Stimpson v. Pfister

By the Court,

DixoN, O. J.

It seems to us that this case presents no ground for the application of the doctrine that a party relying upon an exception in a statute must, in pleading, state facts bringing his case within the exception. That rule, or more properly, the rule that in pleading upon a statute, the subject of any exception in the enacting or prohibitory clause of the act, must, in the declaration, be excluded by averment, applies, so far as we know, only to actions founded on the statute itself. Here the alleged cause of action is not founded on the statute, but exists quite independently of it; and we can see no more reason for requiring the plaintiff to state facts showing herself within the act authorizing a married woman to sue alone, than for requiring her to state that she is twenty-one years of age, and therefore entitled to appear in person or by attorney. There is no rule of pleading making either averment necessary. A married woman, being authorized by statute to take by inheritance, gift, grant or devise, from any person other than her husband, real and personal property, or any interest or estate therein, with like effect as if she were unmarried, and, when the action concerns such property, to sue alone, comes into court like any other suitor, and if her capacity or right to maintain the action is controverted, and her disability does not appear on the face of the complaint, it becomes a matter of defense to be set up in the answer and proved by the defendant as in any other case, subject to the rules of law specially applicable to such actions. Dillaye v. Parks, 31 Barb., 132.

*277We are of opinion, therefore, that the complaint is good, and that the offer of the plaintiff to prove that the note in suit was her separate property should not have been rejected.

Judgment reversed, and a new trial awarded.