It is settled in this State, that when a contract for the payment of money, not entitled to grace, is dated on Saturday, and is due one day after date, it is in law due and payable on the Mon day following; and a suit instituted on such contract on the Monday following, is prematurely brought. — Randolph v. Cook & Ellis, 2 Porter, 286; Sanders v. Ochiltree, 5 Porter, 73. The note sued on *99in this case bears date Eeb. 27th, 1858, and was due one day afterwards. February 28th, 1858, was Sunday, and the suit was commenced on Monday, March 1st, 1858.
There is copied in this record a plea in abatement, setting forth the premature institution of the suit; which plea is unobjectionable in form. This plea was sworn to, within the time allowed for pleading; but the record contains no evidence that it was filed in time. The judgment entry bears date April 24th, 1858, and recites, “ This day came the parties, by their attorneys; and on motion of the plaintiff, and it appearing to the court that the plea filed by the defendant is frivolous, it is therefore considered by the court, that the plea be struck out.” We are now asked to affirm this judgment, because, it is said, the record furnishes no evidence that the plea was endorsed by the clerk when filed. — Code, § 2247.
We do not think this position sound. The record recites, that the plea was struck out as frivolous. This repels the inference that the court rejected the plea for want of the clerk’s endorsement. The record, for this purpose, sufficiently shows that the plea in the record is the one upon which the court acted. — Reid v. Nash, 28 Ala. 733.
While it has been uniformly held, that the refusal of the court to strike out a plea is not revisable, because the party can resort to his demurrer, it has been conceded, that if a plea was improperly stricken out, such action could be reviewed in this court. — See Williams v. Hinkle, 15 Ala. 713-717, and authorities cited; Duncan v. Hargrove, 22 Ala. 150, 161. We think there exists good reason for the distinction.
In Stewart v. Goode, 29 Ala. 476, a question very like this was considered. The record in that case showed, that the pi'imary court had permitted the complaint to-be amended, in a particular which, it was here contended,, should not have been allowed. The record disclosed the character of the amendment, and the action of the court upon it. There was no bill of exceptions. We there said, “ The defendant cannot be permitted to revise the action of the court below in allowing the amendment of *100the complaint, when he was actually before the court in which the amendment was made, made no objection, and now for the first time questions the correctness of the ruling of the court in reference to the amendment.” See, also, Bryan v. Wilson, 27 Ala. 214.
In this case, the record recites, that the parties came, by their attorneys; and it does not appear that the defendant interposed any objection or exception to the ruling of the circuit court. We hold, that he cannot for the first time raise the objection in this court. We make this decision the more i’eadily, because it is supported by the opinion pronounced in White v. Toncray, 9 Leigh, 347 ; and Swafford v. Whipple, 3 Iowa, 261. A different rule prevails when pleadings are pronounced defective on demurrer. This case, then, must be considered and disposed of, as if no plea in abatement had been interposed by the defendant.
We are aware that the question in the case of Randolph v. Cook, 2 Porter, supra, was. presented on.error, and without any plea filed. This court in that case consulted the writ; and, because its date showed the suit to have been prematurely brought, reversed the cause. That case was decided under the statute of 1824, (Clay’s Digest, 322, § 53,) which enacts as follows: “No cause shall be reversed, arrested, or otherwise set aside, after verdict or .judgment, for any matter on the face of the pleadings not previously objected to: Provided, the declaration contains a substantial cause of action, and a material issue be tried thereou.”
To bring a ease within the healing influence of this statute, the declaration must contain a substantial cause of action, and a material issue must be tried thereon. But one of these elements was found in the case of Randolph v. Cook, (2 Porter, 286,) and hence the statute did not apply. There was no issue tried on the declaration. It is true that the act of 1324 is not mentioned in the case of Randolph v. Cook. Any mention of that statute in that case would have been unnecessary, because the case was not within its influence.
The provisions of the Code, which must determine this *101case, are much more liberal. Section 2405 declares, that “No judgment can be arrested, annulled, or set aside,for any matter not previously objected to, if the complaint contain a substantial cause of a'ctioD.” The complaint in this case does contain a substantial cause of action. It has no date, but is headed, “Circuit court of Greene county, spring term, 1858.” "We judicially know, that the spriug term of Greene circuit court did not sit until long after March 1, 1858.
It is true that the summons in this record bears date March 1; but, under the section of the Code above copied, we have no authority, the complaint being good, to arrest, annul, or set aside the judgment, for any matter not previously objected to. The principles declared above prohibit us from looking at the plea in abatement for any purpose; and hence we must hold, that the premature institution of this suit is a matter not previously objected to. — See Stewart v. Goode, supra; Blount v. McNeill, 29 Ala. 473; Steamboat Farmer v. McCraw, 31 Ala. 659.
This opinion is not opposed to any principle decided in Bandolph v. Cook, supra.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.