18 Ala. 382 | Ala. | 1850
This suit was brought against the plaintiffs in -error, as acceptors of a bill of exchange for three thousand dollars, drawn by Wm. T. Stone, in favor of T. W. Brodnax, on the £rm of Brodnax, Newton & Co. Tbe bill purported to be endorsed by tbe payee, .and accepted by Brodnax, Newton & Co. Judgment was rendered against Winston by. default, but Sp.'sgue filed a plea, putting in issue tbe acceptance of tbe bill, as well as the drawing and the endorsement thereof by the parities, whose names appeared as drawer and endorser. On the
When a plaintiff derives his title to a bill through an endorsement, if the factum of the endorsement be put in issue by the pleadings, he must prove the signature of the endorser, but this may be done in several ways, for instance, if the suit be against the acceptor, and he has admitted the genuineness of the endorsement, this admission is evidence against him and sufficiently proves the endorsement. — Chitty on Bills, 635, note c; Kelpinger v. Griffith, 2 G. & Johns. 296; Greenl. Ev. vol. 2, § 159. Applying this rule to the evidence introduced in the court below* we think the court correctly held that the signature of the en
2. But we feel constrained to hold that the court erred in regard to the measure of damages. It is true, that if the bill created a Iona fide debt from the acceptors to the payee, he might sell it in market for whatever it would bring,' and his endorsement would entitle the holder to recover the full amount against the acceptors. — Crow v. Hendricks, 7 Wend. 569; Munn v. The President & Directors of the Commission Co., 15 Johns. 44; Mazerzan v. Mead, 21 Wend. 285; Nickols v. Fearson et al., 7 Pet. 103. But the evidence does not warrant the legal presumption that the bill constituted a valid debt from the acceptors to the payee. It was first seen in the possession of one