The decree appealed from annulled the mortgage and debt prayed for in the original bill and dismissed the cross-bill praying for foreclosure.
The bill was filed under section 8272 of the Code of 1923, to enjoin foreclosure of mortgage on the theory that it was the wife's lands and that the debt was that of the husband.
The respective rights of husband, wife, and mortgagee, as affecting the wife's lands, have been considered at length in Dewberry v. Bank of Standing Rock,
When the evidence is carefully examined, the conclusion is unescapable that the mortgage was taken and an account opened in the name of the wife, without her knowledge or consent; that $40 was held out as a discount, and the balance of $960 placed to her credit on the books of the bank, such account being immediately closed by withdrawal of that sum; that the money was used in payment of the husband's debts, the balance of $157.34 placed to his credit in the bank; and that all of this was done without the knowledge or consent of Mrs. O'Reilly.
The testimony of Mr. Denton on cross-examination shows that the debt was that of O'Reilly, which was paid at such time and in such manner as indicated, the balance of $157.34 being placed to the husband's credit in the bank; and said money so used by O'Reilly canceled the debt and the said notes were delivered up. After all that may be said of the transaction, the debt was that of the husband, which he sought to secure by a method of bookkeeping through the wife with her real properties, and under the statute the mortgage was void.
Mrs. O'Reilly was not disqualified from testifying by reason of the death of Carter, the manager or agent of the Tennessee Valley Bank. In Blount v. Blount,
There was no reversible error in taxing each of the litigants with half of the costs. Such matters are held in equity to rest largely in the discretion of the trial judge. Morris v. Corona Coal Co.,
It follows, therefore, that the judgment of the trial court is due to be affirmed. It is so ordered.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and BROWN and KNIGHT, JJ., concur.