Mobile Savings Bank v. McDonnell

83 Ala. 595
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 83 Ala. 595 (Mobile Savings Bank v. McDonnell) 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
Mobile Savings Bank v. McDonnell, 83 Ala. 595 (Ala. 1887).

Opinion

CLOPTON, J.

— This action was brought by appellant against James McDonnell in his life-time, the testator of appellee, as indorser of a note, of which the following is a copy.

“Mobile, May 19th, 1884.

“Due- the Mobile Savings Bank sixty-five hundred dollars, value received, payable on call.

86,500. “P. Burke.”

The complaint contains several special counts, to each of which a demurrer was interposed and sustained. While the special counts present the claim in different forms, a decision of the case does not require the consideration of many questions raised and argued. The liability of the indorser is determinable on the sufficiency and legal effect of the following substantial averments, which on demurrer are assumed as true: That the consideration of the note was a loan of money, and it was indorsed contemporaneously with the loan. By a custom prevailing among the banks in Mobile, known [598]*598to the indorser, a note payable “on call” bore interest from date, and did not become dne until payment was called for dr demanded. Interest was paid to February 1st, 1885, and in July thereafter payment of the note was called for. On failure to pay, suit was instituted against the maker, to the first court to which suit could be brought after call for payment was made, and judgment obtained. Execution having been issued and returned “no property,” this action was instituted against the indorser. The defense is, that the indorser is discharged by reason of the failure of the plaintiff to use the statutory diligence in bringing suit against the maker. This is the decisive question of contention, the solution of which depends on the applicability and construction of the statutes defining the liability of indorsers on noncommercial paper; several terms of the Circuit and City Courts having passed after the making of the indorsement, and before call for payment, and institution of suit against the maker.

Anote payable “on call” is the same as payable “on demand,” and we shall so consider the note in suit. — 1 Dan. Neg. Inst. § 599.

The status of a party, whose name is irregularly indorsed on paper not mercantile — whether a co-maker, surety, guarantor, or strictly an indorser, or dependent upon intention — is now an unimportant and immaterial question in this State. By the doctrine too well and long settled, by both judicial construction and legislative enactments, to be the subject of controversy, the contract of the indorser on such paper is. conditional, and does not become an absolute undertaking, except upon compliance with the requirements of the statutes regulating and determining the liability of such indorsers, or on a sufficient excuse for non-compliance. Jordan v. Garnett, 3 Ala. 610; Price v. Lavender, 38 Ala. 389; Hooks v. Anderson, 58 Ala. 238. And a complaint against the indorser, which fails to aver or excuse suit against the maker as required by the statutes, does not disclose a substantial cause of action. — Cook v. Mutual Ins. Co., 33 Ala. 37. The statute requires that: “On all contracts assigned by writing, except bills of exchange or other instruments, and notes payable in money at a bank, or private banking-house, or a certain place of payment therein designated, to charge the indorser or assignor, suit must be brought against the maker in the county of his residence, to the first court to which suit can properly be brought, after [599]*599making the indorsement or assignment; and if judgment is obtained, execution must be issued, returnable to the next court thereafter, and his inability to answer such judgment proved by the return of ‘no property.’ ” — Code, § 2112.

This, and correlative sections of the Code, had their origin in the act of 1828, and the judicial construction of the act, which was enacted, as stated in the preamble, because “much injury has been done to the citizens of this State, by means of the uncertainty of the decisions of the courts of this State, in relation to the proper time at which indorsees of bills, notes, bonds, and other instruments made negotiable by indorsement, by law, shall make demand of payment of the payers of such negotiable instruments.” To remedy, the evil, the act, after declaring that the remedy on bills of exchange and notes payable in bank shall be governed by the rules of the mercantile law, as to days of grace, protest and notice, made assignable all other contracts in writing, for the payment of money or property, or for the performance of any duty, and authorized the assignee to maintain such suit thereon as the obligee or payee could have done; “provided, suit be brought to the first court of the county, where the maker resides, to which suit can be brought; and if he shall fail to sue the maker to the first court, as herein provided for, the indorser shall be discharged from liability, unless suit shall be delayed by his consent.”' — Clay’s Dig. 382.

In Jordan v. Garnett, supra, which was decided in 1842, the act was construed as not providing for an irregular indorsement on paper not mercantile; and it was held, that the indorser was liable to pay the debt, if it could not be obtained from the maker by the use of proper diligence; but it was further held, that by analogy, to constitute such diligence, the maker must be sued to the first court after the maturity of the note, unless the failure to sue was excused by some valid reason. This interpretation of the statute was followed in the subsequent case of Fulford v. Johnson, Hendon & Co., 15 Ala. 385. By this judicial construction, such irregular indorsements were practically brought under the influence of the act of 1828, which was incorporated, by legislative enactment, in the Code of 1852, and now constitutes section 2116 of the Code of 1876. This section provides, that all assignments, or indorsements in writing, of the contracts embraced by the provisions of sections 2112 and 2113, whether regular or irregular, must be construed as [600]*600within the meaning of sections 2112 to 2115, inclusive, unless the contrary clearly appears from such assignment or indorsement. And while the provisions are extended to both regular and irregular indorsements, the statute specifically enumerates the causes which shall excuse from bringing suit, obtaining judgment, and issuing execution, as thereby required, which is a significant and material departure from the act of 1828. — Code, § 2115. The complaint does not aver either of these excuses.

The terms of section 2112 are sufficiently comprehensive to include the note in suit — “all contracts assigned by writing, except bills of exchange, or other instruments, and notes payable in money at a bank, or private banking-house, or a certain place of payment therein designated.” A note payable on demand is not embraced in the statutory exceptions, and to incorporate such exception by construction would be judicial legislation. This legislation has relieved us of the embarrassment which might otherwise arise from the contrariety in the decisions, and of having to choose between the conflicting rules maintained by different courts independent of statute, in reference to the time presentment must be made and notice given, to charge the indorser of a note payable on demand. The statute prescribes the time and mode of demand. Neither the convenience of the maker to pay, nor notion of credit, nor the pleasure of the holder, nor the unexpressed intention of the parties, is to be considered or regarded.

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Bluebook (online)
83 Ala. 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobile-savings-bank-v-mcdonnell-ala-1887.