173 So. 510 | Ala. | 1937
The note upon which the suit is brought was not set out haec verba, but the complaint describes it as an unconditional promise to pay the sum claimed upon demand. The special pleas set up a collateral parol agreement that the same was not in effect to be paid upon demand, but only at some future time and then only should the earnings of the company be sufficient to pay said note. The pleas therefore set up a parol agreement at variance with and contradictory of the written terms of the note and which does not relate only to the consideration so as to bring the parol agreement within the exception of the rule against the contradiction or variance of written instruments by parol, and which said rule applies to notes as well as other written contracts. Ford v. Southern Motor Co.,
While the distinction between the foregoing and other cases is apparently quite shady, we find no serious conflict.
In the case of Mid-Continent Life Ins. Co. v. Beasley,
In the case of Wells v. Drane,
The case of Jefferson County Savings Bank v. Compton,
In the case of Davenport Harris Undertaking Co. v. Roberson, supra, we referred to the fact there applicable that the condition sought to be imposed must not change the integrity or tenor of the contract of the maker. There it was sought to show that the maker was not to be liable until plaintiff had exhausted his remedy against another party. The condition there sought to be shown did not enter into the consideration, but served to make a secondary liability rather than one which was primary as expressed in the note. That was the situation in Cowles v. Townsend Milliken,
Although it has not in all cases been so expressed, if the so-called condition occur as a breach of the payee's collateral verbal agreement, which was a part of the consideration, such breach amounts to a failure of consideration pro tanto and to that extent is a good defense. This was so expressed in Ward Motor Co. v. Assets Realization Co., supra.
All of our cases, which have allowed this defense, can, we think, be predicated on that theory. And while it is said that the condition on which the note is payable may be shown, that means, as the context makes clear, that the condition is in effect a breach of the payee's contract which was a part of the consideration. It is not necessary that such contract be in that form, but if that is its substance and effect, it will have that result.
In Barlow v. Flemming,
But in others the conflict is only apparent, for in reality, the condition sought to be imposed is one which relates to the consideration, as by a breach of a covenant, express or implied. Such is Gliddens v. Harrison,
In the case of Rice v. Gilbreath, supra, the distinction is still more obscure. The note was not to be paid unless the maker sold enough churns to earn profits sufficient to pay the note. It was said to vary the legal effect of the note.
Whether that case can be distinguished in principle from the Compton Case and those following it or not, the latter case has set a standard too many times followed to set it aside now. In fact, it is sound in principle. The Rice Case, supra, does not conflict in expressing the principle.
It is perfectly apparent that if the condition on which a note is payable is the breach of an express or implied covenant made verbally by the payee at or before the note was made, not varying any written contract of such payee, but which was an inducement to its execution, it may be shown in defense, but not so if such condition, not relating to the consideration, has the effect to change the integrity of the contract, and make it speak a different obligation further than as affected by the consideration.
A note expressed to be payable at a definite time cannot be shown by a contemporaneous parol agreement to be payable at a different time. Such a note for attorneys' fees for defending a suit is payable at the time named in it, though there was a verbal agreement that it was not to be paid until the suit was tried. Walker v. Clay and Clay, supra.
A note payable on demand is due immediately after delivery, without further notice or demand. Falkner v. Protective Life Ins. Co.,
It therefore follows that the trial court erred in not sustaining the plaintiffs' demurrer to the defendants' special pleas, and the judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
GARDNER, BOULDIN, and FOSTER, JJ., concur.