Waterhouse v. Sterchi Bros. Furniture Co.

139 Tenn. 117 | Tenn. | 1917

Mr. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Sterchi Bros. Furniture Company, defendant in error, brought suit against Waterhouse on a note in the sum of $1,287.14. In the declaration it was averred • that:

*119The sum “was due by a promissory note here to to the court shown, made by Dayton Furniture Company to plaintiff, of which note defendant was in-dorser.”

The declaration was demurred to, but the question discussed below was not raised by the demurrer. On the demurrer being overruled, the case was tried before the circuit judge without the intervention of a jury, and he rendered judgment against Water-house, who appealed to the court of civil appeals. That court affirmed the judgment.

It appears that the defendant moved in arrest of judgment on the ground:

“The declaration avers that defendant is an in-dorser of the note sued on, of which the plaintiff is payee, but fails to allege that notice of dishonor was ever given defendant as such indorser, or that defendant had waived said notice.”

The contention of the Sterchi Bros. Furniture Company is that the note was indorsed by Water-house before delivery, and that, if a bill of exceptions had been preserved by Waterhouse, as there was not, it would have shown the note with an in-dorsement on the back thereof above Waterhouse’s name, as follows:

“Protest, notice of dishonor and presentation is waived. ’ ’

Such a' note appears in the transcript but not identified as a part of the declaration or of any bill of exceptions.

*120The main assignment of error in this court by Waterhouse is that the motion in arrest should have been sustained.

The indorser of a note thus irregularly indorsed before delivery is entitled to notice of protest. Pharr v. Stevens, 124 Tenn., 669, 139 S. W., 730.

In Knott v. Hicks, 2 Humph. (21 Tenn.), 162, where the action was on a promissory note against indorsers, and there was no averment of notice of dishonor having been given to the indorsers, and no averment setting forth a legal excuse for the failure to do so, it was held that the omission in the declaration was subject to a motion in arrest, in that no cause of action whatever was set forth; the omission being one that was not cured by verdict. See, also, Railroad v. Maxwell, 113 Tenn., 464, 82 S. W., 1137, and cases cited.

We are’ persuaded that, notwithstanding this rule, the indorser cannot succeed on his motion in arrest. A distinction must be taken between that ruling and the pending case if it he true or if it must be assumed to be true that the note contract with its in-dorsement was in proof with waiver of demand, protest, and notice on the part of Waterhouse, as in-dorser.

The suit was based on the note. That instrument was not copied into the declaration so as to set forth the waiver, but profert was made of it, that being a formula in pleading whereby the pleader professes to bring into court an instrument to he *121shown to the court and to his adversary. It is true that mere profert of a note does not make the instrument, the foundation of the action, a part of the declaration, when that pleading is tested for sufficiency by a demurrer. Insurance Co. v. Thornton, 97 Tenn., 1, 15, 40 S. W., 136. The court is confined to the face of the declaration in such test.

But a further rule of pleading is that, when oyer is craved by the defendant and granted by the court, the effect is to make the instrument a part of the record, and the defendant may demur or plead at his option, treating the note as incorporated in the declaration, as though set Out verbatim therein.

If an element essential to the existence of a cause of action be omitted from the declaration containing profert, and oyer be craved and the instrument be spread upon the record, the defect will be cured if the instrument supplies or corrects the omission. 31 Cyc., 555; Edwards v. Weister, 2 A. K. Marsh. (Ky.), 382. The omission to aver demand, protest, and notice would be cured in such event when defendant’s waiver thereof, in the note itself, was shown.

The rule is thus summarized in 8 C. J., 906:

“ Where a waiver of demand or notice of dishonor is expressed in the instrument sued oh, no allegation as to presentment or notice is necessary.”

And it has been held that, where the check sued on is set forth with an indorsement across its face showing that payment thereon was stopped, it suf*122ficiently appears that payment of the check had been countermanded so as. to preclude the necessity of alleging notice of dishonor. National Copper Bank v. Davis, 47 Utah, 236, 152 Pac., 1180; Citizens’ Bank v. Millett, 103 Ky., 1, 44 S. W., 366, 44 L. R. A., 664, 82 Am. St. Rep., 546.

Now the question arises: Is the case to he deflected adversely by reason of the fact that the note is brought into the record by proof rather than by way of oyer granted? What substance can there be -to support a divergent ruling? It would seem that, if the note becomes a part of the record by way of sworn testimony, it should not • weigh less in plaintiffs favor than when it is imported into a pleading of record by way of a quasi fiction.

If, then, the proof had shown the note to contain the waiver, the motion in arrest of judgment could not be sustained for the reason that defendant Waterhouse’s liability would not be conditional upon his being given notice of protest, but absolute in that regard. An arrest of judgment in such a case is fairly forbidden by Acts 1911, chapter 32 (Thompson’s Shannon’s Code, section 4902al), which provides that no judgment shall be set aside for any errors in procedure, unless in the opinion of the court, after an examination of the entire record, it shall affirmatively appear that the error affected the result of the trial.

■Waterhouse, as appellant, did not see fit to preserve a- bill of exceptions, incorporating the proof *123adduced. In that event, under a familiar rule, we must assume that there was sufficient testimony to support the judgment rendered against him by the circuit judge; in other words, that Waterhouse was found to he -liable notwithstanding there was a failure to present or protest the note and to give notice; and such liability would he consequent upon the asserted waiver in the note when produced in evidence as the basis of the judgment.

On the motion in arrest of judgment we should, under the acts of 1911, and do assume, that the note was produced in evidence containing the waiver. Affirmed.