedy, 62 Minn. 348, 54 Am. St. Rep. 647, 30 L. R. A. 521, 64 N. W. 912. But such rule of construction does not obtain in this jurisdiction, and has been expressly abolished by section 4, chapter 10, Laws of 1907, wherein it has been enacted: ‘ ‘ The rule of the common law that statutes in derogation thereof are to be strictly construed, shall not apply to the statutes of this territory, (state), but such statutes and all proceedings under them shall be liberally construed with a view to effect their object and to promote justice.”

In this case the facts are that the assault was made by the wife at a time when she and her husband were living separate and apart. That the reasons moving the defendant wife to make the assault were her belief that the plaintiff by contact and improper relations with the husband, and plaintiff’s personal charms, had alienated the affections of the husband from the wife, and the husband and the plaintiff had entered into a conspiracy to effect a legal separation of the husband and wife, and in furtherance of such conspiracy a divorce suit had been commenced and other legal proceedings had been started and were pending, including this action against this wife defendant. Upon these grounds this defendant seeks to excuse her action in forcibly ejecting plaintiff from the plaintiff’s office and place of employment. The only grounds upon which this defendant seeks to avoid liability for her inexcusable conduct is that her husband was jointly liable, because of the marital relation alone. The court ruled that such relation did not make him liable. We think the ruling was just and *328wholly within the enlightened modern view that should be taken of the effect of the married women’s laws emancipating her from the common-law slavery, as was held by the Illinois court in Martin v. Robson, supra, and the courts, following that view, as supported by sound reason and justice, and by such eminent text-writers as COOLEY and FREEMAN.

Aside from these eminent authorities and the sound reasons controlling them, there exists in Arizona an additional reason for taking the above view of the question, not present in any of the laws of the states that have taken the opposite view of the married women’s laws. Paragraph 3106, Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1901, with slight changes as to the age, reenacted paragraph 2104, Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1887, and is as follows: “Hereafter married women of the age of eighteen years and upwards shall have the same legal rights as men of the age of twenty-one years and upwards, except the right of suffrage and of holding office, and except the right to make contracts binding the common property of the husband and wife; and shall be subject to the same legal liabilities as men of the age of twenty-one years and upwards ...” —and may vote, etc. Men are liable for their torts; therefore married women are likewise liable for their torts. If married men are legally liable for the voluntary torts of their wives, then such liability must likewise rest upon a wife for the voluntary torts of her husband. Her liability is made the same as is his. If this common-law rule of liability of the husband is preserved in this state, then this statute extends such rule of law to married women over the age of eighteen years, which is absurd in view of the expressed legislation upon the subject of women’s rights. We have no hesitancy in holding that the rule of the common-law liability of the husband for the voluntary torts of his wife does not now exist in Arizona.

It remains to be considered what effect paragraph 1302 has upon a judgment to be entered in a case coming within the class to which this action belongs. The statute is clear in its terms and will bear no interpretation that would relieve the husband from the burden of becoming a party in such case, as we have seen. If he is not liable by reason of his marital relation, as we have decided above, then is he liable by reason of the necessity of being a party? Since the organization of the territory of Arizona, the statute (paragraph 1302) has *329existed. See Comp. Laws 1877, sec. 8 (2444), p. 410. Since 1887 married women have been burdened with the same liabilities as men. See Ariz. Rev. Stats. 1887, par. 2104, reenacted" as paragraph 3106, Ariz. Rev. Stats. 1901, with the slight amendment as to age. It would seem that, where the legislature has cast upon a married woman the same liabilities as men have, there remains no reason why the husband of a married woman should be joined with her in an action where she is made a party. The Michigan court had this question before it in Burt v. McBain, 29 Mich. 260, and Justice COOLEY, speaking for that court, said: “What reason the-e can be for joining the husband as defendant, ... it is dammit to conceive, for it would seem plain that he might disregard the proceeding altogether, and suffer the case, so far as he is concerned, to go by default, without either subjecting himself to pecuniary risk, or either improving or prejudicing the ease of the plaintiff against the real defendant. These facts would constitute reasons sufficient for such an amendment of the statute as would make the joinder unnecessary, but the legislature seems never to have recognized them. On the contrary, in the very statutes referred to, it is assumed that the husband, though no longer responsible for the damage which may be recovered, is still a proper party to the suit. . . . ” In Michigan the statute had expressly repealed the common-law rule of the husband’s liability for the wife’s voluntary-torts, but had retained the statute in force requiring the husband to be joined when his wife was made a party. ■ We have held that the husband has been relieved of liability for his wife’s voluntary torts by the married women’s laws, and by paragraph 3106, Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1901, as a re-enactment of paragraph 2104, Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1887, and the requirement of making the husband a party to actions when his wife is a party has been retained.

The ruling made in Burt v. McBain, supra, was approved and followed in Marcus v. Rovinsky, 95 Me. 106, 49 Atl. 420, and such rule is made applicable to the parties only, and has no reference to the question of liability. The husband was a proper party, and, in one sense, he was so made in this case. The evidence discloses no liability upon his part, and the court properly directed a verdict in his favor. In other words, the court committed no reversible error in ordering a nonsuit, *330or in dismissing the action against the defendant husband. While the record indicates, but not clearly, that one of such courses was taken in the case, but it is clear that the jury was finally instructed to render a verdict for the husband defendant. Either course could not prejudice the rights of the plaintiff in error.

The plaintiff in error complains that the verdict is grossly excessive, and tainted with passion and prejudice. If passion and prejudice entered into the verdict, it cannot stand. The mere fact that the amount of the verdict exceeds our idea of the proper sum recoverable under the evidence, if such should be the fact, is not sufficient to justify a court in annulling the verdict. The plaintiff in error contends that some relation in amounts must exist between the compensatory and exemplary damages, and the proper relation does not appear. The verdict was a general one for $6,500. The plaintiff claimed $10,000 as exemplary damages and $5,000 special damages. No special issues were submitted to the jury, and the above general verdict was returned. We do not know how the jury arrived at just that sum, but it was their duty to fix from the evidence a just amount. It is mentioned in the brief of counsel and in argument at the bar that the fashionable personal appearance of the plaintiff in error at the trial was commented upon by the counsel for defendant in error, and the comparison drawn between the conditions and appearances of a working girl, modestly clad, with a fashionably and richly dressed opponent, and such comparison aroused a prejudice and passion in favor of plaintiff and was cause of the excessive verdict. To this we do not assent upon the statements of counsel alone. It has been the common observation of the race from a time whence the memory of man runneth not to the contrary that the decent exhibition of female charms has served in all ages to enlist the sympathy, if not the active services, of the male portion of the race, and, if applied in this case, we would be forced to presume that, instead of working a. prejudice with the jury, the remarks of counsel, calling direct attention of the jury thereto, served to reduce rather than enlarge the amount of the verdict. Nothing appears in the record from which the reasonable inference can be drawn that the jury, in arriving at the amount of their verdict, were controlled, or in any manner affected, by the *331appearance of the defendant or the remarks of counsel relating thereto, and no other grounds are advanced by plaintiff in error justifying an interference.

' We find no reversible error in the record. The judgment is affirmed.

FRANKLIN, C. J., and ROSS, J., concur.

Application for rehearing denied.

NOTE.—The authorities on the effect of married women’s acts upon husband’s liability for wife’s torts are reviewed in notes in 14 L. R. A., N. S., 1003, and 25 L. R. A., N. S., 840.