1. The single question arising for adjudication on this record is, whether the husband is personally and separately liable for the amount of his wife’s debts contracted dum sola.
At common law, the husband took his wife, with all the debts, contracts and liabilities she was under, whether ex contractu, or ex delicto. As compensation, and to enable him to meet these responsibilities, he, by the fact of marriage, became absolute owner of all her personal property in possession, and of the choses in action, which he might reduce to .possession, as well as the use and profits of her real estate. His responsibility was as husband, and continued only so long as he sustained that relation. If, therefore, the debt was not reduced to judgment during the marriage, the obligation of the husband ceased. It was not continued against him, in case he survived the wife, nor against his legal representative, in case he deceased first. But coverture did not extinguish the debts as, to the wife. She still remained debtor, in conjunction with the husband, who became jointly bound with her so long as the coverture lasted. If it were dissolvpd, pending suit and before judgment, by the death of the husband, the suit abated as to him, but the cause of action survived against the wife, and might proceed to judgment and satisfaction against her.
The common-law rule was invariable, that where the promise or obligation was joint, the suit should be brought against all the parties to it. And in case of decease of either, the remedy must be pursued against the survivors. There was nothing peculiar in the relation of marriage *93which made it exceptional. While the liability of the husband is joint, it is also conditional; his obligation is in right of his wife in certain events, and not in his own right and at all events. In the old cases of Robinson v. Hardy, 1 Keble, 281, and Drue v. Thorn, Allyn, 72, it was laid down that the suit must be jointly against husband and wife, and the objection might be taken by demurrer.
In Mitchison v. Hewson, 7 Durn. & East, 349, the judgment was arrested for the non-joinder of the wife. The suit was against the husband, for work and labor done, and medicines provided for the wife before her marriage. The issue was non assumpsit. The court said, that, according to the best authorities, the action against the husband alone could not be supported. The defect was so radical that the verdict could not be helped out by any intendment, nor by the statute of jeoffails. The same doctrine is laid down in Angel v. Felton, 8 Johns. 149. In Gage v. Reed et al., 15 ib. 403, there was an agreement to try the cause on its merits, which, said the court, only raised formal and technical objections ; no objection was made in the superior court to the “ non-joinder of the wife,” yet for this cause the judgment was held to be erroneous. It was good ground to arrest the judgment, and was also available in error to reverse the judgment. Also 4 Ala. 136. At the common law it was essential to join the wife as co-defendant with the husband, and for failure to do so the objection may be taken by demurrer to declaration, by motion in arrest of judgment, or by writ of error.
The argument is pressed earnestly by counsel for the plaintiffs in error, that under the married woman’s law, Rev. Code, 336, art. 25, where the wife has no separate property, the liability of the husband for the debts of the wife incurred dum sole, is as at common law. If the proposition were conceded to the full extent claimed, it would follow, as we have seen, that the demurrer ought to have been sustained, for the non-joinder of the wife, and although this was not assigned as special cause of demurrer, it is so *94essential that judgment could not, according to the right and the law, be for the plaintiff. At common law, the liability of the husband arose from the marriage, and not from the fact whether the wife did or did not bring property to the husband. He was as equally bound,whether she were penny less or brought him a fortune, and no allegation in pleading was necessary to be made on the subject.
We do not think that the husband is liable for the ante-nuptial debts of the wife, in any circumstances, under the statute. The provisions of law on this subject are to be found in art. 25, page 336, Code. In so far as the wife is concerned, there seems to be no change in her condition. “Her separate property shall be liable for debts contracted by her before marriage.” After her death this liability is devolved upon her executor or administrator. The next succeeding clause of the article is: “And the husband shall not be liable for debts contracted by the wife before marriage,” etc. It will be observed that the words are general, without qualification. It seems manifest to us, that the legislature meant to continue the responsibility of the wife for her engagements before marriagé without á suspension during the coverture. But, inasmuch as property, of whatever kind, and rights to property, owned by her at the marriage, or coming to her afterward, do not rest in the husband, but constitute a separate estate free from his control and disposition, therefore the husband, as such, incurred no liability to her creditors. The policy of the statute is, since he takes no interest in her property, he shall be freed from her debts. But the wife shall remain debtor’during coverture to the extent that she was debtor at her marriage, with a right in the creditor, during the marriage and after its dissolution, to satisfaction out of her estate. Dickson v. Miller, 11 Smedes & Marsh. 602. The counsel for the defendant in error urges that the declaration is defective, because it does not allege that the wife, at the time of her marriage, had separate estate. The counsel for the plaintiff in error insists, that this is matter of excuse and avoidance, and *95ought to come from the defendant. In our view of the statute, it matters not whether the wife had separate property or not; if she had, then it is liable and not the husband. If she had not, the statute has repealed the common-law rule to the husband’s responsibility. In suits for ante-nuptial debts, the husband ought tobe joined (for uniformity) with bis wife as defendant. But no judgment or decree enforceable out of his estate can be rendered.
This construction will be vindicated by bringing the provisions of the act of 1846 into comparison with the Code. The former made a partial encroachment on the common law in this, that the creditor must first exhaust the separate estate of the wife. The husband being only held for the deficiency. Section 5 of Hutch. Code, 499. Whereas the 25th article of the Code, p. 336, after naming the contracts which may be binding on the wife’s estate, concludes with the declaration, in general phrase, that the husband shall not be liable for the ante-nuptial debts of the wife, nor those contracted after marriage, if she hold separate property under this act. This sweeps away the qualified responsibility, after exhausting the separate estate under the act of 1846, as also, all liability whatever, at common law. In suits upon these debts, the husband is a proper defendant for conformity; but no judgment, enforceable out of his property, can be rendered. The declaration entirely fails to state a cause of action against the defendant. It was right therefore to sustain the demurrer.
Judgment affirmed.