A married woman shall be capable of entering into and rendering herself liable in respect of and to the extent of her separate property on any contract... Statutes at Large ... - Page 455by Great Britain - 1882Full view - About this book
| James Bicknell, Edwin Ernest Seager - Court rules - 1894 - 540 pages
...Act (RSO, cap. 132). RSO, c. 132, s. 3, ss. 2. A married woman shall be capable of entering into and rendering herself liable in respect of and to the...property on any contract, and of suing and being sued in all respects as if she were a feme sole, and her husband need not be joined with her as plaintiff... | |
| Joseph Edwin Crawford Munro - Commercial law - 1893 - 258 pages
...The Married Women's Property Act 1882 says: "A married woman shall be capable of entering into and rendering herself liable in respect of and to the...property on any contract," and of suing and being sued, as if she were a single woman. There is a method by which a married woman may be prevented from binding... | |
| Sir Henry Wilmot Seton - Equity pleading and procedure - 1893 - 1080 pages
...Women's Property Act, 1882 (45 & 46 V. c. 75), e. 1, a married woman is capable of " entering into and rendering herself liable in respect of and to the...extent of her separate property on any contract," and by sect. 24, the word " contract" includes the acceptance of any trust, or of the office of executrix... | |
| Theophilus Parsons - Contracts - 1893 - 928 pages
...business in which she may engage or for necessaries, and may sue and be sued upon contracts or for torts, as if she were a feme sole. And her husband need not be a party, ยง 19. Any debt, damages, and costs if recovered by her shall be her separate property, and... | |
| New South Wales, Sir Charles Gregory Wade - Husband and wife - 1894 - 460 pages
...Act, 1893. 1893. Every woman married after April 17th, 1893, shall be capable of entering into and rendering herself liable, in respect of and to the...of her separate property, on any contract, and of being sued, either in contract or tort or otherwise, in all respects as if she were a feme May be sued... | |
| Sir Edward Vaughan Williams - Executors and administrators - 1895 - 948 pages
...1883], a married woman is by virtue of the provisions of section 1 (2), capable of entering into and rendering herself liable in respect of and to the extent of her separate property on any "contract" . . . in all respects as if she were a feme sole. By section 24 of the act it is provided that the... | |
| Joseph Chitty - Contracts - 1896 - 906 pages
...that a married Enforcement woman shall be capable " of suing and being sued either in contract Suin~ ^ or in tort or otherwise, in all respects as if she were a feme sole, being sued and her husband need not be joined with her as plaintiff or defendant, or be made a party... | |
| William Pinder Eversley - Domestic relations - 1896 - 1172 pages
...her separate property. The Act provides that "a married woman shall be capable of entering into and rendering herself liable in respect of and to the extent of her separate property or any contract, and of suing and being sued, either in contract or in tort, or other(, chap. xv. 58... | |
| William Blake Odgers - Civil procedure - 1897 - 566 pages
...(10th ed.) 383. Classes of Persons. A married woman may now sue and be sued, either in contract or tort or otherwise, in all respects as if she were...not be joined with her as plaintiff or defendant. (Married Women's Property Act, 1882, 45 & 46 Viet. c. 75, s. 1.) If, however, the husband has sustained... | |
| Sir Howard Warburton Elphinstone - Conveyancing - 1897 - 1064 pages
...which enacts (s. 1, snb-s. 2) that a married woman shall be wolmln to capable of entering into and rendering herself liable in respect of and to the...property on any contract, and of suing and being sued in contract or in tort or otherwise (as to which see Whittalcer v. Kershaw, 15 CU. D. 320) as if she... | |
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