90 So. 340 | Ala. | 1921
Lead Opinion
Amanda Williams recovered a judgment against the petitioner, which upon appeal to the Court of Appeals was affirmed. Besides the common counts, the complaint, as amended, contained count A, as follows:
"Plaintiff claims of the defendant the further sum of $300 for that plaintiff avers that during the year 1915 the defendant was in the county of Montgomery, Alabama, engaged in the business of operating or conducting a bank, and plaintiff further avers that on, to wit, September 7, 1915, she deposited with the defendant the sum of $300, and plaintiff further avers that the defendant has refused to pay her the sum so deposited, and that the same is still due and unpaid; hence she sues."
Among other grounds of demurrer assigned to count A was this: "No demand is ever alleged to have been made in said count for said money." The demurrer was overruled; and the Court of Appeals, while affirming error of the action of the trial court in respect of the quoted ground of the demurrer, applied the doctrine of error without injury because the undisputed evidence went to show a demand by the plaintiff upon the bank, and the bank's unqualified refusal to pay the plaintiff the amount of the general deposit claimed by the plaintiff. The Court of Appeals cited Best Park Amusement Co. v. Rollins,
That the Court of Appeals was correct in declaring error of the trial court's action in overruling the demurrer (containing the quoted ground) is quite plain. Tobias v. Morris Co.,
A general deposit with a bank creates the relation of debtor and creditor subject, however, to certain well-defined precedent conditions, integral of the contract, as respects the obligation to pay. In the Tobias Case, supra, this court approvingly quoted, and applied to a denial of that plaintiff's right to recover under the common counts, this from Morse's work on Banking:
"We have already seen that it is a contract specially modified by the clear legal understanding that the money shall be forthcoming to meet the order of the creditor whenever that order shall be properly presented for payment. It follows, therefore, that this demand for payment is an integral and essential part of the undertaking, and it may be said, even of the debt itself. In short, the agreement of the bank with the depositor, as distinct and valid as if written and executed under the seal of each of the parties, is only to pay upon demand. * * * The undertaking of the bank is not to pay immediately and absolutely, but when payment shall be required. It is in no default till payment is demanded. Therefore no right of action exists until demand is made as stipulated for in the implied contract of deposit."
It was there held that a depositor of a general character has no cause of action until by appropriate demand the bank has been put in default, unless demand has been efficiently waived by the bank or it would necessarily *396
be futile, that in the absence of waiver or the state futility there is "no default until payment has been demanded and refused," and that the institution of suit is not the requisite demand. 1 Morse on Banking (5th Ed.) § 322; Tobias' Case, supra. In cases where demand is necessary the statute of limitations does not begin to run in favor of the bank or against the depositor until demand is made. 1 Morse, supra. The general rules of law applicable to contracts where a demand is a condition precedent to the creation of a cause or right of action for failure to perform govern the subject; and hence it was decided in Tobias' Case, supra, that either demand must be averred or there must be some allegation to dispense with it. The doctrine was given early statement by this court in Forrest v. Jones,
There is no averment in count A of the demand required by the contract, or an excuse therefor. The allegation of "refusal" to pay in count A is not the equivalent of an averment of the demand necessary to be averred. Non constat, the refusal alleged may have been of a request or demand for payment elsewhere than at the bank or otherwise than in banking hours, or by a method or means not recognized in the banking business. Now, as to the application of the doctrine of error without injury: This court will review the action of the Court of Appeals in applying or denying that doctrine. Birmingham Sou. Ry. v. Goodwyn,
For the error indicated the writ will be granted and the cause remanded to the Court of Appeals for further consideration in accordance with this opinion.
Writ granted, and reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE, THOMAS, and MILLER, JJ., concur.
GARDNER, J., dissents.
SOMERVILLE, J., not sitting.
Dissenting Opinion
Count A alleged "that the defendant has refused to pay her the sum so deposited, and that the same is due and unpaid." This count is considered by the majority as fatally defective for failure to aver a demand by the plaintiff. I am unable to agree.
It is of course universally recognized that a demand by the depositor is a condition precedent to the maintenance of a suit of this character. Tobias v. Josiah Morris Co.,
"The reason for the rule is that, when banks are ready and willing to pay on demand, they shall not be annoyed by suit. The implied contract is that the bank shall keep a deposit until called for, and until the bank refuses to pay on demand they are not in default." Holden v. Farmers' T. Nat. Bk.,
While the language of count A does not include the word "demand," yet we are persuaded it is embraced within, and clearly and necessarily implied by, the language used. "The ordinary signification of the word 'refused' is to deny a request or demand." Burns v. Fox,
I recognize the rule that pleading is to be construed most strongly against the pleader, but this court has several times declared that in construing the language used in the pleading it must at the same time be given a meaning *397 consistent with sound reason and common sense. The very language of the complaint, when so construed, presupposes a demand or request for the funds, and while it does omit the precise word "demand," yet this is necessarily implied in the meaning of the language used, and its omission does not render the count bad. So construing the count, therefore, I am of the opinion that it was not subject to demurrer, and that the trial court cannot be put in error for so ruling. This conclusion renders it unnecessary to consider the question of error without injury.
I respectfully dissent.