Court Opinion

ID: 6515351
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:26:06.148881+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:00.240145
License: Public Domain

COLEMAN, J.
J. suit was to recover upon coupons of bonds of the appellant. It would have been better pleading for the complaint to have specified the number of coupons, and the respective amounts of the coupons sued upon. No objection however was taken to the form of the complaint. There was no plea denying the ownership of the coupons or their due execution. The case was tried upon the general issue. The coupons are signed “Charles Merriam, Treasurer” and are “payable to bearer in the city of Boston, Mass.” *230The complaint is in common form of a declaration as upon a promissory note, averring generally the execution of the coupons, and that they were payable on the 1st of September, 1891, without any reference in the complaint to the place of payment.
An objection was interposed to the introduction in evidence of the coupons, based, 1st, upon the grounds that there was no proper proof of the execution of the coupons by the defendant; 2d, that they were not endorsed, and showed upon their face the legal title was not in plaintiffs, and the suit should be in the name of the person from whom the consideration moved, for the use of the holder: 3d, that the coupons being made payable at a particular place were not admissible under a complaint which described them as payable generally.
As to the first ground of objection, Buie 29, page 810, of the Code, and sections 2676 and 2770 is a complete, answer to the.objection, there being no plea in except that of the general issue. A coupon of a bond, as described in the complaint, is a written instrument within the meaning of section 2770, supra. As to the second objection. The general law is, and is so recognized in this State, that, unless changed by statute, coupons made payable to bearer, in legal effect, possess all the attributes of negotiable promissory notes, governed by the law merchant. See authorities collated in 4th Amer. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, pp. 430-32, notes. The coupons under consideration are “payable to bearer,” and are made “payable in Boston, Mass.” The statute of this State, as construed in Blackman v. Lehman, Durr & Co., 63 Ala. 547, has no application to the - instruments, the foundation of this litigation. The distinction- was recognized in the subsequent cases of In re Tallassee Manufacturing Co., 64 Ala. 567, and very clearly declared in Reid v. Bank of Mobile, 70 Ala. 199. See also Act of February 28, 1889 (Acts 1888-89, p. 110), amending section 1761 of the Code. If the coupons passed by delivery, plaintiff became the owner of the legal title without an indorsement, and conceding the contention of appellant for the argument, that there was a condition in the face of the coupons that destroyed their character as commercial paper, then under section 2594 of the Code, the party really interested or the beneficial owner must sue, whether he has the legal title or not.—Cobb v. Bryant, 86 Ala. 316.
The last ground of objection presents a question of more difficulty, because of a want of harmony in our own decisions, *231and that is whether an instrument, made payable at a designated place, may be given in evidence under a complaint, counting on an instrument as if made payable generally. The precise question canie before this court at a very eariy day, and in the case of Puckett v. King, 2 Ala. 570, it was held that “a note, which on its face is made negotiable and payable at the Branch Bank of The State of Alabama, at Mobile, can not be given in evidence under a declaration describing a note as payable generally.” The principle here declared was fully recognized in the case of Clancy v. Hilliard, 39 Ala. 713. This rule was departed from in the subsequent cases of Clark v. Moses, 50 Ala. 326, and Morris v. Poillon, Ib. 403. The question has not arisen sinc'e.
The reason given for the rule in the case of Pucket v. King, 2 Ala., supra, is that there is a distinction between the contracts evidenced by the notes, in that as to the note payable at a particular place and day, the maker is authorized to show this fact in his defense, in a plea of tender; his contract therefore is not the same as when he contracts to pay absolutely, and wherever the note may be presented for payment.”
We are not satisfied with the reason here assigned. A plea setting up that the instrument sued upon was made payable at a certain time and place, and that defendant had funds at the time and place to meet the demand, and had kept the money ready at all times, and now brings it into court, <fec., would have been a good plea of tender to the present suit. The fact of having funds to satisfy the claim is defensive matter and must be pleaded by the defendant. Where the instrument offered in evidence showed a different liability-from the one declared upon, when the amounts recoverable are different, then there is such a variance as to exclude the instniment. But no such result follows in the present case. The liability is the same, and the amount recoverable the same. The same defense under a plea of payment or tender could be made whether declared upon, as payable generally or whether the place of payment had been described in the complaint. Some other questions are discussed in the brief of appellant but are without any merit. There was no error in the ruling of the court, and the judgment must be
Affirmed.