Class & Nachod Brewing Co. v. Rago
Class & Nachod Brewing Co. v. Rago
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
Judgment was entered against the defendant upon a note with warrant of attorney, dated May 15,1906, signed by her and payable to the plaintiff. She presented her petition to the court below averring that she was a married woman: “That the said note was a guaranty or surety for another, and that this defendant never received one penny of the money which the said note and judgment are supposed to represent, nor has she received from the plaintiff or from any one else an accounting of how any of the said money was used, nor did she ever see any of the money which the said note and judgment are supposed to represent, transferred or paid to any one,” and praying that the judgment be opened and she let into a defense. The plaintiff filed an answer to this petition denying that the defendant had signed the note as guarantor or surety for another, and averring that it was for a loan of money to the amount of the note, made to the defendant at the date of the note, and paid to the defendant in cash. The judgment having been opened, the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals.
The plaintiff, at the trial, proved the execution of the note and offered it in evidence, thus showing a prima facie right to recover. The defendant, by herself and other witnesses, presented testimony which, if believed, established that her son John, being in need of $1,000 to pay the fee for a license to sell liquor, had borrowed the money from the plaintiff, upon an agreement that the defendant should become security for the repayment of $500 of the loan, and that in accordance with said agreement she had
The plaintiff does not contend that the question ought not to have been submitted to the jury, but complains only of the manner of that submission. The capacity of a married woman to contract was formerly exceptional, and her disability general; now the disability is exceptional and her capacity general. The Act of June 8, 1893, P. L. 344, in its first section, conferred upon married women “the same right and power as an unmarried person to acquire, own, possess, control, use, lease, sell, or otherwise dispose of any property of any kind, .... but she may not mortgage or convey her real property, unless her husband join in such mortgage or conveyance.” The second section of that statute enacts that: “Hereafter a married woman may, in the same manner and to the same extent as an unmarried person, make any contract in writing, or otherwise, which is necessary, appropriate, convenient or advantageous to the exercise or enjoyment of the rights
The learned judge of the court below in that part of the charge which is the subject of the first specification of error instructed the jury, in substance, that if plaintiff loaned the $500 in cash to the defendant, with knowledge that she was to use it to pay the license fee of her son, and it was used for that purpose, and she gave the note in question, “receiving no personal advantage or use of the same, and that it was not necessary, appropriate, convenient ^ or advantageous to the exercise of her estate, then we instruct you that she is not liable for the payment of the same and the verdict must be for the defendant.” This language must certainly have led the jury to believe that it was a part of their duty to determine whether the transaction was “necessary, appropriate, convenient or
The learned judge of the court below also charged the jury as follows: “If, however, you find from all the testimony that Concetta Rago took this $500 simply to help her son, John Rago, to get the license, that she had no interest in the business at all, and that while the money was paid to her and she gave her note, yet she received no benefit whatever from the money, nor was there any understanding that she was to receive any benefit from the money, then we say to you that that was substantially going security for her son John, and the mere fact that the money was paid to her and the note given by her would simply be an evasion of the act of assembly.” This is the subject of the second specification of error. There was in this case no antecedent debt from John RagQ to the plaintiff to be secured. The transaction involved only a present loan of money by the plaintiff. The above language of the court implies that if the plaintiff loaned the money to the defendant' and took her note for the same, and she then gave the money to her son, not herself receiving any personal benefit from its use, she would be
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.