15 Mo. 204 | Mo. | 1851
delivered the opinion of the court.
From the facts, appearing by the statement above, the question arises whether an assignee of a non negotiable note can maintain an action at law against the makers of the note, when the assigiibig; himself, could not*
That White, the assignor and payee of the note, which is not negotiable, being, himself, one of the firm of McPherson &Co., the makers of the note, could not, at law, maintain an action on this note against the makers : that is, that he could not be both plaintiff and defendant in the same snit at law, is a proposition that does not now require the citation of authorities to support it.
Does his assignee stand in a better attitude ? Sect. 4 of the statute concerning bonds and notes, Digest of 1846 page 194 declares, “that the nature of the defence of the obligor or maker shall not be changed by the assignment, but he may make the same defence against the bond or note, in the hands of the assignee that he might have made against the ««signor;
We, therefore, reverse the judgment of the court below,