72 Pa. Super. 266 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1919
Opinion by
The plaintiff entered judgment on a promissory note containing a warrant of attorney authorizing the confession of judgment. The defendants presented a petition asking that the judgment be opened to permit them to make defense; on which petition a rule was granted. The rule was subsequently made absolute on depositions taken. The complaint of the appellant is that the obligation on which the judgment was entered was a promissory note; that it was endorsed to the plaintiff bank before maturity in due course; and that the defense set up is not available in this action. The obligation with two others of like date and amount were given by the defendants to A. W. Green, the payee, for the purchase-price of a stallion bought by them from him. Shope made the contract with Green for the horse on the sixth of March, 1915, at East Orville, Ohio. The notes were signed at the home of the defendants near Yintondale, Pa., and sent to Green by mail. The horse was shipped to the defendants and received on the eleventh day of March, 1915, and kept until the latter part of February. 1916. The petition to open the judgment sets forth that in February, 1916: “Said stallion proving unsatisfactory, the said A. W. Green agreed to exchange said stallion for another stallion of equal value, and in pursuance of such arrangement, on or about May, 1916, the exchange was made. The said Clyde H. Shope receiving another stal
The decree of the court is reversed at the cost of the appellees.