7 Port. 549 | Ala. | 1838
— The bill, in this case, charges that the complainant made his note dated the eleventh day of January, eighteen hundred and twenty-six, payable to the defendant, Garner, or bearer, three days after the date of the same, for the sum of one hundred and sixty-nine dollars. Of this note, the complainant paid sixty-nine dollars, on the fourteenth day of May, eighteen hundred and twenty-six. In April, eighteen hundred and twenty-seven, the complainant became possessed (in right of his wife) of a note of the defendant, Garner, for the sum of one hundred dollars, given to one Lock, the father of complainant’s wife.
This note was due in January, eighteen hundred and twenty-seven, and after the death of Lock, came to the possession of the complainant, as his property: Garner, the defendant, promised the complainant that he would discount and set-off the amount due from him on this note, against the note of the complainant then held by him, but the settlement was delayed under some pre-tence, that he had omitted to bring the note with him.
In eighteen hundred and thirty-two, Garner (for the use of Peters, the other defendant,) commenced a suit at law against the complainant, on the note held by him;
1. Because the complainant was prevented from sustaining his defence in a Court of Law, by inevitable accident ;
2. Because chancery has original jurisdiction of the case presented by the bill, and the relief sought by it could not have been available, on the plea of set-off.
It is a settled principle, that a Court of Equity will,
The second point presents a question of some importance, and was not, in all probability, raised or examined in the court below.
The note attempted to be set-off, appears to be made payable to Lock, and does not appear to have been endorsed. It is alleged to have belonged to the complainant, in right of his wife. These facts, if true, are conclusive to shew, that the note in his hands would not have been available by him as an off-set to the action, unless he could have shewn an express promise by Garner to pay him the amount of the note so held. If such promise was made, a present right of action would have accrued to the complainant, and in that event, he could have maintained his defence at law. No such promise is alleged by the bill to have been made, but an agreement is set up between Garner and the complainant, that one note should be discounted from the other. In general, courts of equity, in relation to matters of set-off, follow the rules adopted by courts of law; but there are cases in which a set-off will be available in equity, which would not be so at law. Thus, in a matter where mutual credit is given between the parties for a demand not
This view of the bill presents a distinct ground for equitable interference, and in our opinion the Circuit court erred in dismissing the complainant’s bill as without equity; for which error, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings: But as a small portion of the debt due on the note given to Garner, will remain unpaid after off-setting the complainant’s demand, if he shall make out his case, the injunction in the court below must only be retained for the sum covered by the note held by the complainant. As to the remainder, and for the costs of suit, the plaintiff at law will be permitted to proceed with his execution.