44 Pa. Super. 310 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1910
Opinion by
The judgment in question was entered by virtue of a warrant of attorney to confess judgment contained in a promissory note executed by the appellant and her husband jointly. The ground upon which her petition to open the judgment was based was, that she executed the note solely as surety for her husband and that the proceeds of the loan for which the note was given were not received by her or for the benefit of her separate, estate, but were received by her husband. The petition was met by a responsive answer, denying that she executed the note as surety or security for her husband, and averring, in substance, that she executed it to secure a loan she
The testimony taken on the rule shows that the household furniture in the premises where she and her husband resided belonged to her, that the plaintiff carried on the business of loaning money on household furniture, that before the loan was made the plaintiff’s agent went to the premises and, with the appellant’s knowledge and acquiescence, made an appraisement of the household furniture. There is a discrepancy between her testimony as to what was said at this time and that of the plaintiff’s agent upon the same subject. But the great weight of the testimony, taking the written documents into consideration, is that she showed the agent her furniture receipts when he asked for them, that when she asked what papers he had he told her a bill of sale, a judgment note and an application to be signed by her, and that she executed these papers knowing that the proposed loan was to be made on the credit of her household furniture. The evidence would not support a finding that she was not aware of the nature and contents of these papers or that her signature thereto was procured by misrepresentation as to the purpose for which they were to be used. The application by its terms was an application for a loan to her personally. It set forth the amount of the proposed loan, the occupation of her husband, a description of the real estate which she owned, the incumbrances upon it, her indebtedness, her ownership of the goods in the house, her agreement to sign a judgment note for the security of the loan, and concluded with the statement that she had read the application and the same had been fully explained to her. In the body of the application appears this significant statement: “This money is borrowed by me for my own use and for the improvement of my separate estate.” The three papers
Formerly the capacity of a married woman to contract was exceptional and her disability general; now the disability is exceptional and her capacity general; the burden is on her when she seeks to avoid her contract, to bring it within one of the few exceptions: Patrick v. Smith, 165 Pa. 526. Since the passage of the acts of 1887 and 1893, her confession of judgment is presumably valid, and when she seeks to avoid it it devolves upon her to show affirmatively, not only the fact of marriage, but the presence of those circumstances which relieve her from liability. These general principles are so well settled that no authority for them need be cited. The rule is not different where she executes a judgment note jointly with her husband: Stephan v. Hudock, 4 Pa. Superior Ct. 474. In Algeo v. Fries, 24 Pa. Superior Ct. 427, the rule was stated thus: “Prima facie, when husband and wife join in the execution of an obligation, they are joint debtors, and subject to all the legal incidents of joint indebtedness. There is no presumption that either is a surety. This is a matter of defense; and, like other joint debtors, either may show, as against any party to be affected, in law, by such proof, that he or she is in fact a surety for the other. When this is done by the wife, the act of June 8, 1893, P. L. 344, makes her obligation void.” One who presents a money obligation of a married woman has made out a prima facie case, which can only be defeated by showing that the contract is one of the kinds prohibited by the act, and in such case the burden is not on the plaintiff to show that she actually applied
Bearing in mind that the burden of proof was on the appellant to show that she was a mere surety, these other principles that have been settled by a long line of de-' cisions must be kept in view: that the judge to whom an application to open a judgment is made acts as a chancellor; that it is his duty to weigh the testimony; that he is not required in every case of conflicting evidence to send the case to a jury; and that on appeal the appellate court will only see that his discretion has been properly exercised. Many of the early cases upon the subject are cited in Stephan v. Hudock, 4 Pa. Superior Ct. 474. And amongst the later cases sustaining these principles are: Augustine v. Wolf, 215 Pa. 558; McCullough v. Kinnan, 31 Pa. Superior Ct. 557; W. W. Blake Tobacco Co. v. Posluszsy, 31 Pa. Superior Ct. 602. And in one of the latest of our cases the rule is stated thus: “A proceeding to open a judgment is an appeal to the equity powers of the court; a judge, exercising the functions of a chancellor, is vested with the discre
The order is affirmed at the costs of the appellant.