17 Ga. App. 107 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
Hill Brothers brought suit upon a promissory note signed by Mrs. G-. D. Bazemore. The defendant admitted the
The point is made that the evidence admitted by the court is especially objectionable for the reason that the defendant had not filed a plea alleging that the note was signed under duress, and counsel for the plaintiffs rely upon rulings of the Supreme Court in Hull v. Sullivan, 63 Ga. 127, Boland v. Klink, 63 Ga. 452, Schofield v. Jones, 85 Ga. 820 (11 S. E. 1032), and McDonald v.
It was not decided in Hull v. Sullivan, 63 Ga. 126, 127, that the'husband or the wife could not be heard to testify to private conversations between themselves to defeat a contract made by ■either of them with a third person. On the contrary, the fourth headnote in that case merely submits a query as to the propriety of such testimony, and Judge Bleckley, in discussing the question as to its admissibility, said: “But we leave it as a query.” In the Hull case, supra, as well as in the case of Boland v. Klink, 63 Ga. 448, the decisions seem to be based upon the peculiar facts of the particular case. For this reason, under the ruling in Schofield v. Jones, from which we have quoted, we see no impropriety in the trial judge’s having permitted the wife to state the circumstances
The case then stands thus: The plaintiffs told the defendant’s husband they would not sell to him on credit longer, but would sell to her; and instead of communicating with the wife themselves, they selected the husband as their agent to negotitate with his wife and obtain her consent to become herself their customer and to agree to purchase goods from them on her individual account. The
Judgment affirmed.