dissenting: The feme plaintiff, a divorced woman, had been engaged in business under the name “Mrs. Birdie S. Buford.” She was in default and her property was about to be sold under foreclosure. In an attempt to save her equity, she contracted to sell her real estate to the defendants, who knew her as a feme sole. After arriving at an agreement she leaves the State and remarries her former husband, who did not live in the same town and was unknown to defendants. Upon her return the deed was drafted, and she makes the positive assertion that she is unmarried. She had theretofore, through her attorney, conveyed the same information to the defendants. Defendants accepted the deed and paid their money on the strength of this representation. She again asserts that she is unmarried. She stands by until defendants have converted the property into a safe and profitable investment. She now seeks to recover the property.
Unquestionably, had the plaintiff been a feme sole at the time, her conduct as disclosed by this evidence (which we must accept as true on *241■the question bere presented) would work an estoppel against any claim .she might assert. Does her coverture cloak her fraud and enable her to maintain her action notwithstanding her unconscionable conduct? This is the real question for decision.
It may be conceded that the results arrived at by the courts in the •consideration of this question are far from harmonious. This is due in part to the gradual evolution of the law itself, but most of the difficulty and confusion has arisen out of the difference in approach in seeking to •apply the doctrine.
Those courts (notably of Massachusetts) which conceive that the enforcement of the doctrine against married women would operate as a ratification of the conveyance and serve to provide a means of alienation disapproved by statute uniformly conclude that it cannot serve to preclude a married woman.
Conversely, where the doctrine is deemed to be directed to the remedy and not to the right, the plea, on a proper showing, is sustained, the courts holding that coverture does not serve to cloak the fraud of a married woman and enable her to use the processes of the court to reap an advantage growing out of her own wrong. The court does not adjudicate the strict legal right or attempt to validate the conveyance. It merely requires of married women that degree of good faith and fair dealing exacted of all other litigants.
The ratio decidendi in these eases is that a court will not stoop to aid any litigant, even a married woman, in the prosecution of a claim bottomed on inequitable or unconscionable conduct.
The majority choose to adopt the view that enforcement of the law of estoppel in pais would operate as a ratification of the conveyance and serve to provide a means of alienation disapproved by statute.
I adhere to the view that the doctrine is directed to the remedy and not to the right; and that as a married woman can now contract and sue and be sued as a feme sole, there is no sound reason why she should not be as subject to the plea as any other litigant. Tripp v. Langston, 218 N. 0., 295, 10 S. E. (2d), 916. This, in my opinion, is in accord with the weight of modern authority.
In view of the importance of the question and the sharp conflict of opinion on the subject, I deem it essential that I set forth fully the grounds of my dissent.
The history of the evolution of the law concerning the status of married women in respect to property and as a party to actions in court is ■ interesting and instructive. I refrain, however, from any discussion thereof except to call attention to certain fundamental changes which have a direct bearing upon the decisions of the Court and render some of the older eases inapposite.
*242By the early common law the identity of a married woman was merged into that of ber husband. She could not possess a separate estate or sue or be sued alone. Neither could she be held to her contracts. The motivating purpose of the law was to assure the husband complete control over his wife’s estate.
In 1868 her separate estate was assured to her, and she was granted the right to devise and, with the written assent of her husband, to convey the same as if she were unmarried. Const. 1868, Art. X, sec. 6. She was likewise granted the power to sue or be sued when the action concerned her separate estate or was between her and her husband, and the requirement that she prosecute or defend by guardian or next friend was abolished. C. 0. P. of 1868, sec. 56. Their, by the Martin Act, ch. 109, Public Laws 1911, sometimes called the Married Woman’s Act of Emancipation, she was vested with authority to contract and deal so as to affect her real and personal property in the same manner and with the same effect as if she were unmarried, subject only to the limitations prescribed by sec. 6, Art. X, N. C. Const., and Gr. S., 52-12 (0. S., 2515).
She is now under no disability in respect to her right to sue and be sued. As to this she is a free agent and may exercise the right in respect to her separate estate as fully as if she were a feme sole. C. S., 454; Lipinsky v. Bevell, 161 N. C., 508, 83 S. E., 756; Craddock v. Brinkley, 111 N. 0., 125, 98 S. E., 280; Boyal v. Southerland, 168 N. C., 405, 84 S. E., 708; Groom v. Lumber Co., 182 N. 0., 217, 108 S. E., 735.
The attainment of a just and fair result is the primary objective of a court. The principles of equity are the machine tools with which it works. Through their proper use and application justice is fashioned.
One of these principles, the doctrine of estoppel in pais, shuts the door of the court against one who seeks to take advantage of his own wrong or to profit by his own misrepresentations. It had its origin in the determination to prevent fraud resulting in injustice. Thomas v. Bomano, 33 So., 969; Kelly v. Wagner, 61 Miss., 299. It is based upon the manifest inequity of permitting a person to reap advantage from his own wrong. Scott v. Bryan, 210 N. C., 478, 187 S. E., 756, or to allege and prove the existence of facts which by his own conduct he has induced another to believe did not exist. Shean v. U. S. Fidelity ■& Guaranty Co., 248 N. W., 892. Its object is to prevent fraud resulting in injustice. Dallas Joint Stock Land Bank v. Gore, 100 S. W. (2d), 396; Chernick v. National Surety Co., 148 Atl., 418. It is applied to transactions where it is found that it would be unconscionable to allow a person to maintain a position inconsistent with one in which he acquiesced or of which he accepted the benefits. Young v. Venters, 229 Ky., 806, 18 S. W. (2d), 277. It concludes and shuts a man’s mouth from speaking the truth, where to permit him to speak would allow a departure from *243fair dealing and render it impossible to administer tbe law as a system, Lumber Go. v. Price, 144 N. 0., 50, 56 S. E., 684, and is applied and enforced on tbe grounds of public policy and good faitb. Houston Nat. Bank of Dothan v. Eldridge, 84 So., 430.
Tbus it does not challenge tbe strict legal right. It denies a remedy. In short, it is tbe conscience of tbe court in action, repelling tbe plea of one who seeks to reap tbe benefits of bis own misrepresentations or wrongdoing.
Even before married women were granted full capacity to contract in regard to their separate estates, this Court spoke on tbe question of tbe effect of their fraud.
To estop a married woman from alleging a claim to land, there must be some positive act of fraud or something done upon which a person dealing with her might reasonably rely, and upon which he did rely, and was thereby injured. Towles v. Fisher, 77 N. 0., 437; Loftin v. Cross-land, 94 N. 0., 76; Weathersbee v. Farrar, 97 N. 0., 106, 1 S. E., 616.
“It must be borne in mind that the legal disability of coverture, or of infancy, carries with it no license or privilege to practice fraud or deception on other innocent persons; nor will the disability be permitted to protect them in doing so.” Pilcher v. Smith, 2 Head (Tenn.), 208; Boyd v. Turpin, 94 N. 0., 137; Burns v. McGregor, 90 N. C., 222.
“Coverture disables a woman to enter into a binding contract, but it affords no protection or shelter for fraud.” Walker v. Brooks, 99 N. C., 207, 6 S. E., 63.
A married woman “has capacity to perpetrate and participate in a fraud. . . . She has no right, or privilege, or disability, that excuses her as to such fraudulent transactions in which she participates, nor that protects her against their consequences. . . . She has privileges and immunities in some respects, but not such as will help her to share in a fraud with impunity when she must go into a court of justice to enforce her claims growing out of it. The law abhors fraud'and will not help any person to take advantage of and have benefit of it. . . . In such case the wife must be on the same footing as a feme sole, and treated as such.” Hart v. Hart, 109 N. 0., 368,13 S. E., 1020; Hodqe v. Powell, 96 N. C., 64, 2 S. E., 182.
“The general rule is, that To estop a married woman from alleging a claim to land, there must be some positive act of fraud, or something done upon which a person dealing with her, or in a matter affecting her rights, might reasonably rely, and upon which he did rely and was thereby injured.’ ” Rich v. Morisey, 149 N. C., .37, 62 S. E., 762; Wells v. Batts, 112 N. C., 283, 17 S. E., 417; Williams v. Ellingsworth, 75 Tex., 480, 12 S. W., 746; McLaren v. Jones, 89 Tex., 131, 33 S. V., 849; Matador Land and Cattle Co. v. Cooper, 87 S. W., 235.
*244Then, in Martin v. Bundy, 212 N. 0., 437, 193 S. E., 831, decided after tie enactment of tie Martin Act, this Court said by way of dictum: “Tie full doctrine of estoppel did not apply to a married woman (before tie Martin Act) because sle was not sui juris and was under disability, but sle could bind herself by way of estoppel by some affirmative act of fraud upon which a prudent man might rely to his injury in matters affecting her rights.” See Kelly, Contracts of Married Women, p. 122; Bishop, the Law of Married Women, Vol. 2, p. 395; Harris, Contracts by Married Women, p. 435; Cord, Legal and Equitable Rights of Married Women, 2nd Ed., sec. 1287; Bodme v. Killeen, 53 N. Y., 96. See also Land Bank v. Moss, 215 N. C., 445, 2 S. E. (2d), 378; and Tripp v. Langston, 218 N. 0., 295, 10 S. E. (2d), 916.
The great weight of authority sustains the view as stated in the Martin case, supra, that a married woman may be estopped by her misrepresentations or other unconscionable or inequitable conduct to assert a right to real property, although her deed is void because not executed according to the formalities required to bind married women, or the non-joinder of her husband. See Anno. 76 A. L. R., 1501, and 107 A. L. R., 331.
“As has been said in a number of cases, coverture is no excuse, in equity, for fraud, and a party entitled to relief in a court of equity will not be denied such relief simply because the person by whose fraudulent act he has been injured is a married woman.” 26 Am. Jur., 659; Newman v. Moore, 94 Ky., 147, 21 S. W., 759; McDanell v. Landrum, 87 Ky., 404, 9 S. W., 223; Holder v. Hunter, 29 N. M., 644, 226 Pac., 163; Bucknor’s Estate, 136 Pa., 23, 19 Atl., 1069.
In the absence of her husband’s coercion, a married woman can bind herself by way of estoppel by some affirmative act of fraud, upon which a prudent man might and did rely to his injury in matters affecting her rights. . . . She can only be divested of her property in the method prescribed by law, except by intentional fraud. Kelly, Contracts of Married Women, p. 122, sec. 4.
If the only inquiry concerns the effect of her fraud as an estoppel, there is no reason why she should not suffer the consequences of her fraud the same as though she were not under coverture. . . . The question is not one of power to convey. If a man can lose his lands by estoppel when the general law authorizes him to convey only by deed, it is impossible to find a good legal reason why a wife may not lose hers by estoppel, though the general law qualifies her to convey them only by a deed executed jointly with her husband. Bishop, the Law of Married Women, Vol. 2, pp. 395-6.
A fraud may be committed by the wife in the sale of her land which will not vitiate the sale and authorize a recission at the’ instance of the *245vendee, but will estop ber from avoiding tbe sale or conveyance of ber property. Harris, Contracts of Married Women, p. 448.
A married woman may commit sucb acts as will amount to positive fraud and thereby estop berself and destroy all rights in ber separate estate, under many circumstances, whatever those rights may be. Ibid, p. 452.
A married woman should be held to the observance of that good faith in her dealings with the world to which others are bound. Her protection is for the prevention of fraud. She ought not thereby to be enabled, with impunity, to defraud others. Bucknor’s Estate, supra; Grim’s Appeal, 105 Pa., 382.
She is not privileged to practice deliberately a fraud upon an innocent person. Bead v. Hall, 57 N. H., 482. If she could be estopped in no' instance, the morality of the law would be placed upon a very low plane, and the disability of coverture, instead of being, as it ought to be, a shield for her protection againt legal wrong, would become a sword of injustice for the license of fraud. While, therefore, she may not always be estopped to deny her capacity to contract, especially so as to convey her property in a mode prohibited by law, she may be estopped by any positive act of fraud, as a person sui juris would be. Wilder v. Wilder, 89 Ala., 414, 7 So., 767; Patterson, v. Lawrence, 90 Ill., 174; Grice v. Wooct-worth, 10 Idaho, 459, 80 Pac., 912; 3 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur., 5th Ed., sec. 814.'
The contracts and agreements of married women in reference to their real estate, when not joined therein by their husbands, where such agreement is free from fraud, cannot be enforced at law or in equity. But where married women make such contracts or agreements by fraudulent, means and thus obtain inequitable advantages, a court of chancery will hold them estopped from setting up and relying on their coverture to retain the advantage. Grice v. Woodworth, supra.
In Neiuman v. Moore, supra, the plaintiff, a married woman, concealed her marriage and declared she was a widow. The Court saidr “She (plaintiff, a married woman) will not be allowed to take advantage of her own wrong and will be estopped from interposing her inability to contract, in bar of the consequences of her own fraud.”
In Bryant v. Freeman, 134 Term., 169, the plaintiff’s husband had been sentenced to the penitentiary for life. She disposed of her property,, representing herself to be a widow. The court held that her fraud estopped her from questioning the conveyance on the ground that her husband did not join and her privy examination was not taken in the form prescribed for deeds of married women. In so doing it said: “We think the defense (of estoppel) is well founded. The law intends the disability of coverture as a shield, not as a cloak for fraud. When used *246for the latter purpose it will not be permitted to inflict a wrong on innocent people.”
In Patterson v. Lawrence, supra, a married woman when applying for a loan on the security of a deed of trust represented that she was a widow. The Court said: “Where married women make such contracts or agreements (in reference to their real estate) by fraudulent means, and thus obtain inequitable advantages, a court of chancery will hold them es-topped from setting up and relying on their coverture to retain the advantage.”
“While as a general thing the courts are loath to hold that a married woman may divest herself of her property in any way other than that prescribed by statute, yet we have repeatedly held that a married woman may by her acts and declarations estop herself from asserting dower or other claims, when to permit her to do so would operate as a fraud (citing cases). The estoppel in such cases is rested altogether upon the doctrine that a married woman will not be allowed to use her coverture to perpetrate a fraud.” Ayer ■& Lord Tie Go. v. Balcer, 128 S. W., 346 (Ky.) ; 26 Am. Jur., 658; 3 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur., 5th Ed., sec. 814, p. 239.
In Cupp et al. v. Campbell, 103 Ind., 213, a married woman executed a mortgage on her separate estate to secure a debt of her husband. Under the Indiana law such deed is void. The Court said: “A married woman has no more right to injure or mislead others by her conduct or representations than if she were sui juris, and where it is made to appear that by fraud, misrepresentation or concealment she has led one into contracting with her as principal, she will not be permitted to gainsay such representations as may have induced another to act who in good faith relied on them.” Oglesby Coal Co. v. Pasco, 19 Ill., 164; Powell’s Appeal, 98 Pa. St., 403; Bigelow Estoppel, 513; Cooley, Torts, 117.”
“Neither the statute of frauds nor the various statutory provisions enacted for the protection of a homestead claimant can be held to do away with the general equity doctrine of estoppel in pais. While it is, true some courts have held to the contrary, the weight of modern authority is to the effect that the doctrine of equitable estoppel will be applied to married women as well as to a feme sole. The doctrine is not invoked to render invalid a contract which is void under the statute of frauds or under statutes for the benefit and protection of the homestead claimants, but it is invoked to prevent the successful perpetration of fraud by preventing wrongdoers from urging the provisions of such statutes to shield them in their tortious conduct.” Engholm v. Ehrem, 119 N. W., 35 (N. D.). See also note, Grice v. Woodworth, 69 L. R. A., at page 584; also Smith v. Willard, 174 Ill., 538; Hobbs v. National B. Co., 122 Ala., 602; Warner et al. v. Watson et al., Trustees, 35 Ela., 402; and Bruce v. Goodbar, 104 Tenn., 638.
*247Tbe Martin. Act, supra, is very broad, comprehensive, and thorough in its terms, meaning, and purpose, and primarily secures to the wife the complete ownership and control of her property as if she were unmarried. She is now sui juris in respect to her contracts. Tise v. Hicks, 191 N. 0., 609, and cases cited. She may convey her real property, but to do so by deed she must first obtain the written assent of her husband and be privately examined. There are, incidentally, reciprocal limitations on the right of the husband.
Even these requirements are not ironclad, as the law of the Medes and Persians. They may be set at naught by the insanity of the husband, Lancaster v. Lancaster, 178 N. C., 22, 100 S. E., 120; or by a deed of separation, G. S., 52-5 (O. S., 2529) ; or the abandonment of her husband, G. S., 52-21 (C. S., 2524) ; Nichols v. York, 219 N. C., 262, 13 S. E. (2d), 565; or through the bar of the statute of limitations, ch. 78, Public Laws 1899; Graves v. Howard, 159 N. C., 594, 75 S. E., 998; In re Bateman’s Will, 168 N. C., 234, 84 S. E., 272; or by silence when it was her duty to speak, Payne v. Flack, 152 N. 0., 600, 68 S. E., 16. And she may subject her land to judgment and execution sale by breach of her contract. Hverett v. Ballard, 174 N. C., 16, 93 S. E., 385; Warren v. Hail, 170 N. O., 406, 87 S. E.,'126; Lipinsky v. Bevell, supra; Thrash v. Ould, 172 N. 0., 729, 90 S. E., 915; Miles v. Walker, 179 N. O., 479, 102 S. E., 884.
Rut her right to convey and the formalities required are only secondary although important considerations as bearing upon her complete emancipation. The all-important, decisive fact is that she may sue as a feme sole. Coverture as a disability is not recognized. Carter v. Reaves, 167 N. C., 131, 83 S. E., 248. The husband is no longer a necessary party. Lipinsky v. Revell, supra; Earnhardt v. Clement, 137 N. 0., 91, 49 S. E., 49; Kirkpatrick v. Crutchfield, 178 N. C., 348, 100 S. E., 602.
The Martin Act carries with it the privilege and liability of suing and being sued alone. Groom v. Lumber Co., supra, and cases cited. This right to sue is a personal privilege. Lippard v. Troutman, 72 N. O., 551.
When she seeks to avail herself thereof, she comes into court subject to all the limitations imposed upon other litigants. She sues as a feme sole. Her standing in court is to be determined by the same standards required of others, and she should be held to the observance of that good faith in her dealings with the world to which others are bound.
On the showing made by the defendants, the feme plaintiff placed them in possession of the locus in quo and induced them to part with their money by falsely representing that she was unmarried. For eighteen months she was apparently content. But now, since all past-due taxes and installments on the loan have been paid, the debt has been reduced and placed in good standing, the property has been repaired, and eco*248nomic conditions have improved, sbe seeks to recover possession of tbe land. As a litigant sbe should not be beard to deny tbe truth of tbe assertion sbe then made. Nor should tbe court come to her assistance by ejecting defendants.
Applying tbe doctrine, as I think it should be here, tbe Court does not pass upon and decide tbe strict legal rights of tbe parties. It does not decide that tbe deed is void or that tbe defendants’ possession is lawful or unlawful. On tbe contrary, tbe protection given by way of defense theoretically assumes that tbe title of tbe purchaser is really defective as against that of bis adversary. Tbe Court simply ignores tbe question of validity, declines to examine into tbe intrinsic legal merits of tbe two claims, and bases its action upon entirely different considerations. It simply refuses to come to tbe aid of tbe one who seeks to profit by bis own inequitable conduct.
It is said, however, in tbe majority opinion : • “It seems incontestable that unless tbe feme plaintiff is estopped by her deed, which is not pleaded, sbe is not entitled to recover.” This is tbe theory upon which tbe opinion is bottomed. But as I view it such is not tbe case. Defendants do not rely on estoppel by deed. Estoppel in pais is quite a different principle and has an entirely different application.
Some of tbe decisions cited, such as Brinegar v. Chaffin, 14 N. C., 108, were decided long before vital changes were made in tbe law. All relate to estoppel by deed or contract. In each tbe validity of tbe contract was directly in issue. None are directed to tbe law of estoppel in pais and are, in my opinion, beside tbe point.
Scoit v. Battle, 85 N. 0., 184, is decidedly different in factual situation. No wrongdoing was alleged. Defendant merely asserted that be bought without knowledge of tbe marital status of bis grantor and prayed a lien for purchase price and improvements.
In Williams v. Walher, 111 N. C., 604, plaintiff sought to enforce a contract liability and attempted unsuccessfully to prove that tbe feme defendant was a “free trader.” While tbe law of estoppel is there discussed, it should be noted that tbe Court said: “These principles (that tbe deed of a married woman cannot be made good by estoppel) announced by these high authorities are not in conflict with that other principal so tersely stated by Chief Justice Smith in Walker v. Brooks, 99 N. C., 207: Ut (coverture) affords no shelter or protection for fraud’; and by Chief Justice Merrimon in Bums v. McGregor, 90 N. C., 222: ‘The Constitution and tbe statute wisely extend large and careful protection and safeguards to married women in respect to their rights and property, but it is no part of our purpose to permit, much less help, one of them to perpetrate a fraud, if by possibility, under some sinister *249influence, sbe should attempt to do so. It would be a reproach upon the law if such a thing could happen/ ”
In Farthing v. Shields, 106 N. C., 289, the Court was careful to note the difference between the liability of the wife’s separate estate for undertakings in the nature of contracts and where she has obtained an undue advantage by fraud.
"Without undertaking to analyze each of the other cases cited, it is sufficient to say that an examination thereof will disclose like distinctions and a persistent purpose on the part of the Court to limit the decisions to estoppel by deed and to distinguish the law as stated from cases of fraud. In none of them does it appear that the Court had any intention of altogether disavowing the applicability of the doctrine of estoppel in pais to married women. Hence, none of the authorities cited by the Court or by the plaintiff are in conflict with my position. Indeed, I concede that if the situation were reversed and defendants were seeking to enforce the contract a different result would follow.
The law as stated in Williams v. Walker, supra, when applied to the facts in that and similar cases, is sound. But the law draws its quality of soundness from the particular facts to which it is applied. It should not be taken out of its setting, transplanted, and so applied as to confer special privileges and immunities upon a married woman and authorize her to use the courts to reap the benefits of a fraudulent transaction. Warren v. Bail, 170 N. 0., 406, 87 S. E., 126; Light Co. v. Moss, 220 N. C., 200, 17 S. E. (2d), 10; Boss v. Greyhound Corp., 223 N. O., 239.
On the facts in this case, that plaintiff signed the deed, “Mrs. Birdie S. Buford,” has no significance. That was her name through her first marriage. She had been known by and done business in that name for years, when she was admittedly a feme sole. It could not serve to put defendants on notice of her second marriage to the same party.
It is true that no other State has an identical constitutional provision. The fact is that few of the States have made any effort by constitutional provision to free married women of their common law disabilities.
Arkansas, Mississippi, South Carolina, Alabama, and Utah have-granted complete emancipation. In those States a feme covert may convey her separate estate as if unmarried.
The provisions in the other States may be summarized as follows :
The property of the wife shall be and remain her separate estate. California, Kansas, Georgia, Oregon, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nevada, Texas, and Florida.
The separate estate of a married woman shall not be liable for the debts of her husband. Maryland, West Virginia, Georgia, Oregon, Arkansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Florida.
*250Local or special laws are not to be passed relieving a feme covert of disability. Kentucky.
So, while our provision has no exact counterpart, the general limitations are not unlike. Indeed, it is in those states which have no constitutional provision freeing married women of their common law disabilities, in whole or in part, that the doctrine of estoppel' in pais has been most often applied.
The divergence of opinion comes to this: The majority say that estoppel by deed is the only defense and that this doctrine cannot be applied as against a void deed of a feme covert. I freely concede that a married woman is not estopped by a deed which is void at law, but contend that this doctrine is not relevant to the facts in this case. Es-toppel in pais, pleaded by defendants, is the controlling principle of equity which should be applied and, if applied, it shuts the doors of the court against the plaintiff as a litigant without regard to her marital status.
Hence, my view of the law, as well as the dictates of my own conscience, compels me to vote to reverse.
DeviN and Seawell, JJ., concur in dissent.