White v. Central Nat. Bank
This text of 78 So. 74 (White v. Central Nat. Bank) 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
Count 2 alleged that the plaintiff “is a *299 holder in due course of said note.” Under the provisions of our statute (section 5007, Code 1007), a holder in due course is a holder who has taken the instrument under the following conditions:
“(1) That the instrument is complete and regular upon its face.
“(2) That he became the holder of it before it was overdue, and without notice that it had been previously dishonored, if such was the fact.
“(3) That he took it in good faith and for value.
“(4) That at the time it was negotiated to him he had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating it.”
These pleas therefore presented no sufficient answer to said count 2, and reversible error cannot be predicated upon the action of the court in sustaining demurrer thereto.
Other questions presented by this record are, we think, sufficiently answered by the holding of this court in the two following cases: Neill v. Central National Bank, 78 South. 73, 1 present term; Sample v. Tennessee Valley Bank, 76 South. 936, 2 present term — which seem to have arisen from like transactions as that here involved.
Finding no error in the record,- the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
78 So. 74, 201 Ala. 298, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-central-nat-bank-ala-1918.