131 Tenn. 24 | Tenn. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The suit was brought upon a note of $318.60, signed by defendants, of which the following is a literal copy:
Birmingham, Ala., 10/22/1908. $318.60.
On the 1st day of September 1909', without grace, for value received, we promise to pay to the order of Hinds Peevey .... three hundred eighteen and 60/100 .... dollars with interest 8% in United States gold coin of present standard weight and fineness, at the People’s Savings Bank and Trust Co., Birmingham, Ala., at 8%-intereg-t from date.- [And I Sallie 0. Buchanan, wife of R. Gr. Buchanan, do hereby expressly bind my separate estate for the payment of this note] and interest 8%.
The makers and endorsers of this note hereby expressly waive all right to-claim exemption allowed by the constitution and laws of this or any other State and agree to pay cost of collecting this note, including reasonable attorney’s fees, for all services rendered in any way, in any suit against any maker or endorser, or in collecting or attempting to collect, or in securing or attempting to secure, this debt, if this note is not paid at maturity. Notice and protest, on the nonpayment of this note is hereby expressly waived by each maker and endorser.
R. Gr. Buchanan.
Sallie Gr. Buchanan.
The note consisted of a printed form filled in. The words and figures which we have italicized were in
The defendants filed a special plea of non est factum, averring that the words and figures, “with interest S%,” also the words and figures, “and interest 8%,” were interlined after the delivery of the note, and without their knowledge or consent. The depositions of defendants were read fully sustaining the plea. The complainant filed his deposition in which he denied the alteration, and stated that the note as it now appears was delivered to him by the defendants. The defendants stated one fact which is not denied by complainant. That is to say, that when they executed the note in question they owed to complainant $295, as a balance on a prior note; that complainant offered by letter to carry this balance for another year if defendants would agree to include interest at eight per cent, in the face of the note, and make it a part of the principal; that this was agreed to, and the note was aecordinlgy drawn for $318.60, which included $23.60, the interest .at eight per cent, for one year. The testimony of both parties is to the purport that the erasure and all inter-lineations were in the note at its execution, except the
The chancellor decreed in favor of complainant, and on appeal to the court of civil appeals that court affirmed his decree except as to the defendant Mrs. Buchanan, dismissing as to her on the ground of cov-erture, but without prejudice to complainant’s right to institute a new proceeding addressed alone to subjecting her separate estate.
The petition for the writ of certiorari to bring the ease to this court was filed only by defendant R. G. Buchanan. So the case is not before us as to Mrs. Buchanan.
There was a concurrence between the chancellor and the court of civil appeals on the question of fact as to the alleged alteration, and the rule is that a concurrence on a question of fact binds this court. State ex
Such is the present ease, the court of civil appeals having held that the burden of proof was on the defendants to show that the alteration was not made before the execution of the note. Such, indeed, is the rule where the plea of non est factum, is special (Carter v. Turner, 5 Sneed [37 Tenn.], 179; Harding v. Heirs and Creditors of Waters, 6 Lea [74 Tenn.], 324), and the alteration does not show as such on the face of the paper. The plea in the case before us is special, it is true, and the rule just stated would apply but for the fact that the paper presents a suspicious appearance on its face, in the following particulars: A printed clause providing for interest from daté at eight per cent, was erased, while the same thing in different words was written in the face of the note at two other places, one the interlineation “with interest 8%,” and the words and figures, and interest 8at the end of the provision binding the separate estate of the wife. "When a note sued on presents a suspicious appearance, the rule is that the burden rests on the party offering the paper to account for its condition in a manner consonant with good faith on his part. Farnsworth v. Sharp, 4 Sneed (36 Tenn.), 55; Holland v. Locke, 2 Shan. Tenn. Cas., 28; Organ v. Allison, 9 Baxt. (68 Tenn.), 459, 465; Dan. Neg. Inst. (7th Ed.),
“Where it is apparent on the face of an instrument that it has been altered, a prima facie presumption arises that the alteration was made after the instrument was executed, and the burden is held to be on the holder to show the contrary. - If, however, the alteration is not apparent upon the face of the instrument, the burden then rests on the one who sets up such alteration as a defense.” Id. section 136.
The learned court of civil appeals was of the opinion that this rule was .changed by our Negotiable Instruments Law (Laws 1899, ch. 94). We cannot concur in this view. There is nothing in that law on the subject except what appears in sections 124 and 125. The latter specifies what are material alterations, and among them a change in the interest rate. The former reads:
“Where a negotiable instrument is materially altered without the assent of all parties liable thereon, it is avoided, except as against a party who has himself made, authorized or assented to the alteration, and subsequent indorsers.
“But where an instrument has been materially altered and is in the hands of a holder in due course, not a party to the alteration, he may enforce payment thereof, according to its original term.”
It was formerly held that material alterations without the consent of the parties to be bound thereby made the instrument void as to them, even in the hands of
It results that the judgment of the court of civil appeals as to petitioner R. Gr. Buchanan must be reversed, and the bill dismissed, with all of the costs of the cause.