21 Ala. 400 | Ala. | 1852
— Assumpsit on a writing as follows: “ The State of Alabama, St. Clair County. Messrs. Crook & Moore, attys. Please pay Daniel West two hundred and ninety-three dollars and seventy-five cents, and all interest on the same, the demand I have against the estate of David Yarbrough, deceased. 11th Sept. ’43. Willis L. West.”
The plaintiff, in his declaration, declares upon this as a bill of exchange in two counts; sets it out in hmc verba in the third, and in the fourth calls it an order, by which said West directs Messrs. Crook & Moore, attys., to pay, &c. The declaration also avers, that the plaintiff below was the endorsee of Daniel West, the party to whom the instrument was given.
It is clear, from the authorities cited by the counsel for the plaintiff in error, that this is.not a bill of exchange. To say the most of it, it is a direction given to the attorneys to pay to Daniel West the sum of two hundred and ninety-threeTy„ dollars, out of the fund collected, or to be collected, upon the demand which Willis West had against,the estate of D. Yar-brough; and, considered in this aspect, it would not be a bill of exchange. It is drawn upon a particular fund, and not upon the general credit of the drawer. The claim against the estate of Yarbrough is clearly not mentioned as a fund out of which the drawees are to reimburse themselves, but as the fund drawn for. The just and fair construction of the instrument is, that the drawer had a demand in the hands of Crook & Moore, as attorneys, against the estate of Yar-brough ; that he gave this order to the attorneys to pay it over to Daniel West. They are directed to pay him $293 77/7> with all interest, the demand which he then had against the estate of said Yarbrough: that is, the attorneys are requested to pay over this demand to the payee, amounting to $293Ty„, with the interest. The term “demand,” as used in the instrument after the ellipsis, is put in apposition Avith the $293 77/„ in money, and means that the money ordered to be paid over is the amount or proceeds of the demand against Yar-brough’s estate.
Being, therefore, a direction given to the attorneys to pay over the proceeds of a demand in their hands to the payee, the instrument does not fall Avithin the statute authorizing notes, bills, bonds, and other instruments for the payment of money, to be assigned. The decision of our predecessors, in the case of Waters v. Carleton, 4 Por. 205, is an authority in point, to show that the plantiff had no title by his endorsement, and that this Avas not such an instrument as authorizes a recovery upon it. See, to the same point, the authorities
As this view is decisive of the case, it is unnecessary to notice the other points. The judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.