Evans v. Bridges

4 Port. 348
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 Port. 348 (Evans v. Bridges) 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
Evans v. Bridges, 4 Port. 348 (Ala. 1837).

Opinion

COLLIER, J.

— Three points have been raised, by the plaintiff in this case.

1st. That the declaration, being entitled of a term subsequent to the rendition of judgment by the Circuit Court, there was no warrant for the judgment.

2d. That the verdict and judgment are for a sum, larger than the cause of action, disclosed in the record, authorised.

3d. That, though a bill of exchange be protested for non-acceptance, and notice thereof given to the drawer, yet the holder is not authorised to maintain an action, unless payment of the bill is demanded at maturity, and notice of non-payment duly given.

From the record, it appears that the plaintiff, on the seventeenth of December, eighteen hundred and thirty-three, drew on Mr. George M. Rives, at Mobile, in favor of the defendant, at ninety days’ date, fpr f/Ljc hundred and ninety dollars; which bill was pro[350]*350tested, for non-acceptance, on. the twenty-sixth of the same month, and notice thereof duly given to the drawer.

. At the term of the Circuit Court of Wilcox County, holden in May, eighteen hundred and thirty-five, a judgment was.rendered on verdict, for seven hundred and thirty-three dollars and seventy-four cents; a demurrer to the declaration having been first overruled.

1. The first point we think untenable. — It is not essential to a declaration, that it should be entitled of any particular term ; and no matter what be its caption, or whether it have any, — if it discloses a good cause of action, it well subserves its appropriate office. It is certainly .proper, that the declaration should be in Court before judgment, to authorise its rendition ; and where the reverse appears, the judgment .should be reversed. The entry of the judgment, in this case, sufficiently advises us, that the declaration was regularly filed, in reciting, that, the parties came, by their atlornies, and the demurrer to the declaration, having been argued, &c. was overruled.

2. In respect to the second point, it has been determined by this Court, that, where a judgment following a verdict, is rendered for a sum larger than is warranted by the liability sued on, it cannot be reversed on error. The remedy of the party aggrieved, in such case, is an application for new trial.— See Moore vs Coolidge.

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Related

Varner v. Barrett
96 So. 70 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1923)
Hays v. Myrick
47 Ala. 335 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1872)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Port. 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-bridges-ala-1837.