88 So. 221 | Ala. | 1920
“Subscription contracts are favored in law as calculated to foster public and quasi public entez-prises. As a matter of public policy the courts are desirous that subscribers should not evade their deliberate promises of contribution, and their tendency therefore is to adopt such a rule as will sustain the subscriptions - as a legal obligation.” 25 R. C. L. 1398, 1399, § 4, citing Merchants’, etc., Co. v. Chicago, etc., Co., 210 Ill. 26, 71 N. E. 22, 102 Am. St. Rep. 145; Illiopolis M. E. Church v. Garvey, 53 Ill. 401, 5 Am. Rep. 51; Brokaw v. McElroy, 162 Iowa, 288, 143 N. W. 1087, 50 L. R. A. (N. S.) 835; note, 48 L. R. A. (N. S.) 784.
“In other words, the mutuality of the promise is tested by the situation existing at the time it is sought to enforce the subscription, not by that existing at the time of the signing of the instrument.” 25 R. C. L. 1401, 1402, §*33 8; Owenby v. Ga. Baptist Assembly, 137 Ga. 698, 74 S. E. 56, Ann. Cas. 1913B, 238.
And, “when the party or institution for whose benefit a subscription is made acts thereon and incurs legal liabilities and expense on the faith thereof, the promise ripens into an enforceable contract.” 25 R. G. L. 1402, citing a long list of authorities.
From the face of the instrument evidencing this subscription, and the circumstances of its making, it is clear that the plaintiff bank was made the agent of the comm\unity for the reception and disbursement of the funds contributed; and, the funds being required for use before the maturity of the numerous subscription notes, it is equally clear that the bank was authorized and expected to furnish the funds in advance of their payment by subscribers for the reimbursement of the bank.
It is without dispute that the bank did thus advance for the construction of this highway the amount promised by this defendant. Thereby what was before but a nudum pactum became a binding, enforceable obligation, subject of course to the condition expressed upon its face; none the less so by reason of the fact that the payee bank took the precaution of taking notes from a selected few, of known responsibility, as a guaranty of the final payment promised by original subscribers. .
Upon a very careful survey of the record we cannot see that any error has been committed by the Court of Appeals, and the writ of certiorari will be denied.
Writ denied.