89 Ala. 505 | Ala. | 1889
This ease having been heard and determined by the City Court without the intervention of a jury, the appeal brings for revision the conclusions and judgment of the court on the evidence, as well as the questions of law involved.
The action is brought by appellant, as a corporation, and is founded on two notes, which the complaint avers are payable to the order of E. W. Miller, at the Jefferson County Savings Bank, by whom they were “duly transferred” to plaintiff. Section 2594 of Code of 1886 requires, that suits upon bills of exchange, and promissory notes payable at a bank, or banking-house, or at a designated place of payment, must be instituted in the name of the person having the legal title. It’ may be conceded that the complaint was subject to demurrer, on the ground, that the averment as to the transfer of the notes does not necessarily imply a transfer in writing, which is essential. — Ragland v. Wood, 71 Ala. 145. This, however, was not assigned as a cause of demurrer. Defendant raised the question as to the right of plaintiff to institute the suit in its own name, by plea, averring that plaintiff was not, at the commencement of the suit, the
It appears that the notes were indorsed in blank by Miller, the payee, and pledged to the Birmingham National Bank, as collateral security for money loaned him. The bank having been paid, Miller caused the notes to be transferred and delivered, so indorsed in blank, to plaintiff. The blank indorsement conferred on plaintiff, being. a bona fide holder, the right to fill it up by inserting its own name. AVhether it should be filled up before judgment, the authorities do not accord. In this State, the rule may be regarded as settled. It was held, more than forty years ago, that a blank indorsement vests the note in the holder, if the owner, as completely as can be done by any other mode; and that it is unnecessary for the indorsement to be filled up before the note goes to the jury. — Riggs v. Andrews, 8 Ala. 628; Sawyer v. Patterson, 11 Ala. 523. There has been no departure from this ruling. Filling up the indorsement is regarded as merely formal, and bringing suit on the note manifests the intention of the plaintiff to treat the indorsement in blank as a transfer of the note to him by the indorser. — 2 Dan. on Neg. Instr. § 1195. Plaintiff’s possession and production of the note, so indorsed, was prima facie evidence of ownership, and, in the absence of rebutting proof, showed the right to maintain the action in its own name.
By the second, third and fourth pleas, defendant set up the statute of frauds, failure of consideration, and an offer to set off damages alleged to have been sustained by the breach of a .contract between Miller and defendant. The uncontradicted evidence establishes the following facts: Miller, being the owner of four hundred acres of land, proposed to sell certain undivided interests to a number of persons, who should form a company, and become incorporated. Defendant and several other persons purchased each a one-fifth interest. The record contains a copy of an instrument in writing, dated March 1st, 1887, of the following tenor:
The requirement of the statute of frauds is, that the contract of sale, or some note or memorandum thereof expressing the consideration, must be in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or by some other person thereunto lawfully authorized in writing.- — Code, § 1732. The form of the writing is immaterial: a note or memorandum is a sufficient compliance, if it sets forth the essential terms of the contract, with such certainty that they may be understood from the writing itself. — Carter v. Shorter, 57 Ala. 253. The contract of sale states the property sold,
The fourth plea, after setting out the facts of the purchase and formation of the company, avers that Miller solicited defendant to become a purchaser of an undivided one-fortieth interest, and, as an inducement to make the purchase, undertook and agreed with defendant that he would sell enough of the land or stock of the company at such profit as would be sufficient to pay off the notes of defendant, as they matured, and that he should not be called on for payment of the notes in any other manner than by the application of such profits; and that Miller failed to perform the agreement, whereby defendant has sustained damages, which he offers to set off.
The real defense set up is, a prior or contemporaneous agreement that the notes should be paid from the profits to be realized from sales of land or stock — from particular’ funds, or particular sources — and that defendant should not be required to pay them personally; a collateral undertaking, the breach of which is relied on as a bar to a recovery on the notes. If land or stock had been sold at profits sufficient to pay the notes, and the collateral agreement had been executed, this would have constituted a full defense to the action. The notes are absolute and unconditional obligations to pay money on the day specified. The effect of the undertaking and agreement set forth’ in the plea is to make the payment of the notes conditional on the happening of a future and uncertain event. The stipulation, being verbal, and previous and contemporaneous, is presumed to be merged in the written contract. Oral evidence is inadmissible, as between the parties, to add to, alter or contradict the writing;' especially when the stipulation is a material term of a contract of sale of land, which the statute requires to be in writing. The collateral engagement, not having been executed, is no defense to the action. — McNair v. Cooper, 4 Ala. 660.
Moreover, the evidence introduced by defendant in support of the plea, fails to establish an undertaking and agreement such as is set forth therein. The entire evidence is, that Miller said to defendant, during the negotiations for the
Our conclusion on the evidence is, that plaintiff is entitled to recover. The notes contain a waiver of exemptions. The result is, the judgment of the City Court is reversed, and judgment- is rendered against defendant for the sum of $312.20; and against this judgment, and the execution to be issued thereon, there is no exemption of personal property.
Reversed and rendered.