Bedle, J.
The solution of this question depends upon the construction of the act of March 24th, 1862, entitled “ an act to prevent the fraudulent transfer of property, and to facilitate the collection of just claims.” Can this claim be collected by suit at law against the husband and wife, by virtue of that act? Under the common law, a married woman cannot be made personally liable for a debt. She is unable legally to contract it. In equity, she could make her separate estate liable for such debts as, according to equitable principles, could be charged against it, and a remedy for their collection would exist only in a court of equity. The debt in question was contracted for the benefit of the wife’s separate estate, and in the Court of Chancery could be enforced against it, but at law it cannot be collected, as against the wife, unless the act of 1862 authorizes it. That act provides for a suit at law against the husband and wife “ in all cases where a married woman transacts any business or purchases any property, and debts or claims thereby remain unsatisfied;” in which suit judgment may be obtained against the husband and wife both, and the amount collected by execution out of the property of both or either. This is a harsh provision, is in derogation of the common law, and might work very great hardship to the husband, and therefore (he act should not be extended by construction beyond what its express terms require. No additional power to the wife to make contracts, other than such as she could before make in contemplation of equity, should be implied from it.
The act of March 25th, 1852, for the better securing the property of married women, has been strictly construed by our courts. 5 Dutcher 287; 2 Beasley 232; 1 C. E. Green 512; 2 C. E. Green 413. That act provides for a separate property in the wife, but gives no new power of disposing of it; in that respect it is subject to the disabilities of the coverture, the same as all other separate estates. In analogy to that principle of construction, this act of 1862 should be strictly construed, and not held to endow the wife with any new power to contract. As a feme covert she could only contract in reference to an equitable liability against her separate estate, for such debts and claims as could be charged against it. This act merely recognizes that power; it does not extend it, and only gives a remedy in the courts of law for the collection of such equitable debts or claims. Whenever her separate estate could be reached in the Court of Chancery for such debts or claims, a suit at law could be maintained therefor. The act simply takes the married woman with her common law disabilities, recognizing only her equitable powers and liabilities, and furnishes a new remedy for all such debts and claims as before she could so far contract, as to make her separate estate liable therefor. The same tests that would make her separate estate responsible in equity, must be applied to make her responsible at law. In order to maintain the suit at law, it would not be necessary that she should actually have a separate estate at the commencement of the suit. The remedy given by the act is personal, and by a personal judgment; but that remedy can be adopted only when the debt or claim would be equitably chargeable against any separate estate she may have had when her equitable liability was created. According to this test, the debt in question could be sued for at law. It was for labor in alterations and improvements upon the wife’s real estate, the same having been done by her authority, and for which that estate was equitably liable.
It was urged on the argument, that the words, “ transact any business,” were used in the sense of trade, occupation, or calling, and that the act should be further limited to that sense; but the whole clause is so broad that we would not be justified in doing it. The act says, “ in all eases where a married woman transacts any business.” Those words include any single act or transaction of business, out of which debts or claims might remain unsatisfied against a married woman. Whatever act of business she can transact, is fairly within their scope. The words following, “ or purchases any property,” would seems to give some slight encouragement to the idea that the preceding words were used in a restrictive sense, as the purchasing of property is an act of business; but the whole act is very bunglingly drawn, and very little can be relied on from the relation of expressions to each other in it. If the carrying on of a trade, occupation, or calling had only been intended, it is natural to suppose that-other words than those selected would have been used. One special object of the act was, no doubt, to reach those claims remaining unsatisfied by reason of the purchase of property, and therefore that is in words expressed. It is no uncommon thing for some special object of an act to be mentioned in terms, although other clauses may include the same thing, and that same idea contained in this act, and is more clearly discernible by a transposition of the expressions, so as to read, in all cases where a married woman purchases any property or transacts any business. The act must be held to include all equitable debts or claims remaining unsatisfied, whether by reason of the purchase of any property, or the transaction of any single or other act of business by the married woman.
In the case of Deegan v. Morrow, 2 Vroom 136, the question of the application of this act to the equitable liabilities of the wife only, was not raised. That was a suit for property purchased by the wife, whether under such circumstances as to make her separate estate liable, does not appear. The case was chiefly decided on the point that the act did not apply to a debt contracted before its passage. No construction was directly given in that case to the words in relation to transacting business, as none was necessary; and this is the first time that this court is distinctly required to decide the extent of the liability of the wife in courts of law, and for what debts or claims. No aid can be gathered from the statutes or adjudications of other states, as our act is anomalous, and its construction must therefore be sui generis.
The plaintiff is entitled to judgment upon the verdict, and the circuit should be advised accordingly.
It is well to remark, that in actions under this statute, the declaration should be special, and not simply on the common counts.
Beasley, C. J., and Justice Elmer, concurred.
Cited in Lewis v. Perkins, 7 Vr. 134; Vankirk v. Skillman, 5 Vr. 110.
See Rev., p. 636.