Court Opinion

ID: 3220960
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 15:57:42.577466+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:35:23.355859
License: Public Domain

The First National Bank of Ozark, Ala., plaintiff in the court below brought its action in assumpsit, to recover of R.A. Caton, defendant in the court below, certain money alleged to be due by promissory note. The defendant interposed his plea of the general issue, and a verified plea that the plaintiff was not the owner of the instrument sued upon. There was judgment for the plaintiff, and defendant appeals.
The complaint contained but one count, and declared upon a promissory note alleged to have been executed by defendant on the 22d day of March, 1921, and payable to G.P. Dowling Hardware Company, or order on the 1st day of October, 1921, and by the payee thereof indorsed and negotiated to plaintiff.
Issue was joined between plaintiff and defendant on defendant's plea of the general issue; i.e., non assumpsit and defendant's special and verified plea that plaintiff was not the owner of the instrument sued upon. In support of its complaint the plaintiff offered in evidence a certain instrument in writing which, among other things, purports to have been executed at Red Level, Ala., March 22, 1921, and which purports to be payable to G.P. Dowling Hardware Company, Ozark, Ala., or order, in the sum of $658.50; the instrument contains a provision covering attorney's fees, costs of collection, and recordation of the said instrument; the instrument also conveys to the payee certain personal property to secure the payment of the above amount, "as well as all else we may now or hereafter owe to the said G.P. Dowling Hardware Company before the payment thereof," and the payee of said instrument is authorized before or after the maturity of said instrument to seize and sell the personal property thereby conveyed for the payment of the amount, or amounts, thereby secured. The instrument concludes with the clause; "Given under our hands and seals this 22d day of March, 1921, R.A. Caton. [L.S.]." Said instrument was witnessed by two witnesses, and had documentary stamps to the amount of 14 cents attached thereto.
The defendant objected to said instrument being offered in evidence upon the grounds that the instrument offered was not the paper referred to and sued on; that the instrument offered in evidence was not a promissory note, and was not the paper sued upon in this case. The court overruled the defendant's objections to the introduction of said instrument, and the defendant excepted. The objection and exception are founded upon the contention that the instrument sued upon was not a promissory note, but was a bond, or specialty. The same question was presented by the defendant's request for the general charge; the attention of the trial court being directed to the fact that defendant claimed there was a variance between pleadings and proof. The trial court refused to give the general charge for defendant, and defendant again excepted. A motion for a new trial raised the same question, *Page 386 
and this motion was overruled and denied by the trial court, and the defendant again reserved his exception to this action of the court.
The sole question, as we understand this record, is whether or not there was a variance between the pleadings and the proof. The complaint seeks the recovery of money alleged to be due by a promissory note. The defendant answers the complaint, and says that I owe you nothing by promissory note. And thus the issue is clearly presented.
The appellant asserts that the instrument sued upon is plainly a negotiable instrument, and refers us to the case of Bledsoe v. City National Bank of Selma, 7 Ala. App. 195, 60 So. 942. See Ex parte Bledsoe, 180 Ala. 586, 61 So. 813. In Bledsoe's Case it is specifically stated: "The complaint averred the facts and set out the instruments sued on, in haec verba, showing the same to be negotiable instruments, etc.," and this is what differentiates Bledsoe's Case from the case at bar in so far as to whether or not the instrument sued on is a promissory note or a bond, orspecialty. In Bledsoe's Case the plaintiff says I sue you for so much money due upon this instrument and sets out the instrument. In the case at bar the plaintiff could have brought its suit upon the instrument alleged to have been executed by defendant, setting out the instrument, but this the plaintiff did not do. On the contrary, the plaintiff declares upon a promissory note, and the defendant denies that the instrument sued upon is a promissory note. A negotiable promissory note under section 5131 of the Code of Alabama 1907 —
"is an unconditional promise in writing made by one person to another, signed by the maker, engaging to pay on demand or at a fixed or determinable future time, a sum certain in money to order or to bearer."
But in addition to the promise to pay the payee of the instrument in question, the sum of $658.50 on the 1st day of October, 1921, there is a conveyance of personal property to secure the payment of the $658.50, as well as "all else we maynow or hereafter owe the said G.P. Dowling Hardware Company, before the payment thereof"; the property conveyed is all live stock and increase, all gathered crops now on hand, a steel stump-puller and equipment, all crops rasied by the signer, or in which he might be interested in Covington county, Ala., or elsewhere in Alabama, for the years 1921, 1922, 1923, and 1924, also all rents and advances coming to the maker as landlord during said years, and the payee of the instrument is authorized, before or after the maturity of said instrument, to seize and sell said property for the payment thereof, and it is specifically agreed that all payments shall first be applied to the excess due under said instrument.
The negotiable instrument law of Alabama covers many negotiable instruments other than promissory notes. That a negotiable instrument is under seal does not affect its negotiability is plainly provided under section 4963 of the Code, but this consideration has nothing whatever to do with this case. The question is, Was there a variance between the pleadings and proof?
The instrument offered in evidence was a writing under seal. Hatch v. Crawford, 2 Port. 54; Dawsey et al. v. Kirven, 203 Ala. 446,449, 83 So. 338, 7 A.L.R. 1658. The instrument in question was not a promissory note, but was a bond, or specialty, under seal. Phillips v. The Americus Guano Co., 110 Ala. 521,18 So. 104. There was a variance between the pleadings and proof, and the trial court erred in admitting said instrument in evidence against the defendant over his timely and pertinent objections thereto. The attention of the court and plaintiff was directed to the variance, and plaintiff could have amended its complaint to meet the proof, and this in time to have avoided this situation. For its failure so to do plaintiff is responsible.
The precise question before us we think was decided in the case of Hughes et al. v. Spratling, 3 Ala. App. 517, 57 So. 629, wherein the opinion and judgment was pronounced January 9, 1912, and subsequent to our negotiable instrument law. In the Hughes Case the complaint declared upon a bond under seal; while the writing introduced in evidence was not under seal. The defendants requested the general charge in writing, which was refused. Upon appeal to this court it was held:
  "There was a variance between the allegations and the proof, in that the appellee declared on a bond under seal, and the instrument introduced in evidence was not a bond under seal, but a promissory note, and the court was in error in refusing the general charge requested by appellants. Phillips v. Americus Guano Co., 110 Ala. 521,18 So. 104; Breitling v. Marx [123 Ala. 222,26 So. 203], supra; Burton et al. v. Dangerfield, 141 Ala. 285,291, 37 So. 350; N.Y. Life Ins. Co. v. McPherson, 137 Ala. 116, 119, 33 So. 825."
It follows, therefore, that the trial court erred in admitting the written instrument in evidence against defendant; that the trial court also erred in refusing the general charge requested by appellant; that the trial court erred also in refusing to grant appellant's motion for a new trial. For the errors pointed out, this case must be reversed.
Reversed and remanded.