45 Ind. 158 | Ind. | 1873
This was an action by the appellant against the appellees on two promissory notes executed by the appellees to Matthews & Bro. and endorsed by them to the plaintiff. The notes were, on their face, “ payable and negotiable at the Bedford Bank, Lawrence county, Indiana.”
The defendants answered in two paragraphs. In the first, they alleged that the notes were given without any good or valuable consideration whatever, and that there never was any such bank as that named in the notes. The second paragraph of the answer alleged a warranty of the property for which the notes had been given, a breach thereof, and a consequent failure of the consideration of the notes, setting out the facts, and also alleged that there was no such bank as that named in tlie notes. Demurrers to these paragraphs of the answer were filed by the plaintiff, and overruled by the court. This is the basis of the first and second assignments of error.
The ground assumed by counsel for the appellant, relating to both paragraphs, is, that, to make the paragraphs of the answer good, it should have been alleged that the appellant was informed of the non-existence of the alleged bank at Bedford, and that the appellees were estopped to set up the non-existence of the bank as against an innocent holder of the notes. This point has already been decided against the position assumed. Parkinson v. Finch, ante, p. 122.
The second paragraph alleges, in substance, the sale by the payees of the note of certain sheep to Grindstaff, one of the makers of the note, as the consideration for the same; that the sheep were warranted to be sound ; that they were not sound, but, on the contary, diseased, and that many of them died ; that in settlement of that transaction, the notes in question were executed for the value of the sheep yet living, the payee again warranting them to be sound, etc.;
There is no other question presented by the assignment of errors.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.