dissenting.
In the opinion prepared by Norval, J., it is said that it is undisputed that the notes and mortgage securing said notes were signed by both Mary E. Wright and her husband Frederick Wright, and that in neither is there a stipulation that said instruments were given with reference to the wife’s separate property, or, that her estate generally should be bound for the payment of the debts secured by said mortgage. It is also stated that there was evidence tending to establish the fact that the notes were executed to obtain a loan made to the husband alone for his individual benefit, and that the wife signed the said notes solely as surety for Mr. Wright. The notes signed by Mrs. Wright were in the following language:
“$115.00. Grand Island, Neb., August 1,1889.
“February 1st, 1891, after date, for value received, we, or either of us, promise to pay to the order of the Grand Island Banking Company one hundred and fifteen and no 100 dollars at the bank in Grand Island, Nebraska, *586with interest at ten per cent per annum payable from maturity. It is expressly understood that all the makers of this note are principals thereon. The indorsers severally Avaive presentment for payment, protest, and notice of protest and notice of non-payment of this note and all defense on the ground of any extension of the time of its payment, or any part thereof, that may be given to the holder or holders to them or either of them. Secured by mortgage of even date hereivitli on lots 7 and 8, block 98, in Railroad Addition to Grand Island, recorded in Hall county, Nebraska.
“Mary E. Wright.
“Frederick Wright.” •
The only note made to John Lang Avas in the follOAving language:
“12,300.00.
“Grand Island, Nebraska, August 1st, 1889.
“On the first day of August, 1891, I promise to pay John Lang, or order, tAventy-three hundred and no 100 dollars, with interest from this date until paid at the rate of 7 per cent per annum, payable semi-annually as per coupon attached. Value received. Principal and interest payable at the office of the Grand Island Banking Company in Grand Island, Nebr. Should any of the said interest be not paid Avhen due, it shall bear interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum from the lime same becomes due, and upon failure to pay any of said interest Avithin thirty days after due, the holder may elect to consider the Avhole note due and it may be collected at once. It is expressly agreed and declared that these notes are made and executed under, and are in all respects to be construed by, the laws of the state of Nebraska. • Mary E. Wright.
“Frederick Wright.”
In respect to the mortgages to secure the notes it was stipulated that the legal title of the mortgaged property was, when the mortgages were made, held by Mary E. Wright.
*587Section 2, chapter 53, Compiled Statutes, is in this language: “A married woman while the married relation subsists may bargain, sell, or convey her real and personal property, and enter into any contract with reference to the same, in the same manner, to the same extent, and with like effect as a married man may in relation to his real and personal property.” Section 3 of the same chapter provides: “A woman may, while married, sue and be sued in the same manner as if she were unmarried.” By section 1 of the aforesaid chapter it is provided that any property that a woman in this state may own at the time of her marriage and any property that she may afterwards acquire from any person, except her husband, shall be her separate property. The provisions of these sections are supplemented by those of section 4, which section is in this language: “Any married woman may carry on trade, or business, and perform any labor or service on her sole and separate account; and the earnings of any married woman from her trade, business, labor, or services shall be her sole and separate property, and may be used and invested by her in her own name.”
The power of a married woman to bind her estate in the same manner as a man might do, would, under the above provisions, exist without room for any question whatever, but for the supposed limitations found embodied in section 2 in this language, “and enter into any contract with reference to the same.” One view, and that adopted in the aforesaid opinion, as I understand it, is that by reason of these qualifying words there should be contained in every contract made by a married woman express words to the effect that by her said contract she intends to bind her separate estate. In view of our statutes I shall now consider the cases cited' in support of this proposition and such other decisions of this court as bear upon this subject. It is not questioned that the statute under consideration was enacted to relieve married women of their common-law disabilities. The *588words of limitation found in section 2 might, therefore, be held necessary because in the statute the status of married women’s property alone was under consideration. If from section 2 there should be dropped the words “and enter into any contract with reference to the same” and the corresponding words “in relation to,” it would read thus: “A married woman, while the marriage relation subsists, may bargain, sell, or convey her real or personal property in the same manner, to the same extent, and with the same effect as a married man may his real and personal property.” This ■ would empower her only to bargain, sell, or convey her property. She could make no other contract with reference to it. To avoid this result the general enabling clause, “and enter into any contract with reference to the same,” was inserted. Let us now consider section 2 simply with reference to this clause. For this the parts involved are as follows: “A married woman * * * may * * * enter into any contract with reference to the same (her real and personal property) in the same manner, to the same extent, and with like effect, as a married man may in relation to his real and personal property.” If the limitation under consideration requires that a married woman, in order to contract with reference to her real and personal property must, in such contract, expressly so recite, what shall be said of the language “may * * * contract with reference to the same in the same manner * * as a married man, in relation to his real and personal property”? No one would claim that a married man could render liable to his debts his real and personal property only by expressly stating in his promissory note that he intended thereby to bind such separate real and personal property. This, however, must be the logical effect of the above provision, if it is so construed as to make this requirement in relation to the property of married women, for, by statute, the property, real and personal, of each is to be bound in the same way as is the like property of the other. The *589fact that the legislature intended in the chapter to confine its effects to the contractual capacities of a married woman and used the guarded language which it did with regard to the rights of a married woman to contract with reference to her property, so that it would not be misunderstood as changing her marital status and duties toward her husband, is manifested from the consideration that her right to contract is the same as the right of a married man, that is to say, such duties and liabilities as the marriage relation implies between the parties thereto, remain unaffected by this chapter. By virtue of section 2, chapter 53, Compiled Statutes, there exists such a correlation between the contractual powers of a, married woman and those of a married man, with respect to their property rights, that, unless we are willing to say that married men do not contract with reference to their separate property unless their promissory notes or other evidences of indebtedness so state in express language, we cannot consistently insist upon that requirement in relation to the contracts of a married woman. Notwithstanding the confident language to the contrary in the opinion filed as to the construction which should be placed upon this chapter of the Compiled Statutes defining the contractual rights of married women, I think we are not enlightened by a clear uniformity in the adjudications of this court.
In Webb v. Hoselton, 4 Neb. 308, Maxwell, J., said in effect that, at common law, the husband and wife were treated as one person, and that during coverture her legal relation and existence were treated as though suspended, but that, in equity, a married woman, as to contracts with reference to her separate property, was regarded as feme, sole. Following this observation there occurred in the opinion this language: “And the fact that a debt has been contracted during coverture either as principal or as surety for herself or husband (v jointly with him, seems ordinarily to be held prima ftric evidence of an intention to charge her separate estala *590without any proof of a positive agreement or intention to do so. (Bullpin v. Clarke, 17 Ves. [Eng.] 365; Story, Equity Jurisprudence 1400; Murry v. Barlee, 4 Sim. [Eng.] 82; Owens v. Dickerson, 1 Craig & Ph. [Eng.] 48; Norton v. Turvill, 2 P. Wm. [Eng.] 144.) Our statutes provide that A married woman, while the marriage relation subsists, may bargain, sell, or convey her real and personal property and enter into any contract with- reference to the same in the same manner, to the same extent, and with like effect as a married man may in relation to his real and personal property. A married woman may carry on any trade or business and perform any labor or services on her sole and separate account, and the earnings of any married woman from’ her trade, labor, business, or services shall be her sole and separate property and may be used and invested by her in her name.’ In the case of Yale v. Dederer, 22 N. Y. 450, where a wife signed a note with her husband as surety, she having a separate estate, the court held-that unless the consideration of the contract was one going to the direci benefit of the estate the intention to charge the separate estate must be stated in, and be a part of, the contract. And the court refused to permit parol proof to establish that intention. That decision, in our opinion, canm.l be sustained on either principle or authority.” There was more than one proposition discussed in Webb v. Hoselton, and Gantt, J., dissented as to the result, without giving his reasons or directing attention to the particular branch of the discussion which met his disapproval of the holding of the court in Yale v. Dederer, 22 N. Y. 450.
In Davis v. First Nat. Bank of Cheyenne, 5 Neb. 242, the opinion was by Judge Gantt, who, after a brief reference to the scope of the act under consideration, said: “It is not necessary now to inquire into the wisdom of the act in regard to the extent it goes in legalizing the contracts of married women, or in regard to the right of action by or against her, as though she were a feme sole, *591The statute confers upon her the right and power to make legal and binding contracts; it gives her the legal right to sue, and makes her legally liable to be sued on her contracts, in the same manner as if she were unmarried, and the court must expound the law as it finds it made by the constitutional lawmaking power. But the rule must be observed that all such contracts of a feme coverb must be with reference to, and upon the faith and credit of, her separate estate.” The above quotation contains the entire discussion in which was formulated the proposition that a contract which would bind a married woman must be one with reference to, and upon the faith of, her separate estate.
In Hale v. Christy, 8 Neb. 264, the language of Judge Lake upon this proposition was as follows: “It is urged by counsel for Mrs. Christy that owing to her coverture she incurred no personal liability by signing said note. This, no doubt, is true, and the finding of the court below that she was liable cannot be upheld. Even under the very liberal provisions of our more recent legislation respecting the rights of married women, this court has already held that to bind her the contract must be made with reference to, and upon the faith and credit of, her separate estate. (Davis v. First Nat. Bank of Cheyenne, 5 Neb. 242.) She was not liable on the note. But while the finding of the court that Mrs. Christy was indebted on the note cannot be upheld, inasmuch as the decree does not go to the extent of adjudging that she shall pay it, no injury was done.” Following the above language it was said that as Mrs. Christy could not be held liable at law, her property could not be taken to satisfy a deficiency judgment if the mortgaged property should not thereafter sell for enough to satisfy fully the amount thereby secured. The language quoted, therefore, amounts to mere oliier, for it touched no proposition involving the liability of Mrs. Christy as presented in’the case as it stood at the time the above opinion was delivered.
*592In State Savings Bank v. Scott, 10 Neb. 83, Maxwell, then chief justice, quoted from Davis v. First Nat. Bank of Cheyenne this language of Gantt, J.: “But the rule must be observed, that all such contracts of the feme covert must be with reference to, and upon the faith and credit of, her separate estate.” Following the above quotation the chief justice said: “And thé same doctrine is affirmed in Hale v. Christy, 8 Neb. 264. This being the construction given to this statute more than three years ago, it has become a rule affecting the rights and liabilities of individuals, and, if unsatisfactory, should be changed by the legislature and not by the court.”
In Barnum v. Young, 10 Neb. 309, Cobb, J., while intimating that his views might be different if the question was an open one, declared that he felt bound by the case of State Savings Bank v. Scott, supra, and the two eases which it followed.
In Gillespie v. Smith, 20 Neb. 455, it was held that a married woman, by limiting her defense to the allegation that the notes she signed were not a charge upon her separate estate, too much restricted it to avoid liability, for the reason that the negative pleaded did not amount to the allegation that her contract did not conceim her separate property, trade, or business. In the language of the opinion: “The reason is, that her non-liability can only arise from her inability to contract, and this she must clearly allege.”
In the case of Bowen v. Foss, 28 Neb. 373, the action had been brought and a recovery had against E. A. Bowen, the wife of D. Bowen, upon their promissory note of which the following is a copy:
“|100. Orete, Neb., Nov. 27,1882.
“On or before the 27th day of Nov., 1883, for value received in one spring buggy, we promise to pay F. 1. Foss, or order, one hundred dollars, with interest at ten per cent from date, payable at the State Bank in Orete. The express condition of the sale and purchase of the above property is such that the ownership does not pass *593from said --- until this note and interest are paid in full; tliat the said-- has full power to declare this note due, and to take possession of said property at any time that they may deem themselves insecure, even before the maturity of the note. D. Bowen.
“E. A. Bowen.”
The defense was that Mrs. Bowen was a married woman living with her husband, D. Bowen, and was sick at the time, and that she signed said note as surety for her husband.- Upon these issues there had been judgment against Mrs. Bowen. The discussion of the facts is in the following language of Maxwell, J., who delivered the opinion of this court: “The testimony of the • defendant in error tends to show that the indebtedness in question was incurred for a new buggy; that at the time of the purchase the plaintiff in error was in ill health and could not bear the fatigue of riding in a lumber wagon; that the defendant in error had in his hands for collection certain debts due her in Ohio amounting to about $400; that the husband of the plaintiff in error was not in a condition, financially, to pay the debt, and therefore the credit was not given to him, but to his wife. This testimony is denied by the plaintiff in error and her husband, but we find no denial of the charge in substance, that the husband had no means to pay a debt of this kind. This, we think, is a material circumstance in the case in considering; to whom the credit was given, as Mr. Foss testifies that he knew that the wife was abundantly able, while the husband was not. There are other circumstances tending to corroborate the testimony of Foss and the verdict seems to be in accord with the justice of the case.”
In Godfrey v. Megahan, 38 Neb. 748, the general proposition is again stated, that a married woman’s disability to contract has been removed only in cases where her contract has reference to her separate property, trade, or business or was made upon the faith and the credit thereof and with intent on her part thereby to bind her *594separate property. Tlie third paragraph of the syllabus of the ease last referred to would seem amply sustained' by the reasoning in Bowen v. Foss, supra. This paragraph is as follows: “Whether a contract of a married woman was made with reference to her separate property, trade, or business, or upon the faith and credit thereof, and with the intent on her part to thereby bind her separate property, is always a question of fact.”
In Davis v. First Nat. Bank of Cheyenne, supra, Gantt, J., speaking of the enactments above referred to, said: “These statutes have legalized the contracts of married women, and, so far as her separate property is concerned, she is feme sole, and can legally contract and deal with her property as she pleases. She can bind it by general engagements; but ‘it should appear that the engagement is made with reference to, and upon the faith and credit of, her estate; and the question, whether it is so or not, is to be judged by the court.’ (Perry, Trusts sec. 659; Frary v. Booth, 37 Vt. 78; Todd v. Lee, 15 Wis. 400; Same v. Same, 16 Wis. 506.)”
It would seem from this language that the proposition that the determination of the intention of the wife in making her contracts was one to be determined by the ' courts — that is, that it is a question of law — must have been lost sight of in Bowen v. Foss, supra, and has met with direct disapproval in Godfrey v. Megahan, supra. With reference to this proposition it is difficult to classify Eckman v. Scott, 34 Neb. 817, for in that case the language of Maxwell, O. J., is as follows: “The testimony shows that M. A. Scott, is the wife of W. T. Scott; that the debt in this case was that of the husband and did not in any manner relate to the business of the wife, and that she signed the note as surety for him. In a number of cases this court has held that where the contract did not relate to her separate business or estate, a married woman was not bound as surety on a promissory note unless it appeared that she thereby intended to bind her separate estate. (State Savings Bank v. Scott, 10 Neb. 84; Hale v. *595Christy, 8 Neb. 265; Barnum v. Young, 10 Neb. 309; Davis v. First Nat. Bank of Cheyenne, 5 Neb. 242; Payne v. Burnham, 62 N. Y. 74.) The wife, therefore, was not liable on the noté.”
It will hereafter be shown that whether or not a married woman’s contract is with reference to, or upon the faith and credit of, her separate property is a question of law or of fact depends upon circumstances; that sometimes it is one, and sometimes it is the other, or, possibly, sometimes both. In Smith v. Spaulding, 40 Neb. 339, it was held that a married woman in this state may contract as surety for her husband (citing Stevenson v. Craig, 12 Neb. 464), and that the extension of the time of payment of her husband’s past due indebtedness is a sufficient consideration to support her contract as his surety for such debt. In Buffalo County Nat. Bank v. Sharpe, 40 Neb. 123, it was held that where the consideration was as in the case last cited, and the security for her husband’s debt by way of a mortgage on the wife’s property, that the consideration was sufficient and that the property mortgaged was duly bound for the payment of the debt secured. This case was approved and followed in Watts v. Gantt, 42 Neb. 869. The doctrine of Smith v. Spaulding was restated and followed in Johnson v. Guss, 41 Neb. 19, and it was held, furthermore, that the cases cited had established in this state the rule that the wife is not liable on her contracts unless they are made ivith reference to her separate estate, or an intention is shown to bind such separate estate.
While it may be possible that we have not reviewed all the cases cited by this court with relation to the liability of a married woman upon her contracts, it is believed that there is no case omitted which could do more than restate one, or pei’liaps more, propositions noted already. It can scarcely escape observation that there has never been any attempt to analyze section 2, chapter 53, of the Compiled Statutes. The first attempt to state its scope was this remark of Gantt, J.: “But the *596rule must be observed, that all such contracts of the feme covert must be with reference to, and upon the faith and credit of, her separate estate.” (Davis v. First Nat. Bank of Cheyenne, 5 Neb. 242.) In the next case in point of time (Hale v. Christy, supra) this remark was approvingly quoted, but immediately afterwards it was disclosed that in the case under consideration it had no practical application. In State Savings Bank v. Scott and in Barnum v. Young, both reported in the 10th Nebraska, the remark of Gantt, J., was not only approved in the abstract as correct, but was declared to have stood as the law of the state so long that it would be improper for the courts to change it. Oases which followed the four last referred to simply reiterated the same remark as though it had been made independently of the general proposition which immediately preceded it, which was to the effect that the statute had conferred upon a married woman the right and power to make legal and binding contracts and had given her the right to sue, and had made her liable to be sued, in the same manner as though she was unmarried, and that the court must expound the law as it finds it made by the constitutional law-making power. It has the. sound of a legal proposition pregnant with meaning to say that all contracts of the feme covert must be with reference to, and upon the faith and credit of, her separate estate, but under our statute what is meant by it? In Davis v. First Nat. Bank of Cheyenne, supra, Gantt, J., said: “But the settled doctrine of the common law is that the general engagements of a married woman, in respect to her separate property, could only be enforced in equity; and this, not upon the ground that she could make valid contracts in law or equity, but because her honest engagements ought to be answered; and hence it is said that ‘intimately connected with the right of a married woman to dispose of her separate property is the right or power of such feme covert to contract debts and charge her separate estate, either by special agreements in relation to it, or by general engagements * *597and lier separate estate will be bound to make good her contracts, and it may be reached, by proper proceedings, though she is not personally liable.’ (Perry, Trusts secs. 596, 657, 662; Pentz v. Simonson, 2 Beas. [N. J. Eq.] 232; Glass v. Warwick, 40 Pa. St. 140.)”
Already there has been quoted from Webb v. Hoselton, supra, language to the same effect as the above with regard to the equitable liabilities of a married woman’s property, upon her contracts with reference to it. If, by our statute, the property of a feme covert can be subjected only by pleading and proving as an independent substantive fact that the owner contracted with reference to, or upon the faith and credit of, it, in what respect or to what extent have these statutory enactments changed the status of a married woman’s property? In both Webb v. Hoselton and Davis v. First Nat. Bank of Cheyenne, connected with the statement of the rule in equity with reference to the power to subject the property of married, women, there was an epitome of the provisions of chapter 53, Compiled Statutes, from which it might be inferred that in the mind of the writer of each of those opinions there existed a sense of close relationship of some kind between the equitable rule as it was and the statutory rule as it is. From the rule of the statute that “A woman may, while married, sue and be sued in the same manner as if she were' unmarried” (Compiled Statutes, ch. 53, sec. 3),, it seems open to no question that the intention of the law-makers was, at law, to hold personally liable a married woman upon her contracts, instead of compelling a resort to equitable proceedings to subject her separate property. The general rules of pleading are to such an action applicable, for a married woman may be sued during coverture as though she were unmarried. The fact that a married woman has contracted with, reference to her separate property, or upon the faith and credit of it, is by no express provision required to receive more attention in the oetition against her than though the suit was one against *598her husband to charge him in respect to his separate property. In practice, however, the difficult question, and one which there seems never to have been any attempt to meet in this state and the one upon which I cannot agree with the views of Norval, J., is, as to the manner in which proof shall be made as to how the wife contracted on the faith and credit of her separate estate. In Coquillard v. Hovey, 23 Neb. 622, occurs this language: “As we understand the rule for the construction of contracts, it is that, if a contract is to be construed by reference to its terms alone, and without calling in the aid of extrinsic facts and circumstances, it is the duty of the court to interpret it. But if the construction must depend u|)on the proof of other and extrinsic facts, then these questions of fact should be submitted to the jury, under proper instructions from the court. (Begg v. Forbes, 30 Eng. Law & Eq. 508; Etting v. United States Bank, 11 Wheat. [U. S.] 74; First Eat. Bank of Springfield v. Dana, 79 N. Y. 108; Edelman v. Yeakel, 27 Pa. St. 26.)” Ordinarily the question, whether a contract is with reference to a married woman’s separate estate or employment, would probably be a question of fact dependent, for instance, upon the circumstances that goods were purchased for her original stock, or afterward to replenish it, or that clerks or other employés were hired to assist her in conducting her business. But there might be such circumstances surrounding the making of a contract by her ujron the faith and credit of her separate property, but not with reference to it, that, as a question of fact, it should be submitted to the jury. In either of these two cases, where there is no writing, the contentions are liable, in a pre-eminent degree, to be dependent upon questions of fact. But where the contract of a married woman is in writing, how are we to ascertain and enforce her liability? There has been no change in the rules of construction or evidence on account of the act in relation to married women. Whenever to the legislature ihere has appeared a necessity of *599a change of rules of evidence in any class of cases that its provisions may be rendered effective, theie has been no’ hesitancy in that, respect, as has been instanced by the proviso in section 5, chapter 14, Compiled Statutes, that the agent who acts for the borrower shall also be deemed the agent of tlie loaner, and the enactment as to the presumption of the value of the real property insured under the provisions of our valued policy law. Indeed, it may be said that all statutory provisions which provide for constructive notice and defines its effect are of this nature. It is therefore worthy of note1 that in the act relating to married women there is no provision by which is changed the existing rules of evidence and construction, for thereby is evidenced an intention that they shall be given their ordinary meaning and force.
The supreme court of Ohio, in the very instiuetive case of Williams v. Urmston 35 O. St. 293, liad.under consideration an appeal from a decree which independently of statute subjected the separate estate of a married woman who had signed an ordinary promissory note with her husband. In respect to the correct deductions to be drawn from tlie fact that a married woman had signed a note with her husband there was used the folloAving apposite language: “What infeience is to he drawn from the act of a married woman, having an estate to her sole and separate use, in signing the promissory note of another, as surety, as respects her intention or purpose in so doing? In víoav of the fact that in the act of signing she incurs no legal liability, the question admits of but one rational am-Avcr. and that is, in tlie absence of proof sliOAA'ing fraud or imposition, that slm intended thereby to make the debt a charge upon her separate estate. Unless this inference is drawn, her act becomes wholly vain and frivolous and entirely destitute of a. purpose or a meaning. That such is the .natural implication from the act of signing has been distinctly affirmed in numerous cases. In Bell v. Kellar, 3 B. Mon. [Ky.] 381, tlie rule was stated as follows; Tf a fem^Qimrt, *600having a separate estate, make or indorse a note, the presumption is that it was the intention, and the effect is, to charge her separate estate.’ In Cowles v. Morgan, 34 Ala. 535, it was held that ‘a promissory note executed by the wife during coverture, jointly with her husband, is a charge upon her separate estate created by contract.’ So in Burnett v. Hawpe, 25 Gratt. [Va.] 481, it was held that ‘if the wife contracts a debt for herself or for her husband, or jointly with him, the instrument executed by her is sufficient to charge her separate estate without any proof of a positive intention to do so or even a reference to such estate contained in the writing.’ In Metropolitan Bank v. Taylor, 62 Mo. 338, it was held that ‘in reference to her separate estate a married woman is to be treated as a feme sole, and the giving of a note, or making of a written contract by her, raises the presumption that she intends to bind her separate estate.’ This case was on a note executed by the wife as surety for her husband. The same rule prevails in Kansas. (Deering v. Boyle, 8 Kan. 523; Wicks v. Mitchell, 9 Kan. 80.) Judge Story, in commenting on the subject, says: ‘Indeed it does seem difficult to make any sound or satisfactory distinction on the subject as to any particular class of debts, since the natural implication is, that if a married Avoman contracts a debt she means to pay it, and if she means to pay it, and she has a separate estate, that seems to be the natural fund Avhich both parties contemplated as furnishing the means of payment.’ (2 Story, Equity Jurisprudence sec. 1400. See also to the same effect 1 Bishop, Married Women sec. 873.) In Avery v. Van Sickle, ante, 270, we held, that where a married Avoman executed a promissory note for property acquired by her ah implication arises, in the absence of proof showing a different understanding, that she thereby intended to charge her separate estate with its payment. If she executed the note upon the understanding that her separate estate Avas not to be bound for its payment, its enforcement against her Avould operate a fraud upon her. *601No one would pretend that this could be done. But when she executes a note, either as principal, maker, or surety, and has not been deceived in so doing, nor subjected to any undue influence, we think a just inference arises that she thereby intended to deal on account of her estate, and to bind the same in equity for the payment of the note; and that, as a necessary result, a court of equity will give effect to such intention by subjecting the estate to the payment of the note in the mode prescribed by the statute for enforcing claims against the separate estate of a married woman. Her liability, or rather that of her estate, does not depend on whether or not the debt incurred on its account is beneficial to her or otherwise. If made, and no fraud or imposition is shown, the court cannot refuse relief from the mere fact that the engagement entered into proves unprofitable or injurious.”
In the foregoing case, in which there were satisfactory citations of authorities as to the presumption which should be held naturally to arise upon proof that a married woman had signed a promissory note, either as principal or otherwise, are clearly, forcibly, and, I believe, correctly stated, not only as applying in an action in equity to subject a married woman’s separate property as that was, but as well in an action at law, under our statute, in fixing her personal liability.
Irvine, C., concurs in the foregoing opinion of Ryan, C.