Goldberg v. Stone

65 So. 454, 10 Ala. App. 485, 1914 Ala. App. LEXIS 231
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 23, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 65 So. 454 (Goldberg v. Stone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldberg v. Stone, 65 So. 454, 10 Ala. App. 485, 1914 Ala. App. LEXIS 231 (Ala. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

PELHAM, J.

This case, involving no other propo-

sitions than heretofore presented, was before this court on a former appeal and is to be found reported in the sixth volume of the Alabama Appellate Court reports at page 249, 60 South. 744; the appellants here being the appellees on that appeal. There are many assignments of error made upon the record, but they practically raise but one question, and the assignments relating to this question were discussed together by appellants’ counsel on oral argument, and are treated in the same manner in extensive and well-prepared briefs in support of the-appellants’ contention.

The proposition or construction so earnestly presented and persistently contended for by appellants’ counsel is that, under the provisions of our Negotiable Instruments Law (Acts 1907, p. 660 et seq.; Code, § 4958 et seq.), the appellants as the named payees of a negotiable instrument can be “a holder in due course” as against the appellee, one of the parties to it as maker or surety.

We considered this proposition at length on the former appeal (see opinion on application for rehearing), and the only argument that is now offered in support of the appellants’ contention that was not before advanced and considered by us is based on the recognized canon of construction acquiesced in by all of the courts, that, when a statute is subsequently adopted or re-enacted after it has received judicial construction, the known and settled construction that has been given to it by the courts is considered as becoming a part of it — “silently incorporated” — and that the subsequent adoption includes the adoption of the construction that has been [489]*489given and affixed to the statute. It is urged in this connection that our negotiable instruments law of 1907 is substantially taken from, and is a re-enactment in substance and effect, by the lawmaking powers of our state, of the English statute known as the bills of exchange act of 1882. If this is the case, and a comparison of the statutes- shows that it is, then the rule of construction contended for would apply. — I. C. C. v. Del. L. & W. R. R. Co., 220 U. S. 235, 31 Sup. Ct. 392, 55 L. Ed. 448;, McDonald v. Hovey, 110 U. S. 619, 4 Sup. Ct. 142, 28 L. Ed. 269.

Those parts or sections of our negotiable instruments law involved in the question presented here on the rulings of the trial court appear to be adopted from sections of the English bills of exchange act that are identical with our law. In fact, our statute only substantially differs from the English statute in that, not having stamp laws, as England has, our statute does not-include and make provision for matters having reference to those laws. Our statute apparently being an adoption in substance of the English law, it then becomes necessary to examine the English cases construing these sections of the bills of exchange act prior to their adoption or enactment into our laws, to ascertain if they had received and affixed to them a known, settled judicial construction by the courts when adopted and enacted into law in this state.

In passing from a reference to a comparison of the two statutes (our own and that of England) as showing them to be substantially the same it may be well, to prevent confusion in considering the English cases and in discussing the question in connection with the two statutes, to call attention to the fact that the method of numbering the sections of the two statutes is by no means the same, and that section 191 of the Negotiable [490]*490Instruments Law (Acts 1907, p. 692; Code, § 5138), defining the meaning of terms used, appears as section 2 in the English bills of exchange act; the section stating what constitutes a “holder in due course” is numbered 52 in the Negotiable Instruments Luav (Code, § 5007), but appears as section 29 in the bills of exchange act; AAdiile the provision of our statute as to Avhen an instrument' can be said to be negotiated is numbered as section 30 (Code, § 4985) and is designated as section 31 in the English statute. The sections of our statute as to delivery and filing up blanks are someAvhat different from the English statute, due principally to the stamp law of that country, which is taken into consideration, and these provisions framed Avith due regard- to it. The first clause of section 16 of the Negotiable Instruments Law (Code, § 4973) is the equivalent of section 84 of the bills of exchange act, providing that a note is inchoate and incomplete till delivery to the payee or bearer.

The first English case in point to which our attention is directed as the earliest decision of the courts of that country bearing directly on the proposition is that of Lewis v. Clay, L. J. [1898] 67 Q. B. DD. 224, in which the Lord Chief Justice in rendering the judgment of the court flatly and pointedly construes sections of the English bills of exchange act of 1882 that are identical Avith those of our Negotiable Instruments Luav of 1907, under consideration in this case, adversely to the contention of appellants. Quoting from the opinion of the Lord Chief Justice in this case:

“It will be apparent from a consideration of the facts of the case that the plaintiff Avas not a ‘holder in due course’ at all, but he was, in fact, simply the named payee of two promissory notes. Further an examination of sections 20, 21, 29, 30, and 38 [bills of exchange act], [491]*491relating expressly to bills, and sections 83, 84, 88, and 89, relating to promissory notes, will make it quite clear that a ‘holder in due course’ is a person to whom, after its completion by and as between the immediate parties, the bill or- note has been negotiated. In the present case the plaintiff is named as payee on the face of the promissory note, and therefore is one of the immediate parties. The promissory notes have, in fact, never teen negotiated within the meaning of the act.” (Italics supplied.)

The next of the English cases considering this question is that of Herdman v. Wheeler [1902] L. R. 1 K. B. 361, in which the issue before the court for determination turned on a construction of what constituted the “negotiation” of a stamped paper which was signed in blank with an authorization to fill it in for one amount, and which was in breach of authority fraudulently filled in for a larger amount; and the named payee, having in good faith paid full value without notice of the breach of authority, brought suit on the note. The court held that the delivery of the note under such circumstances to the named payee was not a negotiation of the note within the meaning of applicable provisions of the bills, of exchange act so as to entitle the plaintiff as payee to recover; in other words, a holding that the delivery to the plaintiff as payee did not constitute a negotiation of the note and left it subject to the same defenses as if it were nonnegotiable.

In this last-cited case (Herdman v. Wheeler, supra), the holding in Lewis v. Clay, supra, that the payee of a note cannot under any circumstances be a holder of it in due course is criticised as dictum and questioned. It is said, however, by the justice (Channell) in rendering the opinion of the court:

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Bluebook (online)
65 So. 454, 10 Ala. App. 485, 1914 Ala. App. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldberg-v-stone-alactapp-1914.