This action was brought to recover the price of goods sold and delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant. The defense was that (589) the business was conducted by Mrs. Caroline J. Ramsey, who is married woman, and that she was and is the sole proprietor of the business and owner of the stock of goods in the store. The question in the case was whether the business had been so conducted as to constitute *Page 435 Mrs. Ramsey a free trader within the provisions of the Revisal, sec. 2118. The issues submitted to the jury, with the answers thereto, were as follows:
1. Was George C. Ramsey, on or about 16 October, 1906, as husband of Carolina Jones Ramsey, conducting for her a business under the name of the LaMarguerite Shop Company, without displaying a sign at such place showing her Christian name and the fact that she was a ferns covert? Answer: "Yes."
2. Was said indebtedness contracted in the course of said business? Answer: "Yes."
3. In what amount, if any, is the defendant indebted to the plaintiff? Answer: "Fifty-one dollars and fifty cents, interest from 27 May, 1907."
Miles Pegram, a witness for the plaintiff, testified: "On or about 16 October, 1906, I was traveling salesman of the plaintiff. I went to the millinery store in the city of Charlotte known as LaMarguerite Shop, for the purpose of selling some goods, and found G. C. Ramsey, the husband of the feme defendant, in the storeroom, with his hat off. I knew G. C. Ramsey, the husband of the feme defendant, and knew he was a drummer and only in Charlotte occasionally. I knew that Mrs. Caroline Jones Ramsey was in charge of the business, and understood that she either owned it or owned an interest in it. I mentioned the matter of selling goods to Mr. Ramsey, and he said he thought they could use the goods, but that Mrs. Ramsey did the selecting of goods. Mr. Ramsey called Mrs. Ramsey from the back part of the store, where she was engaged in work, and Mrs. Ramsey came forward and selected the goods and gave me an order therefor, for the price of which this suit was instituted. Mr. Ramsey gave me shipping directions and three (590) New York references, and I think he said I must ship the goods to the LaMarguerite Shop Company. The foregoing was all the conversation had at that time. I know nothing else about Mr. Ramsey's conducting the business. I am not now working for the plaintiff company and do not know of my own knowledge whether the bill for the goods is due and unpaid or not. I saw the goods in the store some time after the date I sold them, and Mrs. Ramsey said they were good goods. I heard Mrs. Ramsey swear before the justice of the peace, when this case was tried, that Ramsey did not help conduct the business and had no interest whatsoever. Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey were man and wife at the time the goods were sold, and I knew it at that time. There was a sign on the store window with the words `LaMarguerite.'" Plaintiff rested here.
The defendants G. C. Ramsey and his wife, Caroline J. Ramsey, testified, in substance, that Mrs. Ramsey was the sole owner of the stock of *Page 436 goods and business, and conducted the business herself and not through her husband as an agent. It is not necessary to set forth this evidence at length.
The defendants in apt time moved to nonsuit the plaintiff. The motion was overruled, and they excepted. Judgment was rendered upon the verdict, and the defendants appealed. After stating the case: The plaintiff seeks to charge the feme defendant with the payment of the debt contracted by her, upon the ground that her business was conducted by her husband for her, and that, under the provisions of the Revisal, 2118, she thereby became a free trader and liable for the debt as if she had been a feme sole. It is provided by the statute in question that "If any married woman shall conduct her business through her husband or any other agent, or if (591) any husband or agent of any married woman shall conduct such business for her without displaying the Christian name of such married woman and the fact that she is a feme covert, by a sign placed conspicuously at the place wherein such business is conducted," she shall be deemed and treated as a free trader, and the property purchased and used in the business, as to creditors, shall be liable for the debts contracted in the course of the business by the person in charge of the same.
The statute was evidently passed for the purpose of preventing a married woman from conducting her business by her husband or any other agent in such a way as to mislead her creditors by inducing them to believe that they are dealing with a person legally responsible for any debts contracted in course of the business, and concealing her identity and the fact that she is a married woman, who is protected by her coverture from their payment.
We do not think there is any evidence in this case which brings it within either the letter or the mischief of the statute. The plaintiff's own witness testified that when he sold the goods he knew the husband was a drummer and in Charlotte only occasionally, and that he further knew that Mrs. Ramsey was in charge of the business, and he understood that she either owned it or owned an interest in it; that she selected the goods and gave him the order for them. In the face of this evidence it can hardly be successfully contended that the mere fact of the husband being in the store at the time of the sale and his statements to Mr. Pegram are sufficient to carry the case to the jury for the purpose of charging Mrs. Ramsey personally and her property with the payment of the debt. The *Page 437 facts being established that she was in charge of the business, to the knowledge of Mr. Pegram, agent of the plaintiff, and that she selected the goods and gave the order for them, or, in other words, that she made the contract of purchase herself, take the case entirely out of the words of the statute and show conclusively that it is not within (592) the mischief intended to be suppressed. How could the plaintiff be deceived as to the character of the business or as to the management of it by Mrs. Ramsey as proprietress, when its agent admits that he had full knowledge of all the material facts and was not himself misled? Such a case as is disclosed by the proof was surely not within the contemplation of the Legislature. There is no evidence to show that the entry in the telephone book was made by the authority of Mrs. Ramsey. Indeed, what evidence there is upon that question tends strongly to show that it was not. Besides, the agent of plaintiff testified that he sold the goods upon her order, and that she was at the time in charge of the business. Upon a review of the whole case we conclude that there was not sufficient evidence to be submitted to the jury within the rule established by this Court. Byrd v.Express Co., 139 N.C. 273. The motion to nonsuit should have been sustained.
Reversed.
CLARK, C.J. Not controverting that the Court has placed the proper construction upon the statute, it is an anomaly that may well call for legislative consideration, if a married woman carrying on business herself is not liable for articles purchased in its conduct, but is liable if she has the aid or agency of her husband in buying the same articles.
NOTE. — This is now corrected by chapter 109, Laws 1911.
Cited: Stout v. Perry, 152 N.C. 313; Scott v. Ferguson, ib., 348.
(593)