The jury have found (under an instruction which was unexceptionable to the defendant, in fact one which was asked by him, and given, and subsequently repeated and made more explicit in the charge of the court) that there was no power of attorney executed and delivered by the plaintiff to her husband before the execution and delivery of the deed by him to Manchester. There was irreconcilable conflict of testimony upon this point, and it is hard to believe that there was not falsehood and perjury on one side or the other. But the jury have settled the question upon a sufficiency of evidence, and their decision cannot be disturbed. The defendant does not seek to do so; and it must be taken as true, as found by the jury, that there was no previous authority from the plaintiff to her husband to execute the deed, or cause it to be executed in her name.
This fact, so found by the jury, has an important bearing upon the question we are to consider, namely: whether the plaintiff has ratified by her acquiescence, or is estopped by her silence from denying, the agency of her husband. Such is the question presented by the first, second and fourth instructions asked by the defendant and refused by the court, and to which exceptions were taken.
“ Where an agency actually exists, the mere acquiescence of the principal may well give rise to the presumption of an intentional ratification of the act. The presumption may be far less strong, and the mere fact of acquiescence may be deemed far less cogent, where no such relation of agency exists at the time between the parties.” Story on Agency, § 256. In this case, the jury having found that there was no agency, it belongs to the class where the presumption of ratifica*140tion by mere acquiescence is very much weakened, as stated by Judge Stoey. But in the case of an unauthorized act done in the name of another by a mere stranger, it has been held that it will not be binding on him unless expressly ratified. It was so decided in Wood v. Williams, 26 Ill. 447. And this position is maintained by an English writer of very considerable eminence, who cites the authority of a great civilian in support of/it. 1 Livermore on Agency, 50. Mr. Liveemoee says : “When the relation of principal and agent does in fact exist, although in the particular transaction the agent has exceeded his authority, an intention to ratify will always be presumed from the silence of the principal, who has received a letter informing him what has been done on his account. But, where the person doing the business is a mere volunteer, who has officiously interfered in the affairs, of another person, and has effected an insurance, or made a purchase for him, I do not conceive that the other person is bound to answer a letter from the intermed-dler, informing him of the contracts so made in his name, nor that his silence can be construed into a ratification. Certainly no case has gone this length, and the opinion of the great Cujas is, that this is no ratification.”
And in White v. Langdon, 30 Vt. 599, this doctrine was carried somewhat further. It was there held not to be the duty of a principal, who has given his agent merely a special and limited authority to sell property, upon learning that the agent has sold it in violation of his authority, to seek the purchaser, and give him notice of his claim; and his omission to do so, and his mere silence, are not ordinarily to be construed as a ratification of the sale. And much to the same effect is Powell's Adm'r v. Henry, 27 Ala. 612.
In the able and well considered opinion of the court, by Woodwaed, Justice, in P., W. & B. Railroad Co. v. Cowell, 28 Pa. St. R. 336, it is said: “ I do not under*141stand counsel to mean that there can he no valid ratification unless one of the conditions specified — either prior agency or possession of the principal’s property — has existed, but that silence after knowledge of the act done is evidence of ratification only in such cases. It must be • admitted that the act of a merel stranger or volunteer is capable of ratification, for allí the authorities are so; but the argument is, that the® silence of the party to be affected, whatever the attending circumstances, cannot amount to ratification of the act of a stranger. * * * #
“ If then, the principle of law be, that I can ratify that only which is done in my name, but when I have ratified whatever is done in my name I am bound for it as by the act of an authorized agent, it is 'apparent that my silence in view of what has been done is to be regarded simply as evidence of ratification, more or less expressive, according to the circumstances in which it occurs. It is not ratification of itself, but only evidence of it to go to the jury along with all the circumstances that stand in immediate connection with it. Among them, the prior relations of the parties are very important. If the party to be charged had been accustomed to contract through the agency of the individual assuming to act for him, or had intrusted property to his keeping, or if he were a child or a servant, partner or factor, the relation, conjunctionis favor, would make silence strong evidence of assent.
“ On the other hand, if there had been no former agency, and no peculiarity in the prior relations of the parties, silence — a refusal to respond to mere impertinent interference — would be a very inconclusive but not an absolutely irrelevant circumstance. The man who will not speak when he sees his interests affected by another, must be content to let a jury interpret his silence. ******
“ If mental assent may be inferred from circumstances, silence may indicate it as well as words or *142deeds. To say that silence is no evidence of it, is to say there can be no implied ratification of an unauthorized act — or at least to tie up the possibility of ratification to the accident of prior relations. Neither reason nor authority justifies such a conclusion. A man who sees what has been done in his name and for his benefit, even by an intermeddler, has the same power to ratify and confirm it that he would have to make a similar contract for himself; and if the power to ratify be conceded to him, the fact of ratification must be provable by ordinary means.”
The learned judge then proceeds with some observations upon the language of Mr. Livermore above quoted, and to make a distinction between the effect of silence upon the judicial mind, or as a ratification to be implied by law, and its effect as a circumstance from which the jury may imply it.
It is not my intention to criticise the views which have been thus expressed on either side of this question, but simply to give them; and I do not do so, except to say of the language of Mr. Justice Woodward, that I think he goes too far in assuming that the principal has the same power to ratify and confirm the unauthorized act of an intermeddler that he would have to make a similar contract for himself, and this may have led the learned judge too far in his reasoning upon the other question. It is not true as a principle of law, at least as has been held by this court, that the principal always possesses such power. He cannot by his own mere act or assent, in whatever form, always bind the other party to the contract. Dodge v. Hopkins, 14 Wis. 630.
And besides the authorities above cited and those referred to in Story on Agency, the ‘following may be examined with profit upon this question: Hall v. Vanness, 49 Pa. St. 457; Law v. Cross, 1 Black, 533; Hall v. Harper, 17 Ill. 82; Reese v. Medlock, 27 Texas, 120; Franklin Fire Ins. Co. v. Massey, 33 Pa. St. 221.
*143But it may be said that the husband was not a stranger or volunteer within the meaning of the law on this subject, and that the marriage relation existing between the parties made it the duty of the wife to disavow the conveyance at once, and, not having done so, she will be deemed by her silence to have ratified it. We have already seen that the prior relations of the parties are important; and Judge Stout says, in the section above referred to, that if there are peculiar relations of a different sort between the parties, such as that of father and son, the presumption of a ratification will become more vehement, and the duty of disavowal on the part of the principal more urgent when the facts are brought to his knowledge. And then he cites the case put by the Roman law, of a son who should borrow money in the absence of his father, as if by authority of the father, and should write to him to pay the money to the lender; and it declares that if the father does not approve of the loan, he ought immediately to make known his dissent to the lender, otherwise he will.be deemed tacitly to have ratified it. The cases pút by way of illustration are all where the principal or party to be charged is sui juris, and entirely free to act as he pleases. Such is the case of the father where a child, or of a master where a servant, has undertaken to act for him, or of a factor or partner; and such would be the case of a husband whose wife had contracted in his name without previous authority. But whether a married woman, whose husband has assumed to act without authority in her name and to dispose of her property, can be said to stand upon the same footing, is another question. In times past married women have been very much under the dominion and control of their husbands, and they are so still, notwithstanding the liberality of modern legislation in their behalf. It may be a question, therefore, whether the presumption is more vehement in such case or not, or *144whether the situation of the wife, in some instances at least, ought not to be considered as modifying the severity of the rule.
But be these questions as they may, we think there is an essential element wanting in this case to the application of any rule by which the plaintiff shall be held to have ratified the conveyance or estopped from denying the agency. Assuming the law to be that the principal must immediately repudiate and give notice of his disavowal of the acts of a stranger who has officiously interposed in his affairs, and that a married woman who does not notify the other party of her dissent from an unauthorized act or contract of her husband, can claim no protection or immunity on account of her relation as wife, still we think there was no ratification or estoppel here. “No doctrine is better settled,” say the court in Owings v. Hull (9 Peters, 629), “ both on principle and authority, than this: that the ratification of an act of an agent previously unauthorized, must, in order to bind the principal, be with a full knowledge of all the material facts.” See also, 2 Blackford, 119; 8 Gill & J. 250, 323; 2 Bay, 269; 2 Smedes & Marshall, 193, 199; 3 Greenleaf, 429, 432; and 6 Pick. 198, 203. It is true, that the cases are mostly where the principal was ignorant of the true nature of the contract or agreement entered into by the assumed agent; but the principle must extend as well to ignorance of any other fact, a knowledge of which is necessary to the person to be charged, in order that he may disavow and give notice thereof to the other party. The supposed principal must not only have full knowledge of all the material facts relating to the contract, but also of every fact requisite to enable him to repudiate it; or the means of knowledge must be at hand, so that he may obtain it or it shall be his fault if he does not. Such knowledge or means of knowledge is not shown to have been possessed by the plaintiff in this action. It is a *145controverted point in the testimony whether she knew the name of the grantee, Manchester, at all or not, or whether it was ever told to her. She testifies that she did not — Mr. Ladd that she did. If she was told his name, that was all she knew, and all the information her husband ever saw fit to give her with respect to the grantee. It does not appear that she knew Mr. Manchester’s post-office address, or where he resided, nor even that her husband knew. Mr. Ladd undoubtedly knew that Manchester resided in Winnebago county, Illinois, as that was recited in the deed; but whether he knew his particular place of residence, or post-office address, does not appear. The plaintiff resided in Winnebago county, in this state, and distant about one hundred and thirty miles, or four days’ journey according to then existing modes of travel, from the residence of Mr. Manchester, and nearly the same distance from Green county, where the land was, and where only she could expect to gain any information on the subject. She was a stranger to all the persons concerned in the execution of the deed, except her- husband and Mrs. West, who personated her in the transaction, or at least signed and acknowledged the deed in her name. She had only such information as her husband and Mrs. West were willing to give her. Under these circumstances, we think it cannot be said to have been the fault or neglect of the plaintiff that Mr. Manchester was not notified of her dissent. If not absolutely, it was practically, out of her power to give him notice. If she had known his name and post-office address, she might have written to him, hut more than this could not reasonably have been required of a married woman under such circumstances. And it does not appear that her situation was afterwards changed, or that she ever acquired or could have acquired the requisite knowledge until after her divorce from Mr.. Ladd, when this suit was commenced. The burden of showing these facts is upon the defendant, if he seeks *146to estop or hold her to a ratification, and he has not shown them.
And this was the defect in the instructions asked by the defendant, and which were refused. They assumed sufficient knowledge in the plaintiff of all the facts, so that mere silence on her part amounted to a ratification, or would authorize the jury so to find, and that she so intended. But the proofs in this particular were defective, and if they had not been, it was still a matter of fact for the jury to find that the plaintiff had such knowledge, and not for the court to assume in its instructions. The instructions were therefore properly refused.
The remaining exceptions are to the refusal of the court to instruct as requested with respect to the statute of limitations, and to the order refusing to grant a new trial when applied for under the statute.'
There was nothing in the evidence upon which to found the instruction with respect to the statute of limitations. The possession was vacant until the defendant entered after the conveyance to him in November, 1865. Mr. Manchester made some little preparations to build, cleared away some brush, and made some rails on the land in the summer of 1854, but never afterwards entered upon or cultivated any part of it, and it seems no one did until the defendant entered. This did not constitute possession adverse to the plaintiff, and so the instruction was inapplicable.
The new trial under the statute was refused because the defendant had waived it by stipulation. It is urged that the stipulation was invalid because made before trial, and before it was known that the defendant would want a new trial, or had the right to apply for it. This is no objection. A party may ..waive a future contingent right, as well as one which he presently has; and effect was properly given to the stipulation.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.