73 So. 759 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1916
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] Assumpsit by the Oneonta Trust Banking Company against L. Q. Box. Judgment for defendant and plaintiff appeals. Reversed and remanded. The complaint counts on nine promissory notes, amounting to $2,500, dated the 22d day of January, 1909, and payable on the 1st day of each November thereafter until November, 1917, to D. R. Blackwood Mercantile Company. It is averred in the complaint that in and by a mortgage executed contemporaneously with the notes and as a part of the same transaction it was provided that, if the defendant failed at the maturity of the notes to pay any of the same in whole or in part, all of them should become due and payable. It is further averred that the notes are past due, that they are the property of the plaintiff, and that defendant is entitled to a credit of $1,650 on January 11, 1915.
Plea I was the general issue; plea 2, payment; plea 3, that the defendant had paid all the notes up to and including the note due November 1, 1914, and at the time the suit was brought there was nothing due on the series of notes. The fourth plea denies that any of the notes had passed maturity without being paid, and avers that the defendant had more than paid all the notes due up to that time. The fifth plea is one of set-off.
(1) The plaintiff replied to pleas 1, 2, 3, and 4, stating, in substance, that the plaintiff was a holder of the notes in due course. This replication was stricken on motion of the defendant, and this ruling of the court is assigned as error. *442
The complaint does not show that said notes were negotiable, in that it is not averred that they were payable to order or bearer. — Code 1907, § 4598, subd. 4, § 5131. Nor does the replication aver that they were payable to the D. R. Blackwood Mercantile Company or order. Therefore the replication was demurrable for that reason; but it should not have been stricken from the file. — Stone v. Goldberg Lewis,
The appellee contends that the striking of the replication, if error, was without injury, for that, as he contends, the record shows that the question submitted to the jury, and upon which the cause was tried, was whether or not the plaintiff was a holder of the notes in due course.
(2) We are of the opinion that the striking of the replication was injurious error; for, under the issues presented by the pleadings with the replication stricken out, the question was whether or not the notes had been paid, not whether they had been paid to the holder. There was nothing in the pleadings left under which the plaintiff was authorized to show that it was a holder in due course, and, as a matter of fact, the court admitted, against the objection of the plaintiff, evidence which tended to show that the defendant had paid the payee before the maturity of the notes, and before their transfer to the First National Bank of Birmingham, the transferor of plaintiff. The admision of this evidence was highly prejudicial to the cause of the plaintiff, as the jury evidently considered this testimony in making their verdict, as they were authorized to do under the court's holding that it was material. Furthermore, the court declined to give the affirmative charge for the plaintiff, which it would have been entitled to for a substantial sum if this evidence of payments before transfer had been excluded.
Under the authorities above cited, it was clearly reversible error for the court to strike the special replication, and for this reason the judgment must be reversed.
(3) There are numerous other assignments of error; but from our point of view it is not essential that these assignments be specifically passed upon. For the guidance of the court on another trial, however, it is proper to point out that evidence *443
of payments made to the payee on these notes or any one of them. introduced in evidence, and of which the plaintiff or its transferor was a holder in due course, is not material, and should not be admitted. — Merchants' National Bank v. Norris,supra; Prim. Kimbell v. Hammel,
Should the evidence develop on the next trial, however, that the defendant made payments to the original payee after the notes had been transferred to the First National Bank of Birmingham, or that the original payee allowed credits to the maker, and upon a settlement with the First National Bank, the then holder, the Blackwood Mercantile Company accounted to said bank for such payments or credits allowed by Blackwood to the defendant, and said bank ratified the same, then the defendant would be entitled to such credits on his notes.
For the error pointed out, the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.