212 Pa. 24 | Pa. | 1905
Opinion by
This is an action of assumpsit against a married woman, the appellant, to enforce a liability arising on certain agreements signed by her and the plaintiff, the appellee. She resists a recovery on the ground that no consideration passed to her and that in executing the agreements she assumed the liability of a guarantor or surety for her husband and is therefore protected
We must disregard the last eight assignments which allege error in the court’s answers to the requests for instructions embraced in the points for charge presented, by the appellant. No exceptions were taken to the rulings of the trial court and hence they cannot be assigned for error. This is to be regretted as those rulings raise material questions.iir the case. . The appellant’s contention is that the three papers offered in evidence for the purpose of establishing herliability, at least when supplemented by the parol evidence she offered, disclose the fact that she was a surety for her husband and hence the contract was ■ avoided by the above cited provision of the act of 1893. ’ She maintains that, in the language of the court in Patrick & Co. v. Smith, 165 Pa. 526, “ the whole transaction
Some, at least, of the other assignments, however, alleging error in the rejection of testimony, must be sustained. The purpose of the testimony, as we gather from the questions though not set forth in an offer, was to show that the liability of the appellant was assumed, as in the cases cited above, on the importunity and solely at the request and for the benefit of the defendant’s husband and without any negotiations between the appellee and the appellant. Such testimony in no way contradicts the writings in the ease, but was material in determining the liability of the appellant on the cause of action set forth in the statement. This evidence was competent in view of what was said in the opinion referred to above, that the defendant’s “ liability is not determined alone by the form of the obligation, if the object was to evade the disability created by the statute, the fact, not the form, will determine her liability.” We sustain the assignments in so far as they allege error in-the rejection of testimony of that character.
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo is awarded.