1. Where two or more persons sign a promissory note as apparent principal makers, the note reciting that “We promise to pay,” and there is nothing to indicate that such signers are not principal makers, the note is prima facie a joint, and not a joint and several, undertaking. Graham v. Marks, 95 Ga. 38 (
2. The allegations in plaintiffs’ amendment, that they had previously brought a suit against Mrs. Helen Gray, one of the other parties whose name appears on the note, that she had filed an answer setting up that she was a married woman and had signed as surety for her husband, another of the makers, who is now dead, that they had no evidence to -contradict the allegations of this answer and dismissed their action against this maker, but that they have not released her from liability on the note and she is not released by any act of theirs, are not sufficient to show that this maker was in fact a surety. It is clearly inferable from these allegations that the plaintiffs did not concede that this maker signed the note as a surety, for if she had, being a married woman, she would not be liable, but on the contrary they alleged, in effect, that they did not consider her released from liability on the note. Moreover, counsel for the plaintiffs do not contend that this maker signed as a surety, but proceed on the theory that she was a maker, and that under section 68 of the negotiable instruments law (Ga. R. 1924, pp. 126, 140), the liability of the signers of this note was joint and several. It has been held that thisu section has application to indorsers only, and not to joint makers. Smith v. Moore, supra.
3. It follows that the court did not err in sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the petition.
Judgment affirmed.
