protection order. When the order is granted the provisions for
making her a free woman need not be excepted to. But that
she should be driven to institute a snit for an account which is
sure to be disputed in a hostile case, and may be very minute
and intricate, and after all is left to the discretion of the judge,
is no slight evil. The cost would be an effectual bar to it in
most cases. And why should her freedom depend on so grotesque
and capricious a criterion as her earning half the expenses of
her family 1 The mother of a family has something to do
besides earning money. Numbers of cases might be put to show
the fallacy of such a test. I will put on'y one, which may easily
happen in factory towns. Suppose a woman with a large
family of children, doing little paid work herself, but receiving
and managing the earnings of the children, superintending the
household and keeping it together. Why should not she have
any little property of hers protected against a bad husband 1
Yet Mr. Raikes's test would leave her in the lurch. Her
property passing by mere delivery would be his, and other
property would be seized and strictly settled in the mode
before described.
I will only observe on tvro other very singular effects of Incidental
mischeifs.
this Bill. One is that as protection orders may be cancelled,
outsiders would never know without searching: a remster
whether a wife v/as under disability or free from it — a most
inconvenient state of things. The other is that women with
bad husbands would be better off as regards the power of
applying their money to their wants than those with good ones,
for the well-conducted couples would remain under the law of
strict settlement; whereas the wife who earned half the family
expenses might dispose of her property according to her own
judgment. And so, when the wife had some capital which was
wanted for the family use, there would be a direct inducement
to throw on her the earning of wages.
I have confined myself in these remarks to the broad effects The Lill is
of the Bill, which appears to me only to add one instance to the founded on no
' '■ ^ . "^ principle, and
many that are constantly appearing of the perils that environ would aggia-
those who desert the plain, broad path of simple principles to evils.^^^ ^^°
follow inventions of their own fancies. The existing law we
know, and the law of freedom we know ; but what is this Bill?
Better far the common law than these shackles of jiaternal
government in e- cry household. Mr. Eaikcs's little finger is
Page:On the forfeiture of property by married women.djvu/19
Appearance
This page has not been proofread
15