It appears by the agreed statement of facts, that the defendant being indebted to Rosa B. Shepardson for money that she had loaned him, gave her his promissory note for the amount; that a few months afterwards the parties intermarried, and that the marriage relation has ever since existed between them; that the note belongs to the wife and was overdue when, this suit was brought; that she indorsed it to the plaintiff for the purpose of collection only, and that suit was brought after demand of payment.
I. Under the Married Women’s Act, No. 84, laws of 1884, which is incorporated into V. S. 2644 to 2647, inclusive, the note continued to¡ be the property of the. wife after the marriage. It is true,'as the defendant contends, that this statute, which givels married women the right to hold all personal property and rights of action acquired by them before marriage to *178their sole and separate use, only enables them to' make contracts with all persons other than their husbands, and to sue and be sued upon such contracts. But the contention cannot be maintained that the note in this case became null and void and the debt extinguished by the intermarriage, for this is contrary to the express provisions • of the statute. It is immaterial that the wife acquired the property in this note from the defendant while the parties were sole. It was the payee’s property until the marriage, and the statute is broad enough to include -it within its terms. It says, “All personal property * * * acquired by a woman before coverture,” * * *. It makes no exception.
Sweat v. Hall, 8 Vt. 187, and Ellsworth v. Hopkins, 58 Vt. 705, 5 Atl. 405, are not authorities for the defendant. They only hold that a promissory note given by a husband to his wife during coverture is void because of the legal incapacity of the parties to contract with each other. But both these cases recognize the doctrine that where the note represents a separate statutory or equitable property in the wife, a Court of Equity will protect it.
The defendant cites Abbott v. Winchester, 105 Mass. 115, where it was indeed held that a note given by a man to a woman whom he afterwards married became a nullity upon the marriage and was not revived by the husband’s death. But the doctrine held in that case and in Chapman v. Kellogg, 102 Mass. 246, was repudiated in Butler v. Ives, 139 Mass. 202. In the latter case a husband advanced money to his wife for the benefit of her separate estate, and she gave her promissory note therefor, secured by mortgage, to a third person who assigned the note and mortgage to the husband. The husband assigned the note and mortgage to a fourth person who foreclosed the mortgage and brought a *179writ o'f entry against the person who was claiming under the wife; held, that the writ could be maintained.
But it is unnecessary to' consider the decisions of courts of other states. The doctrine of the common law by which all the personal property of the wife became her husband’s upon marriage has been abrogated by our statutes. Wright v. Burroughs, 61 Vt. 390, 18 Atl. 311, is authority that, under existing laws, the note in this case was the sole property of the wife when- she transferred it to the plaintiff. It was held in that case that the husband was improperly joined as a party plaintiff with his wife in a suit upon her note against a third person.
II. It is further contended that, as the wife could not sue her husband upon the note, she could not give the plaintiff authority for that purpose. It is a sufficient answer to this claim that the wife retained every right in respect to the note after her marriage that she possessed before, except the right to sue her husband upon it. She could sell the note absolutely, or transfer it for collection as well after as before her -marriage. The statute places no inhibition upon this act; on the contrary, it gives her the same authority to deal with the note as if she were unmarried. She did not confer authority upon -the plaintiff to sue the defendant; that authority was incident to the plaintiff’s legal title to the note, although the equitable interest remained in the wife.
Judgment affirmed.