Court Opinion

ID: 6517989
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:28:26.757216+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:04.547962
License: Public Domain

McCLELLAN, C. J.
— -Where to an action on a note or bond the defendant interposes a special plea of non est factum, not denying his signature but setting up ¿Iteration after execution, the burden is upon him to show such alteration unless the paper itself furnishes some evidence or indication of having been tampered with some badge of the alleged fraud, so to speak.—Montgomery v. Crossthwait, 90 Ala. 553; Barclift v. Treece, 77 Ala. 528. This upon the presumption in. favor of good faith and against fraud, where the paper bears no evidence to the contrary, that the paper is as it was when it was signed. In such case the plaintiff may introduce the *429paper without any evidence of its execution or-negativing alteration, and if the defendant offers no evidence, judgment must go for plaintiff. The same presumption against alteration, Avhen there is no appearance. of it on the face of the paper, attends the note on a general plea of non est factum. The averment of that plea is that the note sued on was not executed by the defendant, or by any one authorized to bind him in the premises. Where the note does not appear to have been tampered with, this averment prima facie is a denial of the signature, and does not inform the plaintiff that reliance will be had upon an alteration. He, therefore, makes a prima facie case against the plea on proof of signature, and he may then put the note in evidence; and if the defendant offers no evidence, the presumption against alteration in connection with proof of signature entitles him to judgment, just as where there is a special plea of alteration only, the admission of signature and presumption against fraud makes out the plaintiff’s case, and entitles him to recover unless the defendant proves alteration. Our opinion is, therefore, that in the case at bar when the plaintiff proved that the defendant signed the notes sued on, the papers themselves giving no indication of alteration since the signature, the burden was on the defendant to show that material alterations had been made in them since he signed them.. It follows that the trial court erred in giving' the portion of its general charge to which exception was reserved, and in refusing charges 1 and 2 requested by the plaintiff.
Reversed and remanded.