Action to recover the amount of ten tax-bills issued to C. A. Buggies, doing business under the name of Buggies Cement Co. for the construction as contractor of certain sidewalks in the city of Carterville. The petition is in the usual form. The answer is quite lengthy but for the purposes of this appeal we need only notice one feature of it. It alleged that the taxbills for sidewalks against the lots described in the petition when issued were against the Federated Mines and Milling Co. as owners, and purported to be issued by virtue of ordinances No. 319 and 364 and were delivered to the Buggies Cement Co. as issued, but that since their delivery, the plaintiff or his attorney had, without the knowledge of the city clerk and without any authority whatever, changed all of said taxbills by scratching out the name Federated Mines and Milling Co. and inserting therein T. T. Luscombe and by scratching out the figures 319 and writing therein the figures 311 and by scratching out the figures 364 and writing therein the figures 363 and that the taxbills filed as exhibits were not the taxbills issued by the city of Carterville. The reply was a general denial. Plaintiff offered the taxbills in evidence and defendant objected to them upon the ground that they showed upon their face that they
The question for our determination is whether the court erred in excluding the taxbills. Alterations in written instruments, in the absence of anything suspicious on their face to indicate improper action in making the alterations, are presumed to be made at or before the execution of the instrument and the burden is on the party assailing the instrument to show an unauthorized alteration. [Paramore v. Lindsey,
To the above proposition counsel agree. Appellant concedes that the taxbills show on their face that alterations have been made, but contends that there is nothing suspicious about the alterations as they appear upon the= face of the taxbills and hence the general rule that the alterations are presumed to have been made at or before the execution of the instrument should be applied in this case, the taxbills admitted, due credit given them and the burden of proving the defense of an unauthorized alteration cast upon defendant. Defendant contends that the alterations are in a different hand writing and different ink from the body of the taxbills and that an inspection of the taxbills will arouse suspicion that the alterations were made after delivery and that the court, was, therefore, right in requiring an explanation of the alterations before admitting them in evidence.
By agreement of counsel the original taxbills have been presented to us for our inspection and we have carefully examined them and are of the opinion
