Colgin v. State Bank

11 Ala. 222
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 Ala. 222 (Colgin v. State Bank) 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
Colgin v. State Bank, 11 Ala. 222 (Ala. 1847).

Opinion

ORMOND, J.

The first point made, that- the motion was discontinued because not made at the first term, and continued, is not sustained by the record. It does appear from the bill of exceptions, that the motion was placed on the docket at the September term, 1841, that being the term at which the motion indicated by the notice was to be made, and regularly continued from that term, down to the trial of the cause. Whether, if such had not been the fact, it would not have been waived by the subsequent appearance of the defendant, and the continuance of the motion at his instance, is a point we need not now determine.

The defendant having appeared and pleaded, and an issue being made up and submitted to a jury, the proceeding lost its summary character, except that to sustain the jurisdiction it was necessary to show, that the note sued on was the property of the bank; in all other respects it is to be governed by the rules'which regulate suits commenced in the ordinary mode. This question .was fully considered in Smith v. The Branch Bank at Mobile, 5 Ala. 26, where the result of all the cases on this subject is stated to be, that “ if the defendant appear, it will be evidence of notice, and if an issue is made up between the parties and submitted to a jury, it is then like any other cause commenced in the ordinary mode, except that it must appear upon the record that the court had jurisdiction to entertain the motion.”

Here the defendant appeared; there was therefore no necessity for the production of the notice, as that was admitted by the appearance. The plea of the defendant, when an issue is tendered, is not to the notice, but to the motion, which the plaintiff makes for judgment upon the debt sought to be recovered. It was not therefore competent for the defendant, [226]*226having pleaded to the merits, to move a rejection of the note, for a variance between that and the notice. But as a material difference between the note, or other security offered in evidence, and that described in the notice, would be an available defence to the defendant, either by plea, or by a motion to quash the proceedings, and as the whole proceeding was conducted without any regard to form, and the notice was in fact produced and read by the plaintiff, we will consider it as if the appropriate motion had been made by the defendant.

The notice being merely designed to apprise the defendant of the intended motion, nothing more is necessary, than that it should describe the debt upon which the motion was to be made with reasonable certainty. The rules of the common law in respect to a variance in pleading, have no application to such a case as this. Indeed, the statute does not in terms require the notice to be in writing. This precise question arose in this court at an early day in Lyon v. The State Bank, 1 Stew. 442. The notice in that case was identical in its terms with the present, and on a motion to quash, the court held it to be sufficient, saying that a notice in writing, which so far identifies the debt for which judgment will be moved, as to afford reasonable certainty, is sufficient. This is the leading case upon these summary proceedings, and has been adhered to from that day to this. • Nor if the question was now open, would it be possible to doubt, that this notice did give the defendant full information of the precise debt, upon which the motion was to be predicated, and this was all the statute contemplated. If necessary, it would also be worthy of inquiry, whether such a motion could be entertained, five years after the appearance of the party.

The case of Turner v. Lazarus, 6 Ala. 875, is a decisive authority in favor of the decision of the court below, respecting the deposition of E. B. Colgin. The bank could have selected one of the makers of the note, or have embraced them all in its motion for a judgment. It did move for a judgment against E. B. and J. Colgin, and this in its effect is precisely the same as if it had commenced a suit in the ordinary mode against them jointly; and as in the latter case a discontinuance as to one, or a judgment in favor of one, [227]*227would be a discontinuance of the entire action, it follows that E. B. Colgin was not a competent witness for his co-defendant. It does not change the rule, that one of the parties is a mere surety, being sued jointly, the judgment must be joint,-either for or against both; and a several judgment in favor of one defendant, would be a discontinuance of the action as to the other.

The charge moved for by the defendant, that the plaintiff could not recover, without proving by whom the memorandum in red ink on the face of the note was made, proceeds upon the supposition, that the onus of proving for what amount the note was discounted, lay upon the bank. The necessary inference from the appearance of this note, and the ' attending circumstances, is, that the note was made and offered to the bank for discount. It is filled up with the sum of $2000, and is without a date, and the writing upon the face of the note in red ink, is for the purpose of showing what sum was lent upon the note, and the time when it was lent. The fact that the bank had possession.of the note, is prima facie evidence of title, which it could only obtain by a discount of the note, and if the bank had not made this entry upon the face of the note, the presumption would be that it had discounted the note for the entire amount for which it was executed, and it would have devolved upon the defend- _ ant to aver and prove, that it was discounted for- a less sum than the note on its face called for. The only effect then of the memorandum on the face of the note, was an admission by the bank of the true sum due upon it. From this it appears, that the court correctly refused the charge which was moved for, and although the court erred in the charge, which was given, considered as an abstract legal question, it was an error which, so far from prejudicing, benefited the defendant, as without the memorandum, the possession of the note was evidence of title in the bank for the full amount.

In Findley v. The State Bank, 6 Ala. 244, we held that when the bank refused to discount a note, unless additional security was given, the mere possession of the note, no additional security being given, was not evidence that the bank had afterwards discounted it. Here no suspicion was cast [228]*228upon the title of the bank, and the possession was evidence grima facie of ownership.

The remaining question relates to the jurisdiction of the Court, which depends upon the validity of the certificate made by Mr. Hawn as the agent of the bank commissioners, that the debt was bona fide the property of the bank.

The objections which have been taken to this certificate, involve a consideration of the true character of the commissioners, appointed under the act of the last session of the legislature, “to regulate the.affairs of the bank, and provide for the payment of the State bonds.” This act vests the entire interest of the State in the State Bank and its branches, in certain persons, for the purpose of collecting the debts due the bank, and for the payment of the State debt, giving to them large discretionary power, and before entering upon their duties, they were required to execute a bond, and take and subscribe an oath, which were to be filed in the office of the Secretary of State.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ala. 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colgin-v-state-bank-ala-1847.