181 Ga. 787 | Ga. | 1936
The real gist of the question involved in the present case is not so much whether the husband was originally authorized by the wife to act as her agent, but whether, after he had arranged for the loan from Withers, she ratified the agreement and became primarily liable by reason of signing the notes and mortgages. “The wife is a feme sole as to her separate estate, unless controlled by the settlement. Every restriction upon her power in it must be complied with; but while the wife may contract, she may not bind her separate estate by any contract of suretyship nor by any assumption of the debts of her husband, and any sale of
It is not shown that Mrs. Meeks was under any legal disability. To support her claim she testified that she was a woman of 71 years of age, unaccustomed to transacting business, but on cross-examination she stated: “I worked hard for my home. I ran a restaurant for seven years. I kept boarders for four years. . . I worked in Capps Cotton Mills for eighteen months.” A total of nearly thirteen years of business life thus revealed, the jury was authorized to conclude that out of her experience, though unable to write, she was not ignorant of such business papers as notes, mortgages, and the like. They were also authorized to find that she had acquired enough experience to distinguish between the figures $100 and $650, and that from her experience prudence would have suggested that, if she did not know what she was doing, she make some inquiry of the contents of the papers. Her testimony does not go to the extent of swearing that her husband had led her to believe that she was signing only as surety for a machinery debt. She merely says, “I thought I had signed as security for one hundred dollars.” She does not say that she understood that the husband or any one else was to sign as principal. “The very essence of the contract of suretyship is that there must be some one liable for the payment of the debt, the principal and the person alleged to be surety; and it follows that where one person only is shown to have signed the note sued on, that person must necessarily be the principal.” Saxon v. National City Bank, 169 Ga. 784, 788 (151 S. E. 501). The evidence shows only one signature. But if the husband had practiced duress or fraud upon her, unknown to the lender, the latter would not be bound by such an act in the absence of knowledge thereof, and if the-contract was one such as the wife could enter into. As was said in Schofield v. Jones, 85 Ga. 816 (11 S. E. 1032), quoted in Saxon v. National City Bank, supra, “Where the creditor, at the time of creating the debt, really intends in good faith to extend credit to the woman and not the man, and the consideration, as the writings are constructed, passes legally and morally to her, and she executes writings adapted to the nature of the transaction, which purport to bind her for the debt as her own, then whatever may be the private understanding between her and her husband, unknown to the creditor and of
Nor would the fact that the wife remained in possession of the property be evidence of any imposition by the husband or be sufficient to put the lender upon inquiry as to any fraud perpetrated by the husband upon the wife. Pendergrass v. New York Life Insurance Co., supra. Having ratified the contract by signing the necessary papers and delivering them to the husband (if the jury found such ratification), it was not incumbent upon the lender to trace the funds which were entrusted to the husband. It appears that the check, though made payable to the wife", was not indorsed by her, but was in some way cashed at the bank on the husband’s indorsement. That is no concern of the lender. If it did not represent any understanding between the wife and the husband, it was her right to take the necessary action. The prior loan which was to be discharged was shown by the evidence to have been canceled of record. Of this the wife, owning the property, received the benefit. The bill of sale for the machinery is shown to have been made in her name. When the check for the machinery not delivered was issued, it was made payable to the husband; but that one detail is not sufficient to overthrow the whole nature of the transaction, and the wife still has her remedy. Now, was that which the wife ratified, if her conduct constituted ratification, a contract which under the law she could enter into ? It is not con
Judgment affirmed.