1. It is contended on behalf of the plaintiff that the property in controversy, which was seized on execution and sold to satisfy the judgment recovered by the defendant against John H. Hanson, the husband, was the partnership property of Hanson and his wife, Oaretha M. Hanson, as the firm of Hanson & Co., and had been previously transferred to Green for the benefit of the plaintiff, and to secure to it and others partnership debts of Hanson & Co., and therefore the seizure and sale of the' property in question for the debt of the husband were wrongful, and that the defendant is liable for its value. It is contended that a great part of the property seized was sold to the so-called firm of Hanson & Co. by the plaintiff, and that it acquired a title to it, valid as against all but partnership creditors. The question presented is whether husband and wife can become copartners in carrying on a business, under *578the statute in relation to married women, and, if not, what is the legal result of suoh an attempt by husband and wife to carry on business as such.
Prior to the statute concerning married women, a feme covert might have a separate estate, which courts of equity, only, could recognize and protect; and she might bind it by her engagements or contracts for the benefit of such estate, or on her own account or for her benefit upon the credit of such estate, which could be enforced only in equity against it, but not by way of judgment or decree as for a personal liability. Her contracts' were void at law, and enforceable only in equity against her separate estate. The statute changed the former equitable ownership of her separate estate into a legal one, and,- for its better security and protection, provided that her estate should “ not be subject to the disposal of her husband,” and that, as to subsequently acquired separate estate, it should “ not be liable for his debts.” It has repeatedly been held, under this statute, that the contracts of a married woman, when necessary or convenient to the proper use and enjoyment of her separate estate, are binding at law, and that all her other contracts and engagements stand, as before the statute, good only in equity, and that the change from an equitable to a legal estate has not, in respect to such other contracts, enlarged her powers or removed the disability of coverture. The power of a married woman to bind herself at law is a restricted'one and limited to the making of such contracts and engagements as are necessary or convenient to the use and enjoyment of her separate estate. Conway v. Smith, 13 Wis. 125; Todd v. Lee, 15 Wis. 365; Beard v. Dedolph, 29 Wis. 136; Haydock Carriage Co. v. Pier, 74 Wis. 582, 585. It has never been held, under this statute, that the wife could contract any debt or obligation, valid at law, not fairly within this restricted power, whatever may have been said in subsequent cases as to her power to acquire and *579hold property, separate and apart from her husband, with the proceeds of her individual earnings, under sec. 2343, R. S., or either of the preceding sections. And while it is conceded that, separate and apart from her husband, the wife, with her separate estate, hot derived from her husband, may engage in and carry on business, and for that purpose contract debts and engagements binding at law, her power to do this without a separate estate exists only in the emergencies specified in sec. 2344, where her husband shall have deserted her, or shall, from drunkenness, profligacy, or any cause, neglect or refuse to provide for her support or for the support and education of her children, in which, event she “ shall have the right to transact business in her own name, and to collect the profits of such business,” etc., and they will not be subject to her husband’s control or interference, or liable for his debts. In other words, in all such cases the wife, without a separate estate, has the rights and powers of a feme sole. The guarded terms of this section show that her right to transact business in her own name, beyond the scope of the power implied from the ownership, use, and enjoyment of a separate estate, is denied, except in the particular emergencies specified. The wife has not, therefore, in our judgment, the power to enter into an agreement of partnership with her husband, nor, as for that matter, with any one else, if she h'as no separate estate, in respect to which she can be considered as a feme sole, so as to bind herself at law.
There is no competent evidence in this case that Mrs. Hanson had any separate estate at the time her husband made the purchases for the store in West Bend and started business there under the name and style of Hanson & Co. ; and as the plaintiff is claiming to recover for the property in question under and through a bill of sale executed by such alleged partnership, as against an execution creditor of the husband, within repeated decisions the burden of *580showing that she had a separate estate was on the plaintiff; Stanton v. Kirsch, 6 Wis. 338; Gettelmann v. Gitz, 78 Wis. 439, and cases cited.
Had it been shown, however, that Mrs. Hanson had a separate estate, we think that the partnership agreement between her and her husband (if any, for there is little more than a scintilla of evidence of one) must be regarded as void, and that the business in question was the sole business of her husband, and the plaintiff’s claim is his sole'and individual debt. The purpose and policy of the statute concerning the rights of married women, in our judgment, forbid the formation of a continuing business engagement between husband and wife, which shall produce a community of interest, liability, and profit, in which the husband would have, as partner, a right of control and management of the separate estate of the wife, so that he could sell and convert it into money from time to time, draw the firm moneys from the bank, and collect notes and bills receivable and dispose of the proceeds, in the payment of his debts or otherwise, without her knowledge or consent. The making of such an engagement by the wife might be, if put in execution, a conversion of her separate estate into that of her husband. Certainly, it is easy to understand that, with his influence and control as husband, such result would be almost inevitable. The principal purpose of the statute is to give the wife the power and rights of a feme sole as to her separate property, free “from the disposal of her husband,” and “ not liable to his debts.” Manifestly, it was not intended that the act should receive a construction that would be subversive of the beneficent purposes for which it was enacted, and which would almost necessarily tend to strike down the protection it was intended married women should have under it in the use and enjoyment of their separate estates. At common law a married woman was incapable of forming a partnership, and the *581marriage of a feme sole partner worked a dissolution of the-firm. Story, Partn. §§ 10, 306; 1 Bates, Partn. §§ 135-141. Her right to enter into a partnership, if she has a separate estate, with a person other than her husband, is quite generally recognized, and is assumed to exist in Merchants Nat. Bank v. Raymond, 27 Wis. 569; but we are not aware of any case where it has been held, under a statute in substance the same as our own, that she may embark her separate estate in partnership ventures with her husband. In the case of Suau v. Caffe, 122 N. Y. 308, it was held that the common-law disability of a married woman to engage in a business as a co-partner or jointly with her husband, was removed by an act “Concerning the liability of husband and wife," which authorized a married woman to carry on any trade or business on her sole and separate account, and that the wife could not escape liability for debts contracted in a partnership with her husband, on the ground of coverture; but the statute in question is much broader than ours, and is unconditional. The case was decided by a mere majority,— three of the judges dissenting, and is contrary to previous decisions of the supreme and superior courts, and would seem to be in conflict with Hendricks v. Isaacs, 117 N. Y. 411. The view we have taken of the statute is sustained by Lord v. Parker, 3 Allen, 127; Lord v. Davidson, 3 Allen, 131; Edwards v. Stevens, 3 Allen, 315; Plumer v. Lord, 5 Allen, 463; Bowker v. Bradford, 140 Mass. 521; Payne v. Thompson, 44 Ohio St. 192; Haas v. Shaw, 91 Ind. 384, 390; Scarlett v. Snodgrass, 92 Ind. 262; Artman v. Ferguson, 73 Mich. 146; Bassett v. Shepardson, 52 Mich. 3; Carey v. Burruss, 20 W. Va. 571; Cox v. Miller, 54 Tex. 16; Bradstreet v. Baer, 41 Md. 19. It is not to be supposed that the legislature intended that such relations and duties as exist between copartners in trade should be devolved on husband and wife, with their neces*582sary incidents, as a possible means of disturbing domestic peace and confidence, or that they might become contentious-litigants in an action to wind up, with a receiver in charge of their affairs and resources. The statute evidently intended that the gains the wife should make in the exercise of her limited business powers should be her sole and separate property, and not be in any way subject to the interference, control, or disposal of her husband. The conclusion at which we have arrived is not in conflict with Krouskop v. Shontz, 51 Wis. 204, where the real estate upon which farming was conducted by husband and wife was her sole property, and she was held liable for that reason. No partnership was claimed to exist. Nor is it opposed in principle to Arndt v. Harshaw, 53 Wis. 269; Dayton v. Walsh, 47 Wis. 113; Brickley v. Walker, 68 Wis. 564; and Barker v. Lynch, 75 Wis. 624,— which are clearly distinguishable from the present case. The necessary result is that there was no copartnership estate or liabilities of Hanson & Co., and all the property and liabilities were those of the husband.
2. Inasmuch as the property in question was the'sole property of Hanson, the execution and judgment of the defendant entitled him to impeach the validity of the bill of sale under which the plaintiff claims. The bill of sale was given upon the trusts contained in the letter from Hanson to the plaintiff, which was delivered with it, namely: First, to pay the plaintiff its debt; second, to pay the other ¡creditors, and return the rest to Hanson and wife. The bill of sale was therefore a voluntary transfer or assignment of the stock of goods, etc., in question, for the benefit of or in trust for creditors of Hanson, and.was not executed in the manner prescribed by the statute, and fell directly within the condemnation of the statute, sec. 1694, and of sec. 1693a, S. & B. Ann. Stats., because it gave and secured the plaintiff a preference over all other creditors, contrary *583to the last-named, section. The documents through which the plaintiff claims title created a -trust, a trustee, Green, and creditors as cestuis que trpstent, with an ultimate trust in favor of Hanson and wife. The case is thus brought clearly within the adjudged cases of Winner v. Hoyt, 66 Wis. 227, and Maxwell v. Simonton, 81 Wis. 635. The claim of title of the plaintiff was therefore fraudulent in law, and void, no matter what the intentions of the parties were; and the court properly directed a verdict for the defendant.
On the subject of partnership between husband and wife a note is published with the case of Gilkerson-Sloss Commission Co. v. Salinger (Ark.) 16 L. R. A. 526.— Rep.By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.