51 Ga. 291 | Ga. | 1874
If, then, this money was put into the business of the firm by the wife’s consent, she is a creditor only of the firm, and has the rights of a creditor. That she is a woman, or the wife of one of the partners, does not make a case of trust different from what it would be if she were a man, or of no kin to either party. It is therefore fundamental in this case that it shall appear that she did not freely loan this money to be put as capital in this business. If she did, it is not a ease of trust, but one of the relation of debtor and creditor. And however her husband may be in her debt she has no claim to the title of property passing through the hands of the firm, even though it be bought with the money she loaned. Nor would she have such claim though the purchaser knew that she furnished the means on which the firm was operating. It does not appear by the bill what is the truth as to this matter. She seems to have freely consented to her husband having her money. What he was to do with it she does not say. Lamar says it was there by her consent, and that she was to get a reward of some kind for the use of it. What, he does not say. We think the bill is not sufficiently definite on this vital point to justify the injunction.
2d. That it was notorious in Savannah that Mrs. King inherited a handsome fortune from her father, and that King, her husband, was in 1870 an applicant to be declared a bankrupt.
3d. It is contended that the paper recorded in the record of deeds of the division, or partial division, of her father’s estate, is constructive notice.
4th. It is claimed that the act of Bryan & Hunter in taking the deeds and giving the bonds, and especially in canceling the bonds, in which papers the wives of both King and Lamar were joined, indicated that Mrs. King was supposed to have some interest in these lands.
5lh. King’s statement, by affidavit, that just before the bonds were canceled, he informed Bryan that he had received a large sum from his wife’s estate, and his further statement that he agreed to secure his wife’s signature to prevent complications.
It seems to us that as evidence of notice to Bryan & Hunter that these lots and factory were the product of the misapplication by King of his wife’s funds, entrusted to him as agent, each and all of these facts are but of trifling moment. Bryan & Hunter expressly deny notice in the answer, though they acknowledge they knew Mrs. King was the daughter of Mr. N. A. Hardee.
Is every man in Savannah to be charged with notice, not only that Mrs. King got a handsome estate on the death of her father, but that her husband was insolvent and was dealing on her funds. It seems to us that this is absurd. In so large a city as Savannah, it would be outrageous to make any assumption of notice from such facts as these. The copy of the division is not, in our judgment, constructive notice; so far as it passes title to the lands of Mr. Hardee, it is notice
But there is no law charging a man with constructive notice that a woman has a separate estate because there is a deed on record conveying such an estate to her, except so far as to make him deal at his peril with the property described in the deed. The taking of a deed from the partners and their wives and giving a bond of defeasance, and the subsequent cancellation of that bond, was nothing but what the act of 1871 requires when the parties take that method of securing a debt. The statute requires the deed to be signed by the wife, though she may have no separate estate or interest in it. The cancellation of the bond, as it was made to the husbands and Avives by the signature of both, has, as Ave think, no significance as notice of any interest of Mrs. King. There is no pretense that Mrs. Lamar had any interest. Nor does the-affidavit of King prove anything more than that after Bryan & Hunter’s money had been got and paid out and the deeds-been made, and he and Lamar had failed to pay, he told Bryan that he had received a large sum from his Avife’s estate. Suppose he had, Avas that any notice to them that he had invested it in these lands, or could that relate back so as-to charge Bryan & Hunter with notice at the time their money Avas advanced ? It seems to us that these general facts are nothing to rebut the positive answers of Bryan & Hunter, coupled with the great and admitted facts that at the time the deeds Avere made Lamar & King owed to other persons a sufficient amount to account for all their dealings without any resort to a suspicion that King Avas abusing his Avife’s confidence by the use of her money, and that a large portion of the money advanced by Bryan & Hunter went to pay the debts due for this very property.
Mre feel sorry for the fate of this lady’s for'tune; but it is unjust to parties dealing in good faith with this firm to charge-
Judgment reversed.