Bland v. Davison-Paxon Co.

64 S.E.2d 350, 83 Ga. App. 468, 1951 Ga. App. LEXIS 889
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 14, 1951
Docket33234
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 64 S.E.2d 350 (Bland v. Davison-Paxon Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bland v. Davison-Paxon Co., 64 S.E.2d 350, 83 Ga. App. 468, 1951 Ga. App. LEXIS 889 (Ga. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

MacIntyre, P. J.

The plaintiff, Davison-Paxon Company, sued the defendants, George A. Bland and Mrs. Dottie Hesters Bland, formerly Mrs. George A. Bland, jointly and severally upon an open account for $716.23, principal, with interest; attached an itemized statement of the account; and asked for a joint and several judgment against them. Hereinafter Mr. Bland will be referred to as the husband and Mrs. Bland as the wife. The separate answers of the husband and the wife both denied *469 any liability to the plaintiff on the account individually, jointly or otherwise.

The court charged the jury: “Now, gentlemen, I charge you in this case that, from the pleadings and from the evidence, in all events your verdict must be for the plaintiff in the sum sued for—$716.23 principal, together with interest. Now, the issues for you to determine is [are] against which or both defendants and in what amounts, if any, you divide it between them, or whether you find it all against both of them, and I will try to charge you the law to give you some instruction to aid you in arriving at that decision.” The judge then charged the jury the law to which it should apply the evidence in determining the verdict.

The defendant husband contends that the offer in his answer to pay the debt of his former wife was not an admission of liability, and that the plaintiff failed to prove “the receipt and delivery” of all the articles sued for, and that “this issue of receipt and delivery would be at most a jury question, and the charge that the plaintiff must recover the full amount sued for was unauthorized.”

The defendant wife testified in part: “You ask that I look at this list of accounts and say whether there are any of them that I know were not sold or delivered to one or the other of we two. I would say they are familiar. In other words, I have seen most, of the things there used at the house. I would say that either he or I bought all of it. ’ . . I would say, then, that, to the best of my knowledge, that statement in here is correct, that those things were sold and delivered, at the prices set out there. I do not care to look at any of these at all today further to verify them. [She had previously examined the account.] I am satisfied they were sold to the defendant, Mr. Bland, or to me. . . There are none of those purchases here that were not necessary in accordance with my station in life. As to why they were necessary, they were what I was accustomed to. I had some others like some of them at the time— perhaps the colognes and perfumes. Perhaps I had given out and that’s why I purchased more.” The wife further testified: that the defendant husband had a large income, and after he left her she got no alimony and had no other means of support; *470 that she did not buy any of the merchandise listed in the account sued on after the award of temporary alimony; that she did not give her husband any cause for leaving her, but stayed at home where he left her while she was recuperating from a serious operation; that after the operation her husband was always out of town and she never knew where he was, and when she tried to contact him he avoided her; .that, at the time she bought this merchandise, her husband was giving her no money whatsoever; that he did not leave her any money when he left on the date of the separation; that he left her flat on her back sick from a serious operation; that when he left he went to Miami on a vacation on his yacht and also to Jekyll Island; that his mother gave him from $1000 to $1400 per month; that on numerous occasions he tried to evict her from the house after the separation; that she had been confined two weeks in bed after returning home from the hospital at the time of the separation; that she frequently traveled with her husband on business and pleasure trips to Miami, New Orleans, and Havana, during the time before the separation; and that she discussed the matter with her husband before she opened the account at Davison’s.

The husband in his answer prayed that “the plaintiff be awarded judgment for $190.79 [a part of the total sum of $716.23 sued for], and that the cost of this case be cast against plaintiff.” The husband testified upon cross-examination that some of the articles in the account (three of them) were bought by him personally and charged to the account.

The defendant husband served the plaintiff with notice to produce the application which the wife signed when the account in question was opened. The husband without objection introduced a printed form of an application which was, according to Mrs. Milligan, collection manager for the plaintiff, the same form used by the plaintiff’s customers at the time of the application here in question. Mrs. Milligan testified that this was the same kind of printed form which was used by the defendant when she applied for credit and which was signed by the wife alone. This form contained the following provisions: “This application is made to secure the opening of a joint account for the benefit of my husband and myself and it is under *471 stood that the extension of credit shall create an original obligation jointly and severally against my husband and myself. Carrying the account in the name of my husband or myself shall be considered as a matter of convenience and shall not affect our joint and several liability.”

The defendant husband seems to contend that—when the written application for credit was signed by the wife alone and credit was extended thereon and the merchandise was sold and delivered pursuant thereto—-even with the defendant wife’s explanation of the signing of the application, this was conclusive proof that she purchased the merchandise upon her individual credit exclusively. Relative to this printed form of the application, the wife testified: “You ask me if I remember signing a paper like that when I went in there and opened up the account at Davison’s. I don’t know whether it was exactly like this, but I signed a paper. I know that. When I signed that paper I told my husband when I went back home that I had signed a paper at Davison’s opening up an account. As to whether I told him whether or not I had opened up an account for myself alone, or for him, or for both of us, jointly and severally, we could always use any account that was opened, both of us could. That was always understood. I told him that was what I did at that time, that I had opened up the account for both of us, jointly and severally. . . I don’t recall exactly what I told my husband after I had signed the papers at Davison’s. He knew where I was going before I left to go down. It had been discussed the night before. As word for word, how I stated it, how we-discussed it before going down, I don’t remember that far back. I didn’t bring the signed contract home to show him. No one ever does that. I did not do that. I don’t recall but I imagine I read this over very thoroughly before I signed it. I usually do. I don’t remember whether I did on this occasion. As to whether I told him everything that was written and printed on it, I didn’t tell him word for word everything that was printed on it. It wasn’t necessary. I told him we had opened an account. It was discussed thoroughly before it was opened and afterwards. The words I used I don’t recall. You ask if I know what is meant by a joint and several liability. To my knowledge, it would be an account that both of us used as *472

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.E.2d 350, 83 Ga. App. 468, 1951 Ga. App. LEXIS 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bland-v-davison-paxon-co-gactapp-1951.