Hull held a mortgage upon certain property, real and personal, including a house and lot in the city of Savannah, executed to him by Mrs. Sullivan on February 28th, 1876, to *128secure the payment of her five promissory notes of that date, due at from one to five years thereafter, one each year, and each for $1,400.00. The first note having matured, he commenced proceedings in Chatham superior eonrt to foreclose the mortgage as to the house and lot in Savannah, pending which Mrs. Sullivan filed her bill against him, the substance of which may be condensed as follows :
Hull, the defendant, executed nominally to complainant a deed of bargain and sale, whereby he pretended to convey to her a tract of land in Liberty county, with a steam saw-mill thereon, and other personalty, all fully described in a copy of the deed annexed as an exhibit to the bill; and she, on the same day, executed to him the mortgage. The contract for the purchase of the property embraced in defendant’s deed was made by complainant’s husband, the credit for the purchase money was extended to him; the defendant knew that complainant had no use for any of the property; the debt incurred for it was in truth a debt of her husband ; the defendant never sold the property to complainant, but, in order to secure himself for the debt of her husband,he,through her husband,and under his influence,and against her own wishes, persuaded and induced her to execute the mortgage for the purpose of securing the husband’s debt. The property has been tendered back to the defendant, and he has refused to accept it, but has foreclosed the mortgage as to personalty, sold it out and bought it himself. Certain charges are made as to his non-residence, and the extent of his resources within the jurisdiction of this state. Discovery is waived. Injunction is prayed to restrain the present foreclosure proceedings, etc., and a decree is prayed to cancel the mortgage and the notes. The bill was sworn to by Mrs. Sullivan on the 7th of December, 1877. The answer denies that the sale was to Sullivan, that the credit was extended to him, or that he created any debt of his own for the property. It alleges that the sale was made to the complainant and upon the faith of her notes and mortgage. It denies that she was influenced by defendant, or that he had any knowledge tha' she was influenced.
*129The two cases were tried together on the 25th of February, 1878. The deed, the mortgage and the notes, all of ■them of the same date, were in evidence. The deed conveys directly to Mrs. Sullivan, arid warrants the title to her, 'her heirs, etc., against the claim of all persons whatsoever. It recites, as to the saw-mill and other personalty, that “ the party of the first part doth also bargain, sell and deliver to the party of the second part.” It was duly recorded on the '3d of April, 1876. The mortgage covers besides the house ■and lot in Savannah, the realty and the main bulk of the personalty embraced in the deed. It purports on its faee to be for securing “the faithful payment of the debt which she justly owes to the party of the second part.” After a ■brief description of the saw-mill tract in Liberty, it adds, "“said tract of land being more fully described in a deed of the same from the party of the second part to the party of the first part, bearing even date herewith.” The notes •specify no particular consideration, but are for value received. Interest on each is payable annually. They are ■all payable at the office of Holcombe, Hull & Co.
The complainant and her husband testified in her behalf, .and she introduced three letters addressed to him by the ■defendant. The evidence in behalf of the defendant was his own testimony and that of J. R. Sanssy, E--q. All ■this testimony, so far -as material to the main controversy, will now be recited.
Sullivau, examined by interrogatories, testified:
■“I stopped at the mill for some two hours; did not go for ’the purpose of purchasing it, but to see one of the employees; in the course of conversation Hull stated he was going north ; I asked him why, if the mill was gomg to remain idle, lie did not sell it; he replied he would sell it; I asked him what he would take for it; he said $7,000, in seven years’ time, with interest at seven per eent.; I told him I would take it, and he said he would come to town next day .and fix up the papers. I met him the next day; he asked .me if I did not have some town property ; I told him that *130I did not, that roy wife owned a house in town; he then asked meto give that house as additional security ; I told him that I would have to see my wife, as I did not know that I could. I then left him, he asking me to get my wife to give the house as security ; I agreed to see him the next day, and went home, where I used every entreaty and persuasion to induce my wife to give the house as security ; she refused, but finally consented, saying she would have to do so for peace’ sake. That afternoon or the next day I saw Hull and told him that I had my wife’s consent to her giving the house as security ; we agreed to go to Mr. Saussy, attorney at law, to prepare the papers ; Mr. Hull and Mr. Saussy had most of the conversation, and the latter made the remark, ‘ Well, we will make out the papers in her name.’ We left him to prepare the papers; he came to my house for my wife to sign them; I had told her he would come to sign some papers ; he read the mortgage and she signed it; the deed to the mill and land was not given to her ; it was never delivered to her, and she has never had it; she knew nothing about the mill or its business, and was at the mill only during the prevalence of yellow fever in Savannah.” Examined on the stand the same witness testified : “ I stopped at the mill to see the foreman, and there I met Hull for the first time and had a conversation with hitn about the sale of the mill; we appointed the next day to meet in Savannah to confer about it. We met accordingly and agreed upon terms, but he wanted more security, when I mentioned to him that my wife owned a house and lot in Savannah, upon which he replied that if she would secure him he would make the trade. I spoke to her about it, and she was at first unwilling to have anything to do with it, but, after much persuasion, consented. I told Mr. Saussy to draw the papers, and it was discussed in his office whether the deed should be made to her, and it was there decided that it should be made in her name; I think the suggestion came from Mr. Hull; I did not tell him that she was reluctant to enter into the arrange-*131merit, nor did I tell him that she wished to buy his property. The contract was between him and myself; the debt for the purchase money was my debt and the mortgage on her property was intended to secure this debt. I transacted business [at the mill] as agent, but I really was agent for myself. I bought goods from Holcombe, Hull & Co., as agent. My wife had no knowledge of my agency.” The complainant testified : “ I did not wish my husband to buy the land and mill from Mr. Hull; he proposed that he would buy the property, and for me to give a mortgage upon it and the house and lot in Savannah ; I was unwilling to do this, and avoided him all day so as to escape his persuasion, but towards evening he said he would make way with himself unless I consented, and I did then consent.” The deed from Hull to witness was shown to her, upon which she said that “ I never knew that there was such a deed until the Friday before the trial, when my attorney told me that there was. I never saw the deed until this moment. It was never delivered to me. My husband was not my agent, I knew of no agency, and nothing of the business in any shape or form; I did not understand the mortgage ; I had promised my husband to sign the papers and I signed them. I never derived any benefit from the mill. I did not see Mr. Hull at all during the negotiations, and never until today ; did not inform him I was unwilling to have anything to do with the business, not knowing where to find him. Mr. Saussy read the papers to me, but I did not understand them ; after he read them I signed them. During the yellow fever of 1876 in Savannah, I went to Liberty county and lived on the land for about two months; the house was quite near the mill, and I knew the mill was being worked by my husband, and that he was cutting trees from the land, but did not know that he was carrying on the business as my agent.” J. R. Saussy testified : “ I was employed by Mr. Sullivan to draw the papers ; he directed me to draw the deed to Mrs. Sullivan, and I did so; the conversation *132which he mentioned as having taken place in my office, I do not think took place there ; I do not think my advice as an attorney was asked ; I acted as a scrivener ; they wanted ■a bill of sale and mortgage, and I drew them, then went with the notes and mortgage to Mrs. Sullivan’s dwelling (Sullivan being along) to witness the execution ; when we got there, another witness to attest with me was sent for, and the delay wTas nearly half an hour, during which I remained in the house; do not remember whether Mrs. Sullivan was present before the other witness came.' I read the mortgage and notes over to her before she signed them, and I think she understood them ; she appeared to sign them reluctantly; there was no haste about their execution ; witness had no reason to think she was signing against her will, and does not recollect whether the bill of sale was delivered to her or not.” [Mr. Saussy is a subscribing witness to the instrument called in the record sometimes a deed and sometimes a bill of sale, as well as to the mortgage.] The defendant testified: “I never knew or heard, until she filed her bill, of any improper or undue influence being used to induce complainant to purchase the property. Mr. Sullivan told me that his wife wanted to buy the property, and that she had a house and lot in Savannah which she wanted to give as security; I replied that if secure for the purchase money I would give any time. I did not direct Mr. Saussey to draw the deed to complainant, though I sold the land to her; I gave the credit to her but did not see her then and never have seen her until to-day in court. Possession under the deed to complainant was given immediately upon the execution of this deed. Mr. Sullivan transacted business at the mill as agent. The letters from defendant to Sullivan were written at Oxford, N. Y., and the first is dated December 28th, 1876. It says, “I want to use some money the 1st of February, and would like to have you send me four or five hundred dollars. If you will send me $500 then, I will wait until April or May for $500 due on the 1st of March. I thought perhaps that ar*133rangement would suit you better than to make the whole pavment the first of March.” The second letter is dated January 17th, 1877, and says: “ I am very much disappointed that you cannot make the payment due March 1st. I have borrowed money and expected to pay with the money due from you. I sold you the mill without requiring the payment of a single cent at the time . . . gave you all the time you asked to pay for it . . . when you proposed to buy you offered to pay every three months . . . If you make no payment the 1st of March, when due, I shall be compelled to commence proceedings to foreclose the mortgage,” etc. The third is dated March 13th, 1877, and says: “You bought my mill with your eyes open ; as a practical miller and machinist you examined it . . . no other man would have sold you such property as 1 did without receiving a dollar for it. I gave you five years, your own time, to pay for it. After using it a year you don’t even now propose to pay me a dollar. I cannot afford to give you $7,000.00 ... I cannot lot you wear out the mill and cut off all the timber, and then give me back the property with nothing,” etc.
Certain questions were propounded by the court to the jury, in writing, in answer to which the jury found, that the mortgage as to the Savannah property was not given by the complainant freely, voluntarily and without any improper influence or duress ; that the mortgage was given to secure the purchase money of property really bought for the use and benefit of complainant’s husband; that the deed was not taken, and the mortgage as to the Savannah property was not given, by the complainant freely and voluntarily and with a design of effecting a change of her estate ; that she did not receive the deed with the intention of owning and of constituting her husband her agent and trustee to run and manage the mill property for her; that if theie was duress to induce complainant to sign the mortgage, the defendant did not have notice of it; and that the general result was a finding for the complainant. The defendant moved for a *134new trial on several minor points, none of them vital to the merits, and on the ground that the verdict was contrary to law and evidence. The motion was overruled ; and hence this writ of error.
1. This is a case which cannot be treated at long range, but must be engaged at close quarters. I have therefore reported both the pleadings and the evidence exhaustively, in everything essential. There is more apparent than real conflict in the evidence, though there is some real. When a few loose expressions are bandaged, and a few legal conclusions are cut away from the language of witnesses, where the naked facts ought to be kept uncovered, the conflict ceases to be material. There is scarcely any diversity in the testimony as to what was actually done; the variations relate to what was said, or else to the consequences of putting together the sayings and doings. That negotiations for the sale and purchase of the mill and other property commenced at the mill on one day and were concluded at Savannah on another ; that they were conducted throughout by Hull and Sullivan, Mrs. Sullivan not being even seen by Hull or him by her; that Hull executed a conveyance directly to her, delivering it in her absence, and that it went to record in the second month after its execution; that she executed to him notes for the purchase money, and a mortgage to secni'e them, first hearing them read over; that these came to Hull’s hands in pursuance of the purpose and intention of all the parties, and before he had let go his hold on his own property; and that Sullivan then took charge of that property, and conducted business nominally, at least, as agent, cannot be doubted. Hull says that Sullivan told him, at what stage of the negotiations does not appear, that his wife wanted to buy the property and give her house and lot for security. Sullivan denies this, but of what importance is the conflict? What telling was needed when she gave the only notes for the price that were given, executed the only mortgage, and took the only conveyance ? She got title to Hull’s property and bound *135both that and her own, besides becoming generally liable on her notes, to pay for it; or at least Hull thought she did; then what telling did he need that she wanted to buy it? Her acts showed what she wanted to do ; after these acts, if he had gone away in any uncertainty as to her wishes, he would have been hard to convince. The whole transaction was open and inconclusive until it took its final form ; and the shape into which it ultimately fell was that in which we now find it. Sullivan gives two versions, apparently a little inconsistent, as to what occurred .at the first interview —that at the mill. In his examination by interrogatories, he states that Hull priced the property and named the terms of credit, and he said he would take it, Hull replying that he Avould come to town next day and fix up the papers. In his answers from the stand, he states that they had a conversation totiching the sale, and appointed the next day to meet in Savannah to confer about it; that they met accordingly and agreed upon terms, but Hull Avanted more security, Avhereupon Sullivan mentioned that his wife had a house and lot in Savannah, and Hull said that if she would secure him he would make the trade. Then, it seems, Sullivan repaired to his wife, and her participation in the business ensued. Take either or both of Sullivan’s versions, not by themselves but in connection with what was actually done, and consider the nature of the property which Hull was proposing to sell, that it was a steam sawmill, with machinery, timbered land, vehicles, teams for hauling, etc., consider also the term of credit, and that Hull was closing out to go north, and there is scarcely a doubt that the inability of Sullivan to give other security than upon the property itself, was the obstacle which prevented his becoming the actual purchaser, and that it caused him to induce his wife to take the bargain herself, Hull being Avilling to accept the security which she could give. He may not have explained to his wife so as to enable her to fully comprehend the transaction, and he may have been too urgent upon her to engage in it. But it is not pre*136tended that either his reticence or his excessive zeal was known to Hull. A fair and probable inference from all the evidence is, that Sullivan wished to buy the mill, etc., and after agreeing with Hull upon the price and other conditions, proved unable to consummate the purchase on his own account because the house and lot required as security belonged to his wife; thereupon, he induced his wife to become the purchaser through him, and the contract, in this shape, wras consummated, the papers being drawn and executed accordingly. Hull does not testify that Sullivan told him in the first instance that he wanted the property for his wife ; he does not say when he told him, and we have just seen that no express oral communication to that effect was necessary. When the papers were so drawn as to invest her with the ownership, and she adopted them by executing and delivering those of them which made her answerable for the payment of the purchase money, one of these latter reciting that the debt was hers, and that Hull had sold and conveyed to her, she ratified the purchase as her own, and it was the same as if she had negotiated in person from the beginning. The real light of the contract shines in the papers deliberately prepared and executed when Hull parted with his property and the debt for it was created. The rest of the evidence may obscure it somewhat, but does not put it out. It does not bring on night, but at most only a cloudy day. It is a fact of prime importance that Hull was master of the situation, and remained so until Mrs. Sullivan had, under her hand and seal, taken the position of purchaser and owner. Until then he had both possession and title. The deed to Mrs. Sullivan and the mortgage from her were parts of one entire transaction, and if one document had fallen through, so would the othei*. If she had not accepted the property as her own, and mortgaged it, together with her house and lot, nothing had occurred, or, so far as appears, ever would have occurred to divest Hull of title or possession. He could still have kept his property,'and neither Sullivan nor Mrs. Sullivan *137could have hindered him. Why did she mortgage the property if it was not hers? By the very act of mortgaging it, she exercised over it the dominion of an owner, and estopped herself from denying her title to it without showing fraud. 46 Ga., 133 ; 58II). 178. Unless,therefore, she has shown fraud, and fraud, too, with which Hull is chargeable, does not the estoppel, as matter of law, silence her ? But coupled witli her act of mortgaging are express words in the mortgage instrument, by which she declares that the debt to be secured is one which she justly owes to Hull; and, moreover, that instrument recites that he has conveyed to her, for it mentions the very deed. This deed not only passes title to her, but it absolutely warrants that title against the world, Sullivan included. How, then, could the property be Sullivan’s? and if the property was not his, how could the debt be his ? Surely the debt, the only debt there was, was for the property; the property was not sold twice, but once; there was therefore but one debt for the price; and it would seem that the person who owed that debt was the person to whom the property was conveyed and warranted, and who gave notes for the price, and secured those notes by a mortgage, and in the mortgage declared the debt to be one which she justly owed. Sullivan, it is true, swears that the debt was his, but in doing so he states a legal conclusion which the facts prove beyond doubt to be erroneous. Whether a given state of facts constitute a debt, and if so, who is the debtor, are both questions of law. It is manifest that, on the evidence as a whole, there was no actual debt created between Sullivan and Hull, and that if the latter had sued the former, the action could have been defeated upon the ground that Sullivan’s share in the transaction was as agent for his wife. There is positively no indication of moment that the credit, or any part of it, was given to him, or that he incurred any personal liability to Hull. He gave no note or other promise, and the notes and mortgage of Mrs. Sullivan were, as the trade was finally closed up, all that Hull took in *138place of his property. The letters of Hull speak loosely of the sale as to Sullivan, and the debt as his, and they urge him to pay, but nothing is more clear than that the writer is not referring to any sale other than the one evidenced by his deed, or any' debt other than that evidenced by the notes and mortgage. All his dealings with Mrs. Sullivan had been indirect, her husband standing forth in her stead, and even, it may be, at the time the lettei’s were written, conducting business at the mill as agent. It was natural for Hull to treat him as her agent, and to expect that he would be the channel of payment as he had been that of purchase, and as he also seemed to be in respect to use and management. In this state of mind he looked, we may be sure, at the wife and her husband somewhat as one and the same person, and in some expressions wrote accordingly. It is not uncommon, in speaking or writing to a known or a supposed agent or clerk, especially one that seems to guide as well as serve the'principal, and one with whom the dealings in question have been had, to say “your debt, your note, the sale I made to you, the sale you made to me,” and the like, where the reference is to business in which the person addressed has acted, and is expected still to act, only in a representative capacity. To catch at Hull’s letters, and because of their literal bearing when looked at apart from the more solemn papers in the case, make them work his overthrow would, we think, be injustice. If he had been more guarded, or more full in descriptive terms, his real meaning, no doubt, would have been better expressed, and he would have run much less hazard of misconstruction. We can imagine his own consternation and the momentary perplexity of his counsel in pondering over these letters when first they made their appearance in the litigation. By themselves the letters seem formidable, but their true meaning is perfectly clear when they are read in the light of the other documents and facts; and so to deal with them is our duty. If, indeed, we should take them in literal strictness, they would not change thé result; for if *139Hull thought when he wrote them that Sullivan owed him for the property, and meant to say so in the sense of excluding agency for the wife, he was mistaken ; like Sullivan himself, he committed an error of law in drawing that conclusion. Taken at their true legal value, the facts of trade, title and security make Mrs. Sullivan the debtor, and the only debtor. Nothing but fraud committed by Hull, or by Sullivan with his knowledge, would relieve her.
2. Her testimony that she was ignorant that she was to be invested with title, and that she never knew of the deed until the Friday before the trial is of ,no avail. There is no •charge in the bill that she did not know of the deed at the time of the main transaction, or that she did not know of it at any time. On the contrary, the first thing the bill does is to mention the deed, recite some of its contents, and refer to a copy of it annexed as an exhibit for the balance. She swore to the bill in December', and at the trial in February, forgetting, no doubt, that she had seen or heard of the deed before the previous week, she testified that not until the last Friday did she know there was such a deed. There is no occasion to put an uncharitable construction on this apparent inconsistency, and I have suggested failure of memory as the explanation ; there may be some other. But she was bound to take notice of the deed, for not only did she mortgage the property as owner, but her mortgage mentions the deed by way of recital. If she had not seen the deed she ought to have instituted inquiry. Delivery might be made to her husband or to another for her, and in point of fact it was made, for the deed was duly attested and went to record. She says she did not understand the mortgage when it was read to her; but she was bound to understand it, or decline to execute it. There is no suggestion that she labored under any mental incapacity.
3. She says that she never derived any benefit from the mill, and that her husband wfas not her agent; and to the same effect is his testimony, wfith' the addition that though he transacted business as agent, he was agent for himself, *140and his wife liad no knowledge of his agency. It was odd* that he conducted business as agent for himself, but many-singular things are explainable, and this may be. Grant that he was not her agent, and that she derived no benefit, whose fault was it ? Surely net that of Hull. Hull had put the title in her and warranted it. Neither he nor Sullivan could take it out of her without her consent, nor use the property without the like consent. She was mistress of the title, and it was her province to see that she got the use or the fruits of the use. The law cast no duty in that regard upon Hull.
4. As to duress and fraud there is no need of discussion* The jury found that Hull had no notice of any duress, and there is no notice of fraud established, much less the commission of any fraud on his part. /The bill, properly construed, does not charge duress; nor on the theory on which it rests was any duress, or fraud either, essential. If, as the bill avers, the mortgage was given to secure the husband’s debt, that was enough to render it void. There is a glance at duress in the evidence, but we need not say what its effect would have been if Hull had been aware of all the facts. Consult Ewell’s L. C. notes, pp. 772, 794. It seems the evidence came in without objection, but it may be questioned whether these family conversations, if strictly private, especially where they involve such a delicate and gory subject as a purpose and threat by one of the conjugal pair to commit suicide, can be heard to defeat a contract afterwards made with a third person, the witness being none other than the husband or wife. 40 Ga., 150, 490; 60 lb., 512. It strikes me that if anything ought to be buried as a profound secret, such a momentary exhibition of weakness, especially on the part of the masculine consort, is that thing. But we leave it as a query.
5. The verdict takes a range somewhat wider than the bill, and to that extent is of course to be disregarded. For instance, there is no suggestion in the bill that the property was bought by Mrs. Sullivan for the use of her husband, *141and not for her own use ; on the contrary, it sets up that she did not buy it at all; that the purchase was her husband’s,, not hers, and that the debt secured was his and not her own.. We look at the issues made, and the evidence applicable to-the same, and upon them we think the finding of the jury was contrary to law and evidence, and that there ought to be a new trial. To us it is obvious that the consideration moved to the complainant, that her husband acquired no-title to or interest in the property, that he incurred no debt to Hull, and that the entire credit was given to the wife. '
Judgment reversed.