12 Ga. App. 785 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
This was a suit against a married woman, upon a promissory note for $240 principal, with a credit thereon of $55. The note purported to have been signed by the defendant with her mark. She pleaded non est factum; that she was not indebted to the plaintiff in any sum; and that she borrowed from him $50 and gave him her note for that amount, and paid the note in full, boih principal and interest. By amendment she alleged, that prior to the execution of the note, her husband agreed to trade horses with the plaintiff and give him $150 boot, which agreement was unknown to her, and that two or three weeks after the agreement was entered into and when she went to give the plaintiff her note for the $50 which she had borrowed from him, the plaintiff included in the note, without her knowledge or consent, the $150 due by her husband; that she is an ignorant woman and can neither read nor write. She further pleaded that the con
The plaintiff put in evidence the note sued on, and a mortgage on certain land and a mule, given to secure it, purporting to have been signed'by the defendant and her husband (her signature being by mark). The mortgage recited that the mule was that day sold to her, and that the mortgage was for purchase-money, and that the husband signed for the purpose of relinquishing whatever interest he had in the land. She testified, that she had never bought a mule from the plaintiff, had never owed him but $50, and joaid him that debt, did not know about any other transaction, and did not know of the $240 note until after the suit was brought, when she learned that her husband had swapped mules with the plaintiff and agreed to pay him $150 boot, which was included in the note; that the note and the mortgage were not read over to her
Judgment reversed.