Hightower v. Ivy

2 Port. 308
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 Port. 308 (Hightower v. Ivy) 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
Hightower v. Ivy, 2 Port. 308 (Ala. 1835).

Opinion

By Mr. Chief-J ustice Saekold :

This action was assumpsit, brought in the Circuit Court by the present plaintiff against the defendant, on a promissory note payable by S. W. Maples to the defendant, and by the latter indorsed to the plaintiff-.

The first count is in the usual form upon the note ; the second and third counts are also on the note, with averments of the insolvencjr of the maker at the time of the indorsement, and ever since, and of the indor-ser's knowledge of the fact: the fourth count is for a slave sold and delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant; the fifth count is for money lent and advanced, money paid, laid out, &c. and for money had and received. The plea was non-assumpsit.

[310]*310From a bill of exceptions, it appears that the plain-, tiff introduced as evidence on the trial, the note with the indorsement as described; also, that at and before the time of the indorsement, the defendant, as indor-ser, agreed with the plaintiff, that if the note was not. paid by the maker, he would pay it. This evidence-was admitted by the Court in reference only to the fourth count, which was on the sale of the slave, and ruled to be inadmissible on either of the others. The opinion of the Court was further declared — that under the last count no evidence could be received, other-than proof of money actually received; also, that the evidence offered, to prove that the indorser agreed to-be responsible if Maples did not pay, could be adduced only under- the fourth • count, as it was variant, from the operation of the written assignment. The plaintiff proved that after the lapse of five or six months from the time of the indorsement, the note was presented to Maples for payment, and not paid, and that about one month thereafter, he the plain-, tiff, notified the defendant of the fact, and urged pay-, ment .of him; that defendant then agreed to return the slave, which was the consideration for the assignment of the note, and take it up, making no objection to want of diligence in regard to it; that shortly af-terwards, however, the defendant refused to do so,, and then told plaintiff that unless he sued Maples in a few days, he would be no longer bound as an indor-ser, to which he replied that no court occurred so soon, but that Maples should be sued to the first court — to which the defendant made no objection. The plaintiff then, by proper evidence, proved, that before the then next court, he did sue Maples, obtained judgment, and had execution levied on a ne-. gro as the property of Maples, which was released [311]*311on it béing ascertained it did not belong to him." The plaintiff then offered to prove that at the time of the transfer of the note, and since, Maples had been insolvent; but the Court excluded it as inadmissible. It was also in evidence that the defendant had purchased a slave from the plaintiff, and gave his note for the price, and after it fell due, transferred the note of * Maples to the plaintiff and took up his own. It was also in proof, that Maples had offered to pay the plaintiff about $200 upon his own note,, which plaintiff refused to receive, because suit had been commenced upon the note. The Court then instructed the jury, that neither the agreement when- the note was transferred, nor the insolvency of the maker, would excuse the plaintiff from due diligence in demanding payment, and giving notice to the indorser of the non-payment; and that if the plaintiff had acted so negligently that the indorser would sustain a loss by having the note returned upon him, or if he 'could have received the money or any portion thereof, and failed to do so, that he must, bear' the loss; •and this was all the evidence offered and received.

The plaintiff now assigns as erroneous,

1. That the Circuit Judge refused evidence of the •defendant’s promise, made at the time of the assignment, to pay the note in the event the maker did not; except in reference to the count on the original consideration.

In this, the views of the Circuit Court were correct. The assignment in writing at the time plaintiff received Maples’s note, is the highest and best evidence of the contract of assignment. This can not be varied or controled by any evidence of a parol agreement to the contrary, of the same'date. This principle has been recognised by previous decisions of this [312]*312Court. The parol evidence was admitted in reference to the count on the original contract for the slave. The plaintiff was entitled to nothing more. See Sumerville vs. Stephenson & Johnson.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Port. 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hightower-v-ivy-ala-1835.