This is an action by appellant against appellees for money had and received by the latter to the use of the former. The facts are that appellees procured a loan for appellant on the security of her farm, and, as she contends, paid out a part of the money so received in discharge of her husband's *Page 182 debt without her authority. The wife may not become surety for her husband's debt, but she may pay it out of her own purse if she will. Sample v. Guyer, 143 Ala. 615, 42 So. 106. The real controversy between the parties arises out of the question whether appellees were authorized by appellant to devote a part of the loan negotiated for her to the payment of her husband's debt.
It may be conceded that appellees' third plea was demurrable, for the reason that it alleged their agency, their authority to pay out the money as they did, as a mere conclusion, and without alleging, except by inference more or less anaemic, that they had authority to do that specific thing. But this was of no material consequence, for the evident purpose of the plea was to set up the defense that plaintiff had authorized defendants to pay the money in suit over to one Williams in discharge of a debt which plaintiff owed him, and this was provable under the general issue (Matthews v. Turner, 2 Stew. P. 239; 5 C. J. 1405, 1406), and upon the face of the record it appears that the issue thus made was the only issue litigated between the parties, and that plaintiff — not to mention defendants — went as fully into the proof of her side of it as she desired, nor did the plea give to appellees the advantage of proving anything less than they would have found or did find it necessary to prove under the general issue. This plea, with this interpretation on it, was submitted to the jury. The defect in the plea was a defect in form of allegation rather than a defect in the matter pleaded, and, in view of the course taken by the trial, we conceive it to be reasonably clear that the ruling upon it resulted in no harm to plaintiff's case. Agnew v. Walden, 95 Ala. 110, 10 So. 224.
There was no reversible error in allowing defendants, on the cross-examination of plaintiff, to show that "the stuff that came from Williams" — the stuff for which defendants paid — "was shingles and stuff that covered your house." Williams was the person to whom appellees had paid the money in dispute. The fact inquired about was by no means conclusive, but it tended to prove the reasonableness of defendants' contention, and was properly allowed.
Nor was it error to allow defendants on the cross-examination of J. W. Moore, plaintiff's husband and a witness in her behalf, to draw out the fact that for many years he had had the general management of the farm on which they lived and had purchased the supplies for it — this, not of much significance, but permissible on cross-examination because defendants' contention was that they got authority from the wife through him and showed their (plaintiff's and her husband's) customary method of dealing with such matters.
Defendants were properly allowed to show by their witness Williams, whose debt they had paid out of plaintiff's money, that he had conversations with the husband of plaintiff, and he had promised to pay witness' debt as soon as he got the loan, meaning the loan on plaintiff's property, and that he would authorize defendants to pay it. This, of course, without its context, would have been inadmissible, but there was evidence from which the jury may have inferred that plaintiff's husband had authority thus to deal with her business affairs, and, that inference being drawn, the evidence here in question was properly admitted. Defendants had communication with plaintiff in person on the subject of the loan and the disposition of the proceeds, though in the main that business was conducted by the husband, and, if by what she said and did she led defendants to believe that she had intrusted those matters to her husband she cannot now be heard to deny his authority. Tobias v. Morris,126 Ala. 550, 28 So. 517. Nor was there error in permitting defendants to show that the husband came to see them about the expected means of payment. As said above, this, standing alone, would have meant nothing, but, in connection with the other evidence, contributed to the verisimilitude of the contention by defendants.
It is not perceived how the rulings shown in assignments of error 36 to 39, both inclusive, whether technically correct or not, were prejudicial to appellant.
The evidence was in conflict. The defense had good support, and the general charge requested by plaintiff was properly refused and her motion for a new trial overruled without error to reverse.
Other assignments of error need no specific mention. Most of them are not insisted upon. Others are obviously without merit.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.