31 Ala. 701 | Ala. | 1858
— In Prentice v. McClanahan & Johnson, at June term, 1856, we considered and construed section 2291 of the Code. That was a case where a garnishee had answered to an indebtedness, but further answered that he had received notice that the note which evidenced his indebtedness had been transferred. An issue was made up under the statute, contesting the right to the note and its proceeds ; and on the trial, the transferrees offered the defendant in execution as a witness. We held, that he was competent; overruling Scott, Slough & Co. v. Stallworth, 12 Ala. 25, and Marston v. Carr, 16 Ala. 825. In fact, we consider that the former of those cases had been overruled by Myatt v. Lockhart, 13 Ala. 338; and the latter by Kirksey v. Dubose, 19 Ala. 44, and Zackowski v. Jones, 20 Ala. 189. Our own decisions were in irreconcilable confusion. Both the reasoning and the results attained in the cases last cited have our unqualified approbation, and we adhere to the conclusions we announced in the ease of Prentice v. McClanahan, supra. It results, that the court erred in refusing to permit Bostwiek to testify at the instance of appellant.
Although this question is one simply of evidence, yet it is of great practical importance. In most of our jury trials, involving the bona Jides of assignments, mortgages and conveyances, this question of notice becomes a material inquiry. It is rarely susceptible of direct or positive proof. The more complete and manifest the insolvency, the less likely will the public be to remark or comment upon it. The universality of the knowledge precludes probability that the subject will be discussed, and thus heightens the difficulty of proving the direct fact of notice.
Another argument: The credit system rests, not alone, or even mainly, on the personal 'confidence which one man reposes in another. Ability to pay — responsibility to the coercive power of an execution — is a weighty consideration with one who parts with his goods on credit. Persons engaged in commerce and traffic are usually prudent, if not cautions. It is difficult to believe that merchants and traders will not learn the pecuniary condition of their customers, when that condition so vitally affects them, and is notorious in the neighborhood in which they are operating.
"We think the vice of the argument in the case above cited, so far as it assails our former decisions on this point, consists in this, that it treats the subject as if the evidence when adduced must control the jury. Such was not the rule as formerly declared. It was only evidence to be weighed by the jury, as other cii’cumstantial evidence is weighed. Its effect was for them, and, of course, would be greater or less, as the nature of the business in which the grantee was engaged, and the degree of notoriety which the grantor’s insolvency had acquired, would strengthen or weaken the probability that the grantee also knew of its existence.
Lest this opinion might mislead, we feel it our duty to state, that the evidence we have been considering was not •offered as a means of proving the fact of insolvency. Por that purpose it would have been inadmissible. — See citations supra, and Brice & Co. v. Lide, at the present term. The testimony was offered simply as one means of proving knoiriedge in the grantee, of a fact the existence of which, under the rule, must have been established by other proof.
The judgment of the city court is reversed, and the eause remanded.