Hamilton v. Adams

108 So. 1, 214 Ala. 440, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 18, 1926
Docket7 Div. 637.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 108 So. 1 (Hamilton v. Adams) 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
Hamilton v. Adams, 108 So. 1, 214 Ala. 440, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 11 (Ala. 1926).

Opinions

SAYRE, J.

Appellant sued appellee in a statutory action of detinue for a team of horses and a wagon. Plaintiff’s title was predicated on a mortgage signed “W. M. Adams” and attested by two subscribing witnesses. The execution of the mortgage was denied by a sworn plea. The trial was before the court without a jury, and, upon hearing the evidence, the court, holding the mortgage to be invalid, gave judgment for the defendant.

It is not disputed that Adams was unable to write Ms name. Plaintiff’s case was that Adams requested the mortgagee, plaintiff’s intestate, to subscribe his (defendant’s) name to the instrument, and that he did so; defendant, the while, touching the penstaff. But defendant as a witness denied that he requested intestate to write his name upon the paper or touched the pen while it was being written. - It has long been the law of this state that one person’s name may be' signed for him by another in Ms presence and by his direction (Goldsmith v. Gates, 88 So. 861, 205 Ala. 633); but the obligee in a contract cannot become the agent of the obligor for such service (Carlisle v. Campbell, 76 Ala. 249). A good many closely related cases may be found stated in Barksdale v. Bullington, 69 So. 891, 194 Ala. 624. The statute (section 8033, Code 1923) requires that mortgages of personal property, to be valid, must be made in writing and subscribed by the mortgagor. While a literate person, who knows what he is doing, but suffers at the time from some physical disability, may execute his signature with the help of another, it would seem that an illiterate, who cannot write, may not have the assistance of the obligee in the contract to be executed, if such contract falls within a class required by the statute to be subscribed. But, aside from this, the judgment must needs be affirmed, because, for aught we can learn from the record, the trial judge accepted the testimony of defendant to the effect that he neither requested plaintiff’s intestate to sign his (defendant’s) name nor touched the pen while his name was being subscribed. In this defendant is corroborated in a general way by the testimony of Edge whose name appeared on the mortgage as a subscribing witness. If this was the conclusion reached by the trial judge — and it may have been — we cannot say that it had not reasonable support in the evidence.

It results that the judgment must be affirmed.

Affirmed.

ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.

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Related

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33 So. 2d 475 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1947)
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143 So. 902 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1932)
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Bluebook (online)
108 So. 1, 214 Ala. 440, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-adams-ala-1926.