People's Bank & Trust Co. v. Floyd
This text of 75 So. 940 (People's Bank & Trust Co. v. Floyd) 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.
Opinion
Appellant sued appellee on the latter’s promissory note. Appellee pleaded that the note was based in whole or in part upon the unlawful consideration of appellant’s promise to abstain from a criminal prosecution of appellee’s brother, who — all parties seem to agree — had absconded after embezzling a large sum of money, the property of appellant, his employer.
It is clear that this evidence, and every separate part of it, in connection with other evidence going to show that the result of the conference had been communicated by one of the brothers who wrote to appellee, in substance, that her absconding brother would be brought back, tried and convicted, unless she signed the note, was relevant and competent as tending to bring the note in question within the influence of the decisions supra, and upon this status of relevancy and competency we cannot see that tie absence of appellee from the conference — she lived in Mississippi — had any invalidating effect, seeing that its purpose and result were communicated to her, and that thereupon she executed the note in suit. On these facts, or this evidence of facts, the jury might properly, base a finding that appellee had executed and appellant had accepted the note with the mutual understanding that it was given in consideration of a promise by appellant to abstain from a prosecution, which yvould otherwise be put on foot, against appellee’s brother for a high crime committed by him. If so, the note was without the pale of law.
The foregoing disposes of all the assignments of error touched upon in the brief.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
75 So. 940, 200 Ala. 192, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-bank-trust-co-v-floyd-ala-1917.