48 Ga. App. 458 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1934
“There is no matter of public policy more firmly fixed in this State than that which outlaws a contract of suretyship on the part of a wife in behalf of her husband, or the payment by the wife of any debt of her husband from the proceeds of her separate estate.” “A wife may recover her money which has been paid to a creditor of her husband in extinguishing his debt, even in a cash sale, with her funds, . . and where a wife executes a deed conveying her real estate to a creditor of her husband, she may, upon proof of the fact, proceed to rescind and annul the contract successfully and reassert her former ownership against the grantee or even against holders under the grantee with notice of defect in the consideration . . or by proceeding for a cancellation of the deed of conveyance.” Ulman v. McGill, 155 Ga. 555, 556 (117 S. E. 657); Sally v. Bank of Union, 150 Ga. 281 (3) (103 S. E. 460); Constitution, art. 3, sec. 11, par. 1; Civil Code (1910), §§ 2993, 3007, 6456. This is true although technically the inhibited acts of the wife, declared “absolutely void” by the statute, are not in the strict sense of the word illegal, but are voidable at her election as against the original payee, and are merely unenforceable except as against bona fide purchasers for value without notice; and although the contractual powers of the wife with respect to her husband, except as provided in the code sections
“A note purporting to be that of a married woman, but given in discharge of a pre-existing debt of her husband, renders her a surety within the purview of the statute prohibiting a married woman from entering into a contract of suretyship for her husband.” “When the wife executes her note to take up the debt of her husband, or borrows from the creditor of the husband on her own obligation the money, and hands it to him to pay her husband’s debt, she is, in the meaning of the statute, assuming the debt of another, the same as if her name was signed as surety to a writing promising to pay the debt. The form of the transaction will not be allowed to defeat the statute, when the substance is an evident attempt to evade it.” Bank of Eufaula v. Johnson, 146 Ga. 791, 793 (92 S. E. 631); Rountree v. Rentfroe, 139 Ga. 290, 293 (77 S. E. 23); National Bank of Athens v. Carlton, 96 Ga. 469 (23 S. E. 388); Blackburn v. Lee, 137 Ga. 265, 266 (73 S. E. 1). “A wife has the right to*, repudiate a colorable scheme or device by which she was induced by the creditor and her husband to assume the- previous debt of her husband to such creditor without any consideration flowing to her, no matter how the true inwardness of such illegal and void transaction has been concealed.” Jackson v.
“The settlement of doubtful issues involved in a pending cause is a sufficient consideration to support an agreement of settlement and compromise.” Boswell v. Gillen, 131 Ga. 310 (4) (62 S. E. 187). While it is true, under our decisions, that “in determining the validity of an agreement in accord and satisfaction of a disputed claim, it is not the merit, but the bona lides of the . . contention which is the controlling factor” (Riley v. London Guaranty Co., 27 Ga. App. 686, 109 S. E. 676), “where the contention [is] made in good faith and . . honestly believed in” (Armour Fertilizer Works v. Wynne Mercantile Co., 40 Ga. App. 842, 151 S. E. 671); that “the compromise of a contention as to property rights, the final outcome of which, if settled by litigation, the parties consider to be doubtful, furnishes a consideration sufficient to support the compromise contract,” and “it is not essential that the matter should be really in doubt” (Belt v. Lazenby, 126 Ga. 767 (2), 772, 56 S. E. 81); that the maker of a note will be held bound where it is given in settlement of a pending suit, without regard to “whether the suit itself was instituted upon a just and valid claim or not” (Glenn v. Zenovitch, 128 Ga. 596 (3), 58 S. E. 26); and even that “where a disputed claim, depending upon a legal question, is settled and adjusted by the parties, and a contract between them is accordingly made whereby one promises to pay to the other a sum of money, the promisor is bound thereby, though such question be really free from doubt, and properly resolved would have absolved him fromTiability” (City Electric Ry. Co. v. Floyd County, 115 Ga. 655, 657, 42 S. E. 45), yet these general principles are to be applied together with other equally established rules, that “ a contract executed in consideration of a previous illegal one or in compromise of differences growing out of it, is like that whereon it rests, illegal and incapable of being enforced.”
There is nothing in the decision in Thornton v. Lemon, supra, on which the bank strongly relies, and upon an erroneous interpretation of which the settlement note may possibly have been taken and given, to conflict with the rulings here made. There it was held: “A promissory note executed and delivered by a married woman for the purpose of settling a pending action against her hus
For all the reasons stated, it is our opinion that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, and that the general grounds of the defendant’s motion for a new trial should have been sustained. Athough our previous decision, reversing the judgment on a former trial directing a verdict for the plaintiff, was planted upon another ground, relating to the conflicting evidence on the defense that the bank was a party to or had notice of any actual fraud practiced by the husband on the wife in persuading her to sign the settlement agreement and note in question, yet it withheld any determination of the question upon which the case is now decided. Baxter v. Bank of Grantville, 45 Ga. App. 824 (166 S. E. 63). Under the rulings here made, it is unnecessary to determine whether the evidence as to the alleged actual fraud and notice of the bank demanded a finding in favor of the wife; or whether the court erred in giving or refusing instructions as to which exception is taken in the special grounds. If on a retrial the evidence as to the nature of the obligations, and the previous litigation and compromise, and as to the payments made by the wife which she seeks to recover back from the bank, should be substantially the same, a verdict upon the pleas of the 'defendant would be demanded, regardless of any question of actual fraud or notice thereof by the bank. The questions presented as to charges upon that issue, and as to other instructions, are not such as would be likely to recur in a new trial.
Judgment reversed.