3 Wend. 69 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1829
By the Court,
The note given by the defendants to Bailey had not been transferred by him according to the custom of merchants. The holders of it could not therefore maintain an action upon it in their name; but Bailey had assigned it without endorsement, for a valuable consideration, to the Hoboken Bank. He had therefore parted with all his property in it, and the bank had aquired what interest he possessed in it. The holders stood in the relation of assignees of a chose in action, and not endorsees, and held the note subject to the equities existing between the original parties. (13 Mass. R. 305.) While thus situated, the defendants, under the belief that Bailey had negociated the note, paid it to the assignees, or, which is the same thing, to
It is said the defendants had a right to apply the payment to the demand for which this suit is brought. A person paying money has undoubtedly a right to apply it as he pleases ; but if he does not give express direction, or the circumstances are not such as to imply a direction, the person receiving it may 'make the application. In this case, however, the money was applied. It was sent to the bank expressly to take up the note given by the defendants to Bailey, and for that purpose it was received. No question can properly arise as to the right of mailing the application by either the payees or the receivers.
The money was paid by the defendants in ignorance of their rights. Does this circumstance, connected with the acts of the defendants to rescind or disaffirm the payment when they found the note had not been negociated, actually rescind the payment, and leave the money in the hands of the plaintiffs to be set off in this action? or, to state,the question in other words, perhaps more clearly, could the defendants, after disaffirming the payment, have maintained an action against the plaintiffs for the money thus paid ? The general principle of law is indisputable, that if a party pays money under a mistake of the real facts, without any negligence imputable to him for not knowing them, he may recover back such money. What sort of facts are meant ? Such facts, I apprehend, as shew that the demand on which the money was paid did not actually exist against the- person paying at the time the money was paid. The cases collected, by Comyn, (2 Comyn on Contr. 35, 41,) and those referred to by Saunders, in his Treatise on Pleadings and Evidence,
The case before us is not only different, but so essentially different as to exclude, in my opinion, the application of the principle which permits money paid in ignorance of facts to be recovered back. The debt paid by the defendants was one that subsisted against them at the time of payment The fact of which they were ignorant, did not shew that there'was no debt existing at the time; it only shewed that they were in a situation which enabled them to set-off against the demand they had paid, a demand due to them from Bailey. 1 do not find any case where money paid on a substituting demand has been recovered back on the ground that the person making the payment has subsequently discovered facts that shew he had a set-off against the demand. It may be thought that this note having been transferred without endorsement, was open to be impeached in the same manner as if it had remained in the hands of Bailey ; and as the note
New trial granted.