DocketNumber: 19987
Judges: Bell, Stephens
Filed Date: 9/6/1930
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/8/2024
1. Where the consideration of a contract made with a husband reaches the wife as an accession to her separate estate, and she retains and enjoys it, as building materials used in the construction of a building upon her lands, slight evidence will be sufficient to establish the husband’s agency in contracting the debt as an obligation against the wife. Pinkston v. Cedar Hill Nursery &c. Co., 123 Ga. 302 (51 S. E. 387); Sheffield v. Sheffield, 39 Ga. App. 271 (146 S. E. 655), and cit.
2. In this suit on account against a married woman, to recover the alleged purchase-price of building materials, where there was evidence to show that the defendant and her husband discussed the matter of the construction of a house upon her land before any materials were bought, that the wife consented to the building of such house, and thereafter knew that the husband was buying- from the plaintiff certain materials to be used therein, while the wife in her own behalf purchased other materials from other parties; that the husband in making the purchase
3. This case is distinguished from Cornelia Planing-Mill Co. v. Wilcox, 129 Ga. 522 (5) (59 S. E. 223). In that case there was no evidence that the husband purported to act as the agent of the wife in making the purchase, or that the wife subsequently indicated any ratification or approval of the transaction by him.
4. The appellate division of the municipal court did not err in affirming tlie judgment of the trial judge refusing a new trial, and the superior court properly dismissed the certiorari.
Judgment affirmed.