Upon the trial Freeman, the husband, testified : I made application to the association through Cubbedge, its secretary and treasurer, for a loan. I told him my trouble, that I wanted to get this money, and told him at the time I had nothing I could offer as security, but could get my wife to mortgage her house and lot for it, and he said to me then that the stock would have to be put in her name, and I told him I was aware of that fact I told him I wanted the money for myself and what I wanted with it, that I wanted to pay it to Virgil Powers. The money was obtained and was paid to Mr. Powers, part of it, and part of it went to pay for the stock. As to this stock Cubbedge got twenty shares for me, I do not know who from, and it was paid for out of the money before it was paid over to my wife. Included in the payment for stock was also payment for ten shares which I bought myself from Powers. The mortgage given by my wife was to secure the loan made to me. She had no concern in procuring the money, and it was all done by me and Cubbedge ; all the correspondence and all the conversation was between me and Cubbedge. I told him fully what I wanted with the money, and that I wanted the loan to pay my note held by Powers. The money on the loan was paid my wife by Cubbedge, by my direction. I had an understanding with him that he was to take pay for the shares of stock, and there was something else, I do not remember, to be paid out of the money, and the balance of it to be paid by my direction to my wife. The association never made any loan to my wife, to my knowledge. Cubbedge was secretary and treasurer at the time. After I had made known to him my needs and wants for money and requested the loan, what I said to him was never changed by me. When he got the stock he advised me about bringing down the papers to have the deed examined, and afterwards wrote me that everything was all right and the money ready. My wife had nothing to do with it, except to execute the papers, go and get the check and pay it to Powers for me; not one cent of the money went to her purposes. Powers came and told me what amount he got from her. I got the benefit of the money for what it was paid for. I never handled it, because I told my wife what to do with it. The money was paid by her to Powers. I only know from hearsay to whom the association paid it; they did not pay it to me. I did not get any of it for my immediate use. I was in Atlanta, I think, when she executed the note and mortgage. I gave her a memorandum and told her what to do with it, and could only answer by what she told me as to the money being paid to Powers. She attended to her own business; I attended to very little for her; had no transactions for her at all. I owed Powers the money for my individual debts. I did not pay a dollar on the house and lot on which the mortgage was given. I knew when I applied to Cubbedge. for the loan that I had nothing to offer as security, and! so stated to him, that I went to use her property and borrow money on her credit, and would have to get her to mortgage her property. . I saw the money in her possession. She purchased the house herself. I had nothing to do with it. Since this loan Powers has not made a demand on me for money. It is my wife’s signature to both the mortgage and check.Plaintiff put in evidence a letter signed by Cubbedge, secretary and treasurer, to Freeman, stating that the papers had all been put in proper shape, aud asking whether Freeman would come down to have them executed, or should the writer get Mrs. Freeman to do it and pay the money over to her, “which will have to be done in any event of course,” and that the entire amount of money was ready.Plaintiffs then announced that they would rest; whereupon defendants moved to dismiss the ease, on the grounds that the allegations in the petition had not been sustained, and that the proof did not show that there was ever any mortgage or note given, nor that the association held any debt against Mrs. Freeman, and .failed to show the transaction between Mr. and Mrs. Freeman; and on the further ground, that it was ad•mitted the money was paid to Mrs. Freeman in the cheek, and that it did not appear what was done with the money, but that the proof left the money with her, and there was no proof entitling plaintiffs to recover. Plaintiffs then introduced Powers, who testified that Mrs. Freeman paid him a debt for her husband, amounting to $2,300, on January 28, 1888 (this was the date of the copy mortgage attached to the petition, and Cubbedge’s letter to Freeman was dated January 18, 1888); that witness did not know where she got the money; that she herself did not owe him any money at the time, but the money was paid for the debt that Freeman owed; and that Freeman was not with her. Freeman, recalled, testified, that up to the time of the loan from the association, on or about January 23, 1888, his wife did not have $2,300 in money; and that Cubbedge made the statement next to be mentioned. Plaintiffs then put in evidence a statement from the association, dated January 23, 1888, purporting to be the account of Mrs. Freeman with it. By it she was credited with “ net proceeds of $6,000 bid off on thirty shares of stock for her on January 12th, at fifty-eight per cent, premium, being the then minimum, $2,500,” and charged with amount paid for her for twenty shares of stock, $140, dues and interest paid on thirty shares of stock, $60, and amount paid her in person, in cash, $2,320. At the conclusion of this testimony the motion for nonsuit was renewed, and was sustained.Estes & Estes, for plaintiffs.G-ustin, G-ueriiy & Hall and Dessau & Bartlett, for defendants.
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