112 So. 159 | Ala. | 1927
The suit is on a promissory note by the payee against the makers.
The questions for review arise upon a plea of no consideration. The note was given for in amount agreed upon, in compromise and settlement of disputed matters, evidenced by an agreement and release in writing, which appears in the report of the case.
One of the matters covered by the general terms of the agreement as appears from the evidence was a claim for purchase money for lands of the plaintiff, a married woman, in that without her consent the money had been paid, if at all, not to her, nor any one authorized to receive it. Granting that the money was to be paid through a named bank, plaintiff's evidence goes to the effect that it was to be paid into the bank for her, and, if notes were taken, they were not indorsed by her in such way as to authorize its payment to the husband. The evidence on both sides shows there was such controversy, and the evidence now presents a conflict as to whether the wife was bound by the payments, if made.
Without dealing with other questions, this made an issue for the jury, and the affirmative charge, with hypothesis, was properly refused to defendants.
The court gave the following charge for plaintiff:
"If the note sued on was given in payment of an agreed amount in settlement of a disputed transaction between plaintiff and the defendant, then in such event there would be a valuable consideration for the note sued on."
Appellants insist the giving of this charge was error to reverse. The ground of insistence is that it fails to require proof of a bona fide controversy.
True, if a compromise is induced by deceit or other form of fraud, it is subject to attack as other transactions so induced. Or, if the claim is so unfounded in fact that an insistence thereon is in bad faith, it can furnish no consideration for a compromise agreement. Daniel v. Hughes,
But, where parties deal at arms' length touching personal transactions known to both *632 sides, and they enter into a written agreement that a dispute does exist between them, reciting their respective claims as to matters of dispute, and a note is executed in keeping with the agreement, prima facie, there was a bona fide dispute. The note imports a consideration. The agreement shows its nature.
In view of the evidence, we think the case should not be reversed for the giving of the charge in question. If some phases of the evidence tended to support the plea of no consideration as applied to compromises of this character, the defendants should have presented same by explanatory charges.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and GARDNER, JJ., concur.