1. Our attention has not been specifically called by the counsel on either side to the enactments supposed to bear on this cause; but we presume the tenth section of the charter of the Decatur Branch, and the act of 1840, are those referred to. The first of these provides, that’ “it shall not be lawful for the President,'directors, or cashier, or other officer of said Branch Bank, or any member of the general assembly, to become indorsers for each other, or any. other person or persons, to the said Branch Bank.” [Dig. 96, § 10.] The other directs — 4.'That “it shall-no.t,be.lawful for any member "of the general assembly to become indorser, or acceptor of any bill, negotiable at the Bank of the State of Alabama, or any of the Branches thereof, unless on his own paper, and for his own benefit. 2. No member, &c. shall be security or indorser, except as prescribed in the first section on any note discounted by the 'said State Bank, or any of the Branches thereof.” [Dig. 111, §§, 41, 42.]
The section quoted from the charter, may be dismissed with the remark, that it does not in terms, include a mere surety, and therefore the construction, when invoked to destroy a contract, must be, that, only such as are specified were intended to be prohibited, even if. it was conceded this provision of the charter would discharge a member of the assembly, or other of the designated officers, from liability upon a ¡note or bill indorsed by them In Bates v. The Branch B’k at Mobile, 2 Ala. Rep. 689, we held that sureties and 'indorsers were not equivalent terms, within the acts for'the ¡relief of sureties, and the reason is equally strong against con-' .sidering them so in the present case.
2. Independent of this, it is very clear the act of 1840 repeals, to some extent, the inhibition of the charter, while at .the same time it extends the prohibition against members of the assembly .becoming .-sureties or indorsers, unless on paper Jt>r Ms own benefit; but then only when the paper is discounted by the bank. If then, it is supposed the principle decided in Bates & Hines v. The State Bank, 2 Ala. Rep. 451, does not cover this case, as to which, at this time we express no •opinion, it is evident the plea is defective in np.t averring that *855the' note was discounted by the Bank, and not executed by the defendant ps his own paper, and .for his own benefit. The only fact'averred is, that at the execution of the not’e, the defendant' was a member of the general assembly, but this alone does not entitle him to raise the question of invalidity, (if it is conceded he might do so under particular circumstances,) because the note may have been received in some other way than being disbounted, or it may have been his own paper, or for his own benefit. The demurrer to the plea, instead of being overruled, should have been sustained.
Judgment reversed and remanded.