1 Port. 386 | Ala. | 1835
The declaration is in assumpsit, on a promissory note drawn by J. Watson, in favor of W. Rabun, the nominal plaintiff below, who sued for the use of Greer & Cooley. McInnis is declared against as. indorser of the note, and his appearing to be the only indorsement. There is no allegation of any in-dorsement to him, nor of the person to whom his indorsement was made — nor of any kind of transfer either to or from him— npr any explanation of the circumstances, inducement, or consideration for the indorsement. The further allegations are no other than that the .plaintiff sued Watsoij, the maker of the note, to insolvency, as evidenced by a return of nulla bona, which appears of record, &c. concluding with a general super sc assumpsit.
To this declaration, the defendant demurred. The court overruled the demurrer, and the defendant declining to plead over, final judgment was rendered against him.
The history of the case as giren, appears to supersede the necessity of much comment in the decision. From anything' alieged in the declaration, the note would appear to have been transferred by delivery from the plaintiff to the defendant ; but even this can only be matter of conjecture. To whom the defendant transferred it, is still more uncertain, as no other person appears to have had any legal interest in it. If, from the circumstances of the suit having been brought for the use of Greer & Cooley, we could assume the fact, that the note was transferred to them, and this for a valuable consideration, by wrhat authority can we say they are the immediate transferees from the defendant; as they do not appear in the attitude of indorsers, there is not even the fiction of law to exclude the presumption, that the note may have passed through a dozen hands between the defendant and cestui que use: or, the fact may be, that the defendant having transferred the note to another, as indicated by his blank in-dorsement, it was returned upon him, paid, and then by him returned upon the payee, who is the plaintiff in the action. On either hypothesis, there is no cause of action. But, if we can imagine a state of facts, consistent with the indications of the note, which would create a legal liability agains4 the defendant — that is not sufficient to enable ¡he plaintiff to recover. They must have been averred in legal form. Nor is this note itself evidence of any debt or demand between these parties.
The judgment of the Circuit Court was therefore erroneous, and must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.