Anniston Loan & Trust Co. v. Stickney

108 Ala. 146
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 108 Ala. 146 (Anniston Loan & Trust Co. v. Stickney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anniston Loan & Trust Co. v. Stickney, 108 Ala. 146 (Ala. 1895).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J.

The suit was founded on the defendants indorsement of a promissory note, which is in these words and figures :

“$1100.00 Anniston, Ala., February 11th, 1893. S-ix months after date, I promise to pay to the order of Benj. Micou, eleven hundred dollars. Value received. Negotiable and payable at Anniston Loan and Trust Company, of Anniston, Ala.

And in case this note is nót paid at maturity and suit is brought for its collection, we agree to pay ten per cent, attorney’s fees; and each of us, whether maker or endorser, hereby waive and renounce for myself and faniily any and a-11 homestead or exemption rights we [148]*148may bave guaranteed to us by the constitution, or statute laws of the State of Alabama, or any of the United States.

Y. H. Marshall.

Due Aug. 1 — 14.

Certificate No. 42 for 31 shares of the capital stock of the Anniston. Transfer attached as collateral.”

(Endorsed on back.) “It is hereby agreed that this indebtedness is to be extended for six months from the maturity of this note, if so desired by the makers and endorsers, upon their giving a new note similar to this.

John H. Noble, Sec.

Benj. Micou,

R. H. Stickney, Jr.

Demand, notice and protest waived, Aug. 14, ’93.

The trial was had before the judge of the city court, without the intervention of a jury. The pleadings are voluminous, but the case involves only one question of merit and importance, andas that was directly presented and decided by the-city court, we shall consider and determine it, without reference, to any matter of mere pleading. That question is, whether the instrument indorsed, has the essential qualities and properties of a promissory note governed by the commercial law.

Though, according to the law merchant, a promissory note is not confined to any set form of words, whatever are the words employed', they must import an unconditional promise to pay to another’s order or to bearer, a certain sum of money at a time therein specified. — Story on Promissory Notes, § 1. To these essential requisites of a promissory note, certainty in obligation,’ certainty in the money to be paid, and certainty in the time of payment, the statute adds certainty of the place of payment — :to be negotiable and governed by the commercial .law, the statute require that; the note be payable “at a bank, or private banking house, or a certain place of payment therein designated.” — Code, § 1756/

At the time óf making the. indorsement of the instrument, The Anniston Loan & Trust Company was a cor-, poration engaged in the" business of banking, having a known place of business in the city of Anniston. This fact was shown affirmatively by extrinsic evidencef rea-' [149]*149dering certain the place at which, the instrument was payable, whether we read it as payable at a bank, “or at a certain place of payment therein designated.”- When a promissory note is made, having a place of payment expressed, the place may be distinguished, individualized and rendered certain by extrinsic evidence, for the same reason, that when the de-vscription in an instrument of writing of persons or things, or places, is vague and general, or is applicable to several persons, or several species of things, or several places, extrinsic evidence may be received to give application to the description. — 1 Green. Ev., § 288 ; Rudolph v. Brewer, 96 Ala. 189.

The note and the agreement thereon endorsed, must be read and construed as if they were embodied in and formed a single writing So reading and construing them, the contention is, that the note was not payable in money, but payable in another similar note,- or .in any event, that the time of payment was uncertain, and of consequence, the note is wanting in the essential qualities of an obligation to pay money, and of certainty in the time of payment.

The error of the contention in the first respect seems obvious. It is not payment, satisfaction of the obligation resting upon the makers and endorsers, which the endorsement contemplated, or which upon any just construction can be deduced from its words. All that was contemplated, was that the maker and indorser, should have the option or privilege of -extending the debt, not of paying it, by giving a new note similar to the existing note. The giving of a promissory note or bill of exchange without more, is not satisfaction of a pre-existing indebtedness. The only effect of taking such note or bill, is, ordinarily, to suspend the creditor’s remedy upon the original indebtedness, until the maturity of such note or bill. — 1 Brick. Dig., 287, §§ 501-02.

In Keel v. Larkin, 72 Ala. 493, it was said : “The giving of the debtor’s own note or bill, even though negotiable, does not, according to what is deemed the better doctrine as settled in this State, operate to discharge such debt unless accepted in absolute payment.”

In Lee v. Green, 83 Ala. 491, it was also said : “It is the settled doctrine in this State .that when the debtor gives his own security, of no higher nature, for a pre[150]*150existing debt it is considered, in the absence of an agreement express or implied, as collateral or additional security or a conditional payment, which does not operate an extinguishment of the original debt, but an extension of the time of payment.”

In 2 Dan. on Neg. Instruments, § 1226, it is said: “ It is a .general principle of law that one simple execu-tory contract does not extinguish another for which it is substituted, and negotiable securities form no exception. And by the general commercial law, as well of England as of the United States a bill of exchange drawn or promissory note made by the debtor does not discharge the precedent debt for which it is given, unless such be the agreement of the parties.” The same author, in Vol. 2, § 1266a, further says : “The delivery or surrender to the maker of the old note upon its being renewed does not in itself raise a presumption of its extinguishment by the new, it being considered as a conditional surrender, and that its obligation is restored and revived if the new note be not duly paid.” To the same effect is Crockett v. Trotter, 1 Stew. & Port. 446. And in 3 Randolph on Com. Paper, § 1511, it is said : “The renewal of a bill or note is not in general payment.”

But it is insisted, that reading the indorsement, as it must be read, as if it was incorporated in the body of the note, the time of payment is contingent, uncertain, and the contingency or uncertainty is destructive of its negotiability. The authorities to which we have been referred in support of the proposition, have' been carefully examined and considered. — Citizens Bank of Piollet, 126 Pa. St. 194 ; (S. C. 4 L. R. A. 190 ; 12 Am. St. 860 ;) Second National Bank v. Wheeler, 75 Mich. 546; First National Bank v. Carson, 60 Mich. 432. In the first case, a promissory note had on its margin, a memorandum in these words : “This note, is given for advancements, and it is the understanding it will be renewed at maturity.” The court, after declaring that it is a necessary quality of negotiable paper that it should be single, certain, unconditional, not subject to any contingency, said, it was manifest, “that the only inquiry necessary to determine the question of negotiability is, the effect of the memorandum upon the terms of the note.

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108 Ala. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anniston-loan-trust-co-v-stickney-ala-1895.