DocketNumber: No. 28861.
Citation Numbers: 115 So. 575, 165 La. 315, 1928 La. LEXIS 1719
Judges: Paul
Filed Date: 1/18/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
Mrs. John Trascher, Jr., brought suit against her husband for separation from bed and board, but discontinued said suit and became reconciled to her husband. She afterwards brought a second suit against him and again discontinued her suit and became reconciled to him. See Daly Hamlin v. Trascher,
Upon the filing of her second suit she left her husband's domicile, and after residing for a while with a friend she again left and then rented a house, which she proceeded to furnish completely at a cost of $795.
*Page 317"$15 per month for 8 months, then at least $240 cash, afterwards $30 per month until paid. Account guaranteed by Daly."
The meaning of which was that she expected to collect from her husband in a lump sum, within 8 months, back alimony at the rate of $90 per month, and current alimony thereafter at the same rate, and that "Daly" (her attorney) would see that she carried out her agreement. Cf. Daly Hamlin v. Trascher, supra.
From which it follows that a husband is liable for necessaries supplied to his wife when he himself fails or refuses to supply them. Van Horn v. Arantes,
"A husband is only liable for debts contracted by his wife on the assumption that she acts as his agent. If he omits to furnish her with necessaries, he makes her impliedly his agent to purchase them. If he supply her properly, she is not his agent for the purchase of an article, unless he see her wear it without disapprobation."
For, in such case, there is no necessity entitling the wife to pledge the husband's credit. *Page 318
30 C.J. 590. And it is quite immaterial that the authority of the wife to purchase necessaries on her husband's credit, as well as the liability of the husband therefor, need not be based on any theory of agency on her part, express or implied, and that it suffices to say that it results from the duty to furnish necessaries, imposed on the husband by law as an incident of the marriage relation, and of his failure or refusal to perform that duty. For the authority for any one to perform that duty in his behalf, ex humanitate, towards the wife, can only arise when he himself fails or refuses to perform that duty. This rule compels the husband to pay in a proper case, and at the same time affords him some protection against the extravagance of a wife in purchasing what she does not need. Wanamaker v. Weaver,
In this case the evidence shows that the husband offered to his wife, out of the contents of the common dwelling, any furniture she might need to furnish the house which she was about to take, and that the furniture he offered her was "all right," but the wife refused to take it simply because she wanted all new furniture. Our finding in Daly Hamlin v. Trascher, supra, that the husband "refused to furnish her [the wife] with anything whatsoever," must be read in connection with what was then under consideration, to wit, "cash for her support during the proceedings"; the matter of furniture was not involved and had not even been mentioned.
As to the proposition that the husband ratified the purchase, the fact is that the husband had no effective authority over his wife after she left his domicile and had been assigned to separate domicile by the court, and hence had no means of forbidding or repudiating any contract which she might undertake to make in her own behalf and on *Page 319 her own exclusive credit, such as she did in connection with the furniture herein involved. So that his silence and inaction during the pendency of the suit for separation is of no consequence whatsoever, even had he known that his wife had purchased said furniture entirely on credit and had not paid for it in cash or merely rented it.
But the evidence shows that, as soon as the wife informed her husband that she had purchased the furniture on credit (which was just when they became reconciled and were about to return to the common domicile), he at once declined to pay for it and she notified plaintiff that she was not in a position to pay for it, and would have to return it. Eventually, upon plaintiff's refusal to accept the furniture, it was stored for his account.
Our conclusion is that under the circumstances the husband is not liable for the furniture thus purchased by the wife and that the district court and Court of Appeal erred in holding that he was.