53 Ala. 37 | Ala. | 1875
The promissory note, indorsed by the appellant, is not on its face payable at a bank, or private banking house, nor is it averred in the complaint that the
The circuit court holding the appellant was the indorser of commercial paper, fell into various errors it is not necessary to notice. The promissory note disclosed in the complaint, and set out in the bill of exceptions, was not, at its making, commercial paper. The liability of appellant and the measure of his rights, are not defined or controlled by the mercantile law, but by the statutes to which we have referred. The complaint, as it is now framed, does not disclose a substantial cause of action against appellant, and no judgment rendered thereon against him could be supported. Since the making of the promissory note on the indorsement of which this suit is founded, the statute of April 8th, 1873 (Pamph. Acts 1872-3, p. Ill), has converted promissory notes, payable in money at a designated place, into negotiable instruments governed by the commercial law. It operates on the nature and obligation of the contract of the parties to such notes, and cannot be construed as affecting notes made and indorsed prior to its passage. ■ The law of force, when the note is made and indorsed, regulates and de
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.