1. If a note shows on its face that the defendant wife signed it as an apparent joint maker, the burden is on her to show that the payee had knowledge that she signed the note as surety for the real maker in order to avail herself of that defense; and where the evidence, though conflicting, shows that the note had been already signed by the defendant's son, as maker, when presented to her for her signature, at which time the payee's agent told the defendant "that my signing did not bind or obligate me in any way," the jury were authorized to find that the defendant signed as surety only, and that this was known to the payee, through his agent, at the time she signed.
2. The excerpt from the charge complained of contained correct principles of law, and did not have the effect, as contended by the plaintiff, of withdrawing the note sued on from the consideration of the jury. Especially is this true in the light of another portion of the charge, and of the charge as a whole.
3. Special ground 2 complains of the failure of the judge to give to the jury a certain requested charge. The judge's charge, in his own language, covered plainly and in substance the principles of law stated in the request, and the failure to adopt the plaintiff's language was not reversible error. Southern Railway Co. v. Lowry,
1. A wife can not make any contract of suretyship for her husband or any other person. Allmond v. Mount Vernon Bank,
2. The judge charged the jury in part as follows: "If, upon considering the evidence in this case, you find there is a conflict between the witness or witnesses and documentary evidence, it is your duty, where it can be done, to reconcile conflicting testimony, if there be such in the case, as that all the witnesses shall be made to speak the truth and without imputing perjury to any witness; and if that can not be done it then becomes your duty to believe those witnesses whom you think most credible, and you may look at their interest or want of interest in the result of the case, their bias or prejudice, if any appears, and the reasonableness or unreasonableness of their testimony, their familiarity with the facts to which they testify, and the personal credibility of the witnesses so far as the same may legitimately appear to you from the trial of the case. But the jury, as stated, are at last the sole and exclusive judges as to what witness or witnesses they will believe, and what witness or witnesses they will disbelieve." The plaintiff in error in effect contends that this charge was erroneous because it withdrew from the consideration of the jury the note sued on, and that it gave them the idea that the evidence they were to consider was that delivered by the witnesses from the stand to the entire exclusion *Page 378
of the note. The excerpt complained of was in effect in the language of the charge approved in Chicago Building c. Co. v.Butler,
3. This headnote requires no elaboration.
Judgment affirmed. Broyles, C. J., and Guerry, J., concur.
