21 Ala. 797 | Ala. | 1852
If the payee of the note had failed or refused to perform the services stipulated, that would be a failure of consideration ; but until he does some act, or omits to perform some duty to which he was bound, and which puts him in default, the consideration of the note cannot be said to have failed in any respect.
This question being thus settled, necessarily disposes of the demurrers to the plaintiffs’ replication to the second plea, and to the defendant’s rejoinder to the same replication; and it follows as a necessary consequence, that the court decided the law correctly in overruling the demurrer to the former, and in sustaining that to the latter.
Let us apply these principles then to the fifth plea. It states, in addition to the matter contained in the rejoinder to the plaintiffs’ replication to the second plea, that at the time the note was executed it was the understanding of the parties that Walker would be tried at the next term of the Circuit Court, and that the note should become payable at the time that the said Walter should be tried. We understand the meaning of the plea to be, that the note was not to become payable until the services contemplated by the agreement were rendered. If this is the meaning of it, (and it is the only one we can attach to it) it is repugnant to the face of the note, and makes a materially different contract between the parties. This the law will not permit. If the contract was, in effect, what the plea states it to be, it was the misfortune of the party that it was not correctly expressed in the written agreement, but a court of law has no power to reform it. The plea is bad, and the demurrer to it wás correctly sustained.
The record in this case shows, that the defendant pleaded both by guardian and attorney; the language is, “the said George Walker by his guardian ad litem, Daniel M. Martin, and by attorney, comes and defends, &c.” The question then would seem to be narrowed down to this: does the simple appointment by the court of a guardian ad litem, although the defendant still pleads by attorney, amount to error? We have no hesitation in saying that it does not. We do not wish, however, to be understood as expressing an opinion upon a case where the record did not show that the lunatic pleaded by attorney ; we limit our decision to the jjrccise case presented by the record. Besides, the record in this case would indicate that the guardian ad litem was appointed at the instance of the defendant’s attorney; and it never could be tolerated, that he could be heard here in assigning for error that which he had himself caused to be done below; this would be to permit a party to take advantage of his own wrong.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment is consequently affirmed.