The action was upon a promissory note. The defense was infancy.
It appears the note was given by appellant and his mother in renewal of a former note which had been executed for money borrowed from plaintiff bank with which to pay for an automobile purchased from another party; that the sale of the car was negotiated through the cashier of the bank as the agent of the seller.
There was evidence that the present note was executed some six weeks before the arrival of appellant at full age. He offered *Page 51 evidence that soon after the execution of this note he offered to surrender the car to the bank.
The trial court rejected this evidence on objection of plaintiff. In this there was error.
Without dispute, the car represented the proceeds of the loan in his hands at the time. The offer to return the money or the proceeds thereof in his hands on arrival at maturity was some evidence tending to show a disaffirmance of his contract made in infancy. When an infant arrives at full age, with the proceeds of such contract in his hands, a retention and use of such proceeds shows acquiescence in such contract which may be offered as evidence of ratification. Good faith calls upon him to say whether these proceeds shall be held as his own or recognized as the property of another. An offer of restitution within a reasonable time is a duty, if he proposes to disaffirm.
Conversely, an offer of restitution tends to negative ratification. Appellee makes the point that the offer to return should have been made to the vendor and not to the bank. This contention is erroneous. The person holding the obligation made in infancy is the proper party to whom the thing received or its proceeds should be returned, that he may be placed in statu quo so far as proceeds still held by the erstwhile infant will accomplish that result. Bell v. Burkhalter, 176 Ala. 62,57 So. 460; Mortgage Co. v. Dykes, 111 Ala. 187, 18 So. 292, 56 Am. St. Rep. 38.
Plaintiff's evidence to the effect that, on request to renew this note about a year after it was given, defendant replied that he did not see any use in giving a new note, as all his property was embraced in this note, tended in some measure to show a recognition of this paper as a valid subsisting obligation. The question of ratification was for the jury. Mortgage Co. v. Wright, 101 Ala. 658, 14 So. 399.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and THOMAS and BROWN, JJ., concur.