32 Ga. App. 203 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1924
1. “Where two persons sign a note, apparently as joint principals, and there is nothing in the note to show that one is surety for the other, the presumption of law is that both are liable as joint principals. This is not, however, a conclusive presumption, and may be rebutted by parol evidence, or by circumstances.” Williams v. Peoples Bank, 9 Ga. App. 714 (1) (72 S. E. 177). This rule applies when one of the signers is a married
2. “Where the creditor, at the time a debt is created, really intends in good faith to extend the credit to the wife, and not to the husband, and the consideration of the loan passes legally and morally from the creditor to the wife, and where the writings then executed are such as purport to bind her for the debt as her own, then, whatever may be the private understanding between the wife and the husband, in which the creditor is not concerned and in which he has no interest, as to the disposition by the wife of the proceeds of the loan so received by her, the writings are to be treated as embracing the true substance of the contract. Nor does it matter in such case that the negotiations relating to the loan are in fact all had through the husband, where the- transaction appears to be the bona -fide and voluntary contract of the wife.” Longley v. Bank of Parrott, 19 Ga. App. 701 (1 b) (92 S. E. 232).
3. In the instant case the note was signed by the husband and by the wife apparently as joint principals. Under the contentions and evidence of the defendant wife, the husband alone made the contract as principal with the plaintiff payee of the note, and received all of the consideration money, she herself signing the note afterwards as surety at the request of her husband, and the husband afterwards using the money or a part thereof for the purchase of an automobile, for which he alone contracted, but which thereafter became their property as owners in common. Under the evidence of the plaintiff, the note was signed by both husband and wife at the same time in his presence, the consideration money was loaned to the wife and on her credit, and she alone received the proceeds of the loan, with which she purchased the car in question, which ear she claimed as her property, and which in a subsequent settlement on the separation of the husband and wife was treated as hers. Under this testimony, a verdict for the plaintiff against the wife was authorized; and the court did not err in charging in substance that before a contract of suretyship or the assumption of a husband’s debt by a wife would be unenforceable, the plaintiff creditor should have knowledge or notice thereof. See also Jones v. Fourth National Bank, 20 Ga. App. 219 (2) (92 S. E. 964).
4. The court charged as follows: “If you believe from the evidence that” the defendant “at the time of the execution of the
5. The jury on December 5, 1922, found a verdict for the
Judgment affirmed.