6 Ind. 487 | Ind. | 1855
Assumpsit by George Melne, the indorsee of Elijah Tyner, against William Chrisman and others, parties to a bill of exchange. The bill, which is dated August 23, 1848, was drawn by Chrisman in favor of James Leary, for 600 dollars, payable in one hundred and twenty days, at the office of the Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company, Cincinnati, accepted by Banner Lawhead, and indorsed by Leary and Tyner.
Chrisman and Leary were defaulted; but Lawhead and Tyner appeared. Lawhead pleaded the general issue, and Tyner the general issue and five special pleas.
No question has been raised as to the third, fourth and sixth pleas. They will not, therefore, be further noticed.
The fifth plea avers, that the bill sued on was, on the 20th of January, 1849, the property of the branch bank at Indianapolis; that Tyner, on that day, fully paid to said branch the principal, interest and costs then due on said bill; and that afterwards, on the same day, the plaintiff obtained possession of it by fraud, without consideration, &c. To this plea a demurrer was sustained.
We perceive no ground in support of this decision. Still the error in sustaining the demurrer is no cause for reversing the judgment. The evidence admissible under that plea was also admissible under the general issue. The cause has been tried under the general issue, and the defendant has had an opportunity to introduce the same evidence which he could have introduced under the fifth plea. The decision of the Court did not, therefore, injure him, and he can not complain of it. Shanklin v. Cooper, 8 Blackf. 41.— Cohee v. Cooper, id. 115.
The cause was submitted to the Court for trial, and the Court found for the plaintiff 709 dollars.
The record contains a bill of exceptions, which professes to set out all the evidence given on the trial, and avers that upon the finding of the Court the defendants moved in arrest of judgment and for a new trial, which motions the Court overruled, and rendered judgment, &c.
We have repeatedly decided that a motion in arrest is in effect an admission that the verdict is in accordance with the weight of evidence; and when it precedes a motion for a new trial, the latter motion is not available. Rogers v. Maxwell, 4 Ind. R. 243.—Bepley v. The State, id. 264.—Sherry v. Ewell, id. 652.—Tuberril v. Stamp, 2 Salk. 647.—1 Sellon Pr. 505.—Steph. Pl. 126.—2 Ind. R. 117.
There being no sufficient cause for the motion in arrest, the judgment must be affirmed.
The judgment is affirmed with costs.