53 Ala. 641 | Ala. | 1875
Bills of exception in civil or criminal cases were unknown to the common law. They derive their existence from statutory provisions. Ned v. State, 7 Port. 187; Bounce v. State, 8 Port. 458; Rollater v. Rollater, 52 Ala. 111. At common law a writ of error would not lie except for error apparent on the record .; and therefore, if plaintiff or defendant alleged anything ore tenus, which was overruled by the judge, the party aggrieved was without redress. 2 Phill. Ev. 996. To remedy this defect the English Parliament enacted statutes, from which bills of exception originated. These statutes have been substantially re-enacted in this country, and though sometimes enlarged, so as to present rulings of the court for revision not allowed under the English statutes, the office of a bill of exceptions remains as defined by our statute, the presentation, for revision of a “charge, opinion, or decision of the court touching the cause of action, which would not otherwise appear of record.” R. C. § 2754. It was never intended that a bill of exceptions should lessen the matter of a record, or that it should be made the repository of matter the common law
Nor does it appear otherwise than from the bill of exceptions, whether any, or what plea was interposed. From what we have said, the bill of exceptions is not the proper place for a plea. It is a part of the record, and the law requires the clerk of the court to file it, and indorse it as filed, as positively as the requisition is, in reference to the complaint. Being of necessity a part of the record, though it is improperly found in the bill of exceptions, it cannot be disregarded. Nor would the demurrer be disregarded merely because it is found only in the bill of exceptions, if the record disclosed the judgment rendered on it, and by the record we mean that memorandum of the proceedings which must be kept, though nothing may be alleged ore terms by either party, and no exception reserved and sealed.
The plea is a mere general denial of the allegations of the complaint, without averring any special matter of defense. It cast on the plaintiffs the onus of proving every material allegation of the complaint; it limited the defense to evidence in disproof of them. No matter in avoidance of the allegations of the complaint, or in excuse or justification of the wrongful act imputed to the defendant was within the issue found. All such matters the statute required to be specially pleaded. It. C. § 2639. The defense proposed, so far as the evidence offered and rejected is concerned, was not in denial of the averments of the complaint, or of the act complained of as wrongful. It is in excuse or justification of the act, and was for this reason, if no other, properly excluded. The eharge asked and refused was also as to matter of excuse or justification for the refusal to enter satisfaction of the mortgage. It proceeded on the admission that the defendant had ■refused to enter the satisfaction, but sought to excuse it because of his belief the mortgage debt had not been paid. If it was intended to confess, and avoid the refusal to enter satisfaction of the mortgage, the matter of avoidance should have been specially pleaded. The general denial of the allegations of the complaint was not sufficient to put it in issue.
The general rule is, that as a payment on the part of a debtor is voluntary, he may direct its application when it is made, or at any time before the creditor, in the absence of such direction, has applied it. 1 Am. Lead Cases, 339; McDonnell v. Br. Bank Montgomery, 20 Ala. 313; Callahan v.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed.