delivered the opinion pf. the Court.
The facts disclosed by the pleadings in this case are, that the goods, to recover the value of which, this action was brought, were sold and delivered to, and upon the sole credit, of Sally Reynolds, one of the defendants, called the wife of Elisha Reynolds, the other defendant, previous to their marriage, viz. in October, 1816. That, at the time pf the sale and delivery of the goods, she was the wife of one Joseph Emmerson, then living in Canada; which was known to the plaintiff. That Emmerson, a citizen born in the United States, left this state in 1812, and has ever since resided, and still resides in Canada, furnishing no support to his wife, wh.o has, since the absence of her husband, transacted business, and contracted, as a feme sole.
In contemplation of law, by marriage, the existence of the wife is merged in that of the husband. And it is a general principle, that she can, during coverture, make no contracta by which she is bound ; or sue or be sued alone.
To this rule of law, that a married woman is incapable of suing, or being sued, without her husband, there are excepted cages ; and so far as the principles, which have controled the decisions in such cases extend, the Court feel bound to recognize them, as the law here.
Where the husband is accounted in law civiliter mortuus, the wife may sue or be sued alone; as where the husband is exiled, banished for life, or has abjured the realm. So too, where the husband is an alien, having never resided in the. government, she is capable of suing and being sued alone. But we believe there is no principle of law, that will authorize her to sue, or subject her to a suit, as a feme sole, where the husband is a citizen or subject of the government, on account of her having a separate maintenance, or of his temporary absence.
That living separate and apart from her husband, with a separate maintenance, will not authorize the wife to sue, or subject her to be sued as a feme sole, is now well settled. — Marshall vs. Rutton, 8 T. R. 545.
In examining the cases that have been decided, bearing upon the question upon which a decision is called for in this case, it will be found, that although there are some, in which a temporary absence of a citizen or subject, would seem to have been a ground for considering the wife as a feme sole, for thcpurposes of contracting, pleading, and being impleaded ; yet it is clearly opposed by the current of authority.
In the case of Carrol vs. Blencow, 4 Esp. 27,1 decided at nisi prius, by Lord Alvanly, where the husband was transported for 7 years, and was still absent, the wife was held liable; notwithstanding the 7 years had expired at the time of pleading.
The case of De Gailon vs. L'Aigle, 1 Bos. & Pul. 357, in which the wife was held liable alone, is a case where the husband was a foreigner, and had never been in England. The case decided as above, viz. against the wife, by Lord Kenyon, at nisi *178prius, Walford vs. the Duchess of De la Pienne, 2 Esp. 554, is also a case, where the husband was an alien, though he had been domiciled in England. In the case of Franks vs. the same Duchess De la Pienne, the decision of the same judge is as in the former case.
These are the cases upon which the plaintiff principally relies ; but from examination it will be found, none of them come up to this case; and if the principle contended for can be extracted from them, it is not supported by any ancient authority, and is very clearly and fully refuted by subsequent decisions.
‘ In the case of Carrol vs. Blencow, the ground taken is, that the husband had abjured- the realm. The case of De Gailon vs. L'Aigle seems to have been decided much upon the authority of Lady Belknap’s case; and that he was a foreigner. The case is clearly to be distinguished from Lady Belknap’s; for, although it is said by Buller, J. that it does not appear whether the husband was banished for one year, íof five, or for life; in Coke’s Lit. ■133, in treating of the ability of the wife to sue alone, the case is thus stated. “If, by act of parliament, the husband be attainted of treason or felony, and saving his life, is banished jorever, as Belknap &c. was, this is a civil death, and the wife may sue as a feme sole. But if the husband, by act of parliament, have judgment to be exiled but for a time, which some call a religation, this is not a civil death.”
Justice Heath, who concurred in the opinion, in the case of De Gailon vs. L'Aigle says, in the case of Farrar vs. the Countess Dowager of Granard, 1 New Rep. 81, that the former case proceeded much upon the ground of the defendant’s husband being a foreigner ; and Lord Kenyon, in the case of Franks vs the Duch De la Pienne says, “had this been the case of an Englishman, who might be presumed to have the animus reverlandi, it might be different.”
In the case oí Marsh vs. Hutchinson, 2 Bos. & Pul. 224, Lord Elden, in giving his opinion, limits the right of the wife of an Englishman to sue as a feme sole, and her liability to be sued as such, to the cases of the civil death of the husband ; and in this opinion, Heath, justice, seems to concur; and on the subject of voluntary absence, says, “there is no case in which the wife has been held liable, the husband being an Englishman.”
In the case of Farrar vs. the Countess Dowager of Granard, 1 New Rep. 80, the wife was held not liable, upon the ground that a temporary absence of the husband, was not sufficient. In the case of Hopewell vs. De Pienne, 2 Camp. 113, before Lord Ellen-borough, where the husband had been absent 12 years, at the time of pleading, and 11 years at the time of making the contract, the only question that was raised was, whether it was incumbent on the defendant, to prove her husband to be living; and this having been proved, a verdict was taken for the defendant.
The decision in the case of Ray vs. the Duchess De la Pienne, 3 Camp. 123, would seem to put this question at rest. The *179same Duchess De la Pienne, against whom Lord Kenyon had' twice decided at nisi prius, is again sued, (her husband being still hbsent.) — Lord Ellenborough remarks “if the husband has never been in this kingdom, the wife of an alien, 1 think, may be sued as a feme soleand he supposes it probable, the fact that he had once been in England, was not distinctly brought to Lord Kenyon’s attention.
A. G. Whittemore, A. Aláis, and Jas. Davis, for the plaintiff. B. Turner and B. F. Smalley, for the defendants.The principles of this decision are the spme that governed the Court in the case of Marsh vs. Hutchinson; though Lord Ellenborough goes still farther, and denies the liability of the wife of an alien, who is absent, if he has once bisen domiciled in England; a distinction not taken in that case. The plaintiff was nonsuited, and at the ensuing term, the whole Court concurred in the opinion of the chief justice, and refused a rule to show cause.
The same principle is fully confirmed in the case of Boggett vs. Friar, 11 East, 301.
The Court cannot listen to the suggestion, that the husband, by three years absence, has lost all right to reclaim the wife without her consent; nor will absence alone, for any length of time, deprive the husband of his legal rights, as such, over the wife. There is nothing in this case that shows the husband did not intend to return, at the time the plaintiff contracted with the wife; nor even now, excepting that the wife has taken anothér hus - band.
If the wife was not liable at the time of contracting, lapse of time cannot make her so.. Suppose the husband should return while the action was pending, could the plaintiff proceed with his action and imprison the wife ? In the event of the return of the husband, it will hardly be contended, that property acquired by the wife in his absence, would be beyond his control, or that she can be endowed. It is not perceived upon what prin-* ciple the wife, for some purposes may be considered as a femem sole, and for others as covert.
Judgment, that the plaintiff’s plea is insufficient.