1. Counsel for plaintiff in error do not contend in their brief that the debt claimed by Mrs. Glover against the estate of Mrs. McMichael was barred by the statute of limitations, nor ■does it appear that this contention was made in the trial court. But counsel for defendant in error has discussed the question whether this debt was thus barred, contending that it was not, and has asked and obtained leave to review the decision of this court Tendered in Johnson v. Johnson, 80 Ga. 260, evidently being apprehensive that if that decision should be followed in the present •case, the judgment of this court might be adverse to his client. Even admitting that the note held by Mrs. Glover, which the .mortgage -was given to secure, fell due on December 1, 1895, it was not, relatively to the estate of Mrs. McMichael, barred by ihe statute of limitations. As shown by the evidence, Mrs. McMichael died on April 29, 1897, and there was no administra“tion upon her estate until August 7, 1899. During the period ■of time between these two dates the statute of limitations, relatively to claims against her estate, was suspended. Civil Code, ■§ 3782; Acts 1882-3, p. 104. It was, of course, still further suspended for twelve months after the appointment of the administrator. Civil Code, §§ 3421, 3423; Smith v. Hudspeth, 63 Ga. 212; Pendleton v. Andrews, 70 Ga. 306; Johnson v. Johnson, supra; Adams v. Adams, 113 Ga. 824; Williams v. Lancaster, Ib. 1020; Tarver v. Cowart, 5 Ga. 66. Mrs. Glover took the initial ¡steps toward the enforcement of her mortgage on August 24, 1903, when she, after giving notice of her mortgage upon the land, became a party to the agreement under which the entire interest in the land was sold under the execution in favor of Mrs. Hawes, trustee; and on September 16, 1903, she filed her petition setting up
2. Section 5269 of the Civil Code, which is relied upon by plaintiff in error to exclude the testimony of W. J. MeMichael as to the execution of the note and mortgage by Mrs. E. J. MeMichael, is as follows: “Where a person not a party, but a person interested in the result of the suit, is offered as a witness, he shall not be competent to testify, if as a party to the cause he would for any cause be incompetent.” Eelatively to the question of the liability of the witness upon the note, he was competent to testify to its execution by his deceased co-obligor thereon, because at the time he testified he was no longer legally liable upon the note. Although the body of the note concluded with the expression, “Witness my ■ hand and seal,” it was not, as to any of its makers, a sealed instrument, as no seal, or anything intended to take the place of one, appeared thereon after the signature of any one of them. Ridley v. Hightower, 112 Ga. 476, and cases cited; Jackson v. Railroad Company, 125 Ga. 801. It was certainly matured on December 1, 1896. The trial under review occurred in 1905, at the April term of the court. As the note was not under seal, it was clearly barred as to this witness when he testified in the case; for it -is not r-laimp.fi that any suit had ever been brought against him upon it, but the question as to his competency was based solely upon the facts which appeared upon the face of the paper. The mere fact that it was not barred as to the estate of Mrs. MeMichael, his coobligor thereon, did not prevent its being barred as to him. In Shepherd v. Crawford, 71 Ga. 458, it was held: “Where a client
It is further contended, however, that the witness was incompetent under the act of December 21, 1897 (Acts 1897, p. 53). That act provides, “That when suit is instituted against joint defendants, one of whom is the representative of an insane or deceased person, the sane or living party defendant shall not be permitted to testify as to any transaction or communication with the insane or deceased party, when, his evidence would tend to relieve or
2. The objection to the testimony of the witness, that he signed the name of his wife, Mrs. E. J. McMichael, to the note and mortgage, by her request, under her direction and in her presence, upon the ground that authority to execute the mortgage could not be conferred by parol, but would have to be executed with all the formalities required in the execution of the mortgage itself, was properly overruled by the court. In Reinhart v. Miller, 22 Ga. 402, it was held: “When a party present, and an instrument is presented for his signature, directs another to sign it, no written authority is necessary, and if the instrument is signed and the parties immediately recognize it by acting upon it, no proof of the presence of the party when the instrument is signed need be made.” In Brown v. Colquitt, 73 Ga. 59, 62, it was said: “A deed may be signed, sealed, and delivered by a person under instructions by parol, if the grantor be present at the time, and it will be good to pass title, because the law considers, under such circumstances, the act of the agent to be the act of the principal; it is done at his instance and under his directions, it is his act.” In Wyatt v. Walton Guano Co., 114 Ga. 375, it was held: “Where a husband, in the presence of his wife and with her express consent, signs her 'name to a promissory note which she knows is to be delivered to
3. A mortgage is good as between the parties without any attesting witness. Marable v. Mayer, 78 Ga. 60. So is a deed. Johnson v. Jones, 87 Ga. 85; Howard v. Russell, 104 Ga. 230. And a mortgage, not attested as the law requires, is good as against third persons who take with actual notice of its 'existence. Gardner v. Moore, 51 Ga. 269. The requirements of the code as to the at-
4. The Civil Code, § 2488, provides, that “while the wife may contract, she can not bind her separate estate by any contract of suretyship, nor by any assumption of the debts of her husband, and any sale of her separate estate, made to a creditor of her husband,, in extinguishment of his debts, shall be absolutely void.” In construing this section, it has been repeatedly held that any contract of suretyship entered into by a married woman, whether in behalf of her husband or any other person, is void, and at her instance-will be so declared. But the question whether a creditor of hers can. raise the question of the validity of such a contract entered into by her, when, because of her insolvency and the existence of some lien or conveyance which she has executed in connection with the contract, it tends to prevent the collection of his debt against her, has1, never, so far as we have been able to discover, been before this, court. In Palmer v. Smith, 88 Ga. 84; it was held: “A conveyance of land executed by a married woman in payment of her husband’s debt, though declared by the statute absolutely void, is only so as against her and upon her election to treat it as void, coverture being a personal privilege which is not available in behalf of a. stranger to her title.” In the opinion Mr. Justice Simmons said: “Where a married woman having a separate estate conveys her property to a third person in payment of her husband’s debts, and afterwards seeks to recover the property or cancel the deed, the
5. Section 2727 of the Civil Code, which provides that an unrecorded mortgage is “postponed to all other liens created or obtained . . prior to the actual record of the mortgage,” refers to liens created or obtained during the lifetime of the mortgagor. Standing alone, this section would seem to give a general judgment obtained against the estate of a decedent priority over a mortgage executed before the judgment but not recorded. But the statute of distribution provides that “Judgments, mortgages, and other liens created during the lifetime of the deceased, [are] to be paid according to the priority of their lien,” and gives them the sixth place in the order of distribution of insolvent estates. Civil Code,, §3424(6). This clearly excludes the idea that a judgment obtained after the death of the judgment debtor is to have any priority of lien, as a judgment, upon the assets of Iris estate. It also clearly includes the idea that a mortgage, whether recorded or not, is entitled after the death of the mortgagor to whatever priority of lien it had when he died. So the provisions of these two sections of the Civil Code are to be construed together and in harmony with each other. Subsequent paragraphs of section 3424 give the order of priority of debts ranking below liens created in the lifetime of' the deceased, placing “All liquidated demands,” including promissory notes, etc., in the eighth class. In construing this distribution statute, it has been repeatedly held that, in the distribution of an insolvent estate of a decedent, a judgment obtained against the administrator thereof ranks no higher than the claim upon which it. is based. Consequently a mere general judgment against the estate of a decedent can neither take precedence over, nor stand upon an equal footing with, an unrecorded mortgage executed by him. Counsel for plaintiff in error contend “that the word ‘mortgages’1 in the sixth paragraph of section 3424 means a mortgage executed and recorded in accordance with law, such a mortgage only as. yould be good against a subsequent judgment if the intestate had remained in life, because a mortgage unattested and unrecorded according to the provisions of section 2727 is not such a lien as.
It follows that the court did not err in directing the verdict in favor of the mortgagee.
Judgment affirmed,