143 Ala. 613 | Ala. | 1904
The only issue in this case is between the defendant (appellee), Millie A. Guyer, and the cross-complainant (appellant), R. H. Sample; the latter seeking to enforce a mortgage executed by said defendant and her husband in favor of said cross-complainant, and the former alleging that said jnortgage was given as security for the debt of her husband, and consequently is void.
Under our present married woman’s law, capacity to contract is the rule, and incapacity the exception. A married woman can make all contracts, agreements and conveyances in regard to her separate estate “Except as otherwise provided by law,” and the only prohibition upon her is that she cannot “Directly or indirectly become the surety for the husband.” — Code of 1896, § § 2526, 2529. She has the “Right to give her property away to her husband or anybody else, and to apply it, by her own hand or through her husband, directly to the payment of his clebts.” — Hollingsworth v. Hill, 116 Ala. 184; First National Bank of Gadsden v. Moragne, 128 Ala. 161.
She has the right to convey her property in absolute payment of her husband’s debt, or on the consideration of the transfer to her of the obligation of her husband, and she can mortgage her property for these considerations, and if she makes a mortgage reciting an indebtedness of her own the presumption is that it speaks the truth, and the burden is upon her to prove that it was, in fact, given merely as surety for her husband. — Gafford, et al. v. Speake, 125 Ala. 498; Mohr v. Griffin, 137 Ala. 456, 467; Lunsford v. Harrison, 131 Ala. 263.
In the present case the only testimony offered by Mrs.
If the transaction was one of mere suretyship, Sample would certainly have held on to the note of the principal, and the surety would scarcely insist on holding the obligation on which alone the creditor could coerce payment from the principal, and thus release the surety.
It matters not whether the mortgagor wished to acquire the note, because she hoped to make the money out of her husband, or to fortify her own title to the land, or to suppress the evidence of forgery against her husband, or merely wished to extinguish the debt; so that her object was to acquire the note or to extinguish it, and not merely to become surety for the husband, it would be sufficient to remove the transaction from the prohibition of the statute.
The court erred in the decree, in so far as it dismissed the cross-bill of said R. IT. Sample and ordered the mortgage to Sample to be cancelled.
The point is made by the attorney for appellee, in his brief, that the record shows that certain depositions and exhibits, which were before the court below, do not appear in the record before this Court, and that therefore we cannot review the finding of the chancellor.
That is a correct general principle, but, in this case, those which are not set out are shown by the note of testimony to have been introduced by one of the other parties to the bill, who has no part in the matter in controversy now before the Court. And the register certifies that this “Is a full and complete transcript of the record and proceedings * * * * * in so far as they apply to or affect the cross-bill of R. H. Sample, or the cross-bill of Millie A. Guyer.” We hold that it is sufficiently shown that all the testimony pertaining to the issue before the Court is in the record.
The judgment of the court is reversed, and a decree
Affirmed in part and in part reversed and rendered.