12 Ala. 214 | Ala. | 1847
Mr. Greenleaf,.inthe section which the counsel have cited, says, if a bill or other negotiable security be lost, there can be no remedy upon it at law, unless it was in such a state when lost, that no person but the plaintiff could have acquired a right to sue thereon. Otherwise the defendant would be in danger of paying it twice, in case it has been negotiated. Therefore, wherever the danger of a double liability exists, as in the case of a bill or note, either actually negotiated in blank, or payable to bearer, and lost or stolen, the claim of the indorsee or former holder has been rejected. But if there is no danger that the defendant will ever be liable on the bill or note, as if it be proved to have been actually destroyed, while in the plaintiff’s own hands,
It is however insisted, that the law in respect to the remedy upon lost notes, has been so modified by the act of 1828, regulating judicial proceedings,” as to require an affidavit to be made of the loss, as a pre-requisite to the institution of the suit. [Clay’s Dig. 382, § 9.J The section relied on, and the preamble of the act are as follows : “ Whereas, there hath been much uncertainty in the decisions of the courts of this State, respecting the manner in which persons may bring suit upon any bond, bill, note, or other instrument in writing, which may be the foundation of such suit, and which bond, bill, note or other instrument may have been lost; for remedy whereof: Be it enacted, &c. That when any person may have, or own, or may have had or owned, any bond, bill, note, agreement, or other instrument in writing, the right or title to the same remaining in him, her or them, and the same shall be, or shall have been, destroyed by fire, or lost by accident, such person or persons shall be authorized, upon first making oath in writing of the loss of such bond, bill, note, agreement, or other instrument, and that the same has not been paid, satisfied or discharged, to sue at common law, for and recover upon the same, upon making proof of the contents of such bond,” &c. &c. The preamble of this enactment indicates its true meaning, too clearly to be misapprehended, viz : to provide a certain remedy at law, for parties who have lost the written evidence of any debt or duty— the necessity for which is affirmed to be the uncertainty in the decisions of the courts of this State upon the subject. In this view it must be regarded as furnishing a cumulative remedy, and not as repealing or annulling all others which.
Whether, if the notes in controversy purported on their face to have been given in consideration of the purchase of part of a sixteenth section, (as it is said they did,) it would have been competent for the plaintiff to have passed the legal interest in them by an indorsement, we need not inquire. It is not pretended that they were negotiated, and the mere fact of their being negotiable, does not affect their right to maintain the action.
Whatever may be the effect of the affidavit when made as the statute directs, we cannot doubt but it is altogether competent to prove by other evidence, at the trial, the loss of an instrument on which snit is brought. It therefore follows, that the judgment of the county court is reversed, and the cause remanded.