Levert v. Planters' & Merchants' Bank

8 Port. 104 | Ala. | 1838

ORMOND, J.

— This was a motion by the defendants in error against the plaintiff in error, for a judgment on a note discounted by the bank.

The judgment was rendered by default, and it is now objected here, that the record does not shew a case in which a judgment could be rendered in favor of the bank,on motion, because it docs not state that the' note was negotiable and payable at that bank.

The charter of the bank provides “ That if any person shall be indebted to said corporation, as maker or *106endorser of any note, bill or bond, expressly made negotiable and payable at said bank, and shall delay payment thereof, it shall be lawful for said corporation, after having given at least thirty days nótiee thereof, and producing to the' court before whom the motion is made, the certificate of the President of the hank, that the debt is really and bona fide the property of the bank, to move for judgment and award of execution,” &c.

The statement on the record is, that the plaintiff “moved the court for a judgment in this case, for the amount of a promissory note signed by defendant, dated June twentieth, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven, payable sixty days after date, to one Joseph Bates, jr. or order, and by him endorsed for the sum of four thousand nine hundred and forty dollars, which note was discounted at said bank,” &c. There is no other description or proof relating to the note than this, except in the notice attached to the transcript, which cannot be considered as was determined in the case of Bates vs. the Planters’ & Merchants’ Bank, at this term; and according to the principles determined in that case, and the previous decisions of this court, it is not sufficient. The record does not shew that the note! was made payable and negotiable at the planters’ & Merchants’ Bank, and this court cannot intend that it was thus made. If not made negotiable and payable at that particular bank, the charter did not give the right to recover on it by motion.

It is, however, insisted, that, an act passed on the thirtieth of June, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven, covers the case. The act provided, that “if any person shall become indebted to any of said institutions,” (including *107this bank,) “by bill, bond, note, or other contract, for the payment of money, and shall delay payment thereof, the said banks may sue for and collect the same by summary remedy, as in other cases under the charter of said •banks.”

Giving to this act a just interpretation, it would seem very clear that it contemplated to give this remedy only to the future acquisitions of the banks. It does not appear when the bank acquired property in the note; and it is just as likely to have been before the passage of the act, as afterwards. But the right' of the bank to this summary remedy cannot be maintained by the inference, that it might not have obtained property in the note, until after the thirtieth of June, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven. The note bears date on the twentieth of June, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven, and if acquired before the thirtieth of June, was a debt, though not payable until a future day. The remedy being in derogation of the common law, cannot be enforced; unless the party claiming the benefit of it, shows affirmatively on the record that he is entitled to it.

That not being done in this case, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.

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