American Nat. Bank & Trust Co. of Mobile v. Long

Decision Date08 February 1968
Docket Number1 Div. 414
Citation207 So.2d 129,281 Ala. 654
PartiesThe AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK & TRUST COMPANY OF MOBILE v. J. Z. LONG.
CourtAlabama Supreme Court

Hamilton, Denniston, Butler & Riddick and Oliver J. Latour, Jr., Mobile, for appellant.

Pierre Pelham, Mobile, for appellee.

MERRILL, Justice.

Appellant sued appellee on a note. Appellee filed several pleas, one of which was non est factum. When appellant rested, appellee also rested and requested the affirmative charge. The court gave the general affirmative charge without hypothesis on the ground that the appellant had not proved the execution of the note, and the verdict and judgment were in accord with the charge.

The appellant proved that the Mobile Jeep Corporation had negotiated to it, for a valuable consideration, a note purportedly executed by appellee to Mobile Jeep Corporation with a balance due on it of $2,735.75. Appellant also introduced excerpts from a deposition of appellee taken after suit was filed and some three months before trial. This evidence revealed that appellee was shown a conditional sales contract and a note, each purportedly bearing his signature. Appellee testified that he signed his name only once to some instrument, but he did not know which one. As to the signature on the note, he stated: 'This one here looks more like my signature than that one.' 'Well, it resembles it.' 'No, I wouldn't swear I didn't sign it.' 'Yes, it looks like my signature. Both of them look like my signature, but I can't swear which one of them I signed.' No. I wouldn't swear I didn't sign either of them.'

Appellant sought to introduce the note in evidence; the appellee objected on the ground that appellant had not met the burden of proof. The court sustained the objection; appellant excepted and rested, and appellee rested and requested the general charge which the trial court promptly gave.

Appellant contends that it comes within the provisions of Tit. 7, § 375, Code 1940:

'Every written instrument, the foundation of the suit, purporting to be signed by the defendant, his partner, agent, or attorney in fact, must be received in evidence without proof of the execution, unless the execution thereof is denied by plea verified by affidavit; and every assignment of such instrument, on which suit is brought in the name of the assignee, must be deemed genuine, unless impeached in like manner, when, in either case, the burden of proof is cast on the plaintiff.'

We have held that the intention of Tit. 7, § 375, Code 1940, was to relieve the plaintiff from the burden imposed by the common law, of proving the execution of the instrument sued on, unless the defendant denied its execution by a verified plea. In the absence of such plea, the fact of execution is not in issue. Whether the defendant executed it, or whether it was executed by anyone having authority to bind him, is a fact resting within his own knowledge, and it is not unjust to him to foreclose all inquiry on the point unless he denies it under oath. J. F. Holley Construction Company v. Brown Service Funeral Homes Company, 277 Ala. 251, 168 So.2d 621; Wimberly v. Dallas, 52 Ala. 196.

It is settled that a verified plea of non est factum places the burden upon the plaintiff to prove the execution of the note. Porter v. Porter, 244 Ala. 132, 12 So.2d 186; Ford v. Hodges Boiler & Machine Works, 211 Ala. 153, 99 So. 908; Webb v. Bryant, 209 Ala. 659, 96 So. 907. This has been the rule since Alabama was a territory. In McCoy v. Harrell, Nichols & Co., 40 Ala. 232, this court said:

'2. It is true, as a general rule, that where a defendant pleads an affirmative plea, the onus of proving it lies upon himself; and if he does not appear to sustain his plea, and a judgment by default is rendered in favor of the plaintiff, it will not be reversed on error, for the irregularity works no injury.--Dougherty v. Colquitt, 2 Ala. 337; McCollom & Capel v. Hogan, 1 Ala. 515. But, when a sworn plea is interposed, denying the execution of the instrument sued on, the rule stated has no application. In such case, the parties stand as they did at common law, when the general issue was pleaded, which devolved on the plaintiff the necessity of proving the execution of the instrument sued on; and such proof not having been made by the plaintiffs in this case, it was error to render a final judgment by default against the defendant.--Crow v. The Decatur Bank, 5 Ala. 249.'

We agree with the trial court that appellant did not meet the burden of proving execution. The evidence introduced by appellant from the deposition of the defendant as to his signature was equivocal, and while the same evidence would not have been sufficient to support a...

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    • United States
    • Connecticut Supreme Court
    • August 6, 1985
    ...Dunn v. Stewart, 235 F.Supp. 955, 964 (S.D.Miss.1964); Celentano v. Zoning Board of Appeals, supra; American National Bank & Trust Co. v. Long, 281 Ala. 654, 656, 207 So.2d 129 (1968); Sloan v. Sloan, 393 So.2d 642, 644 (Fla.App.1981); Davis v. Independence, 404 S.W.2d 718, 720 (Mo.1966); W......
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