205 Pa. 466 | Pa. | 1903
When an affidavit of defense is filed and its sufficiency is in question, the court must accept it for verity and regard all the facts properly set forth in it as proved. But where the affidavit is not filed in time, as in the present case, and comes before the court only on a rule to open a judgment regularly entered, the court is entitled to examine the averments critically and to require further evidence as to the facts, as in other cases of application to open judgments.
The court below was not satisfied that a prima facie defense was sufficiently made out to justify sending this case to a jury. Plaintiff sued on a promissory note of which defendant' was the maker. The defense was that defendant was a guarantor for the real debtor, one Shearer, and made the note on the
A further defense is based on the want of a revenue stamp on the note as required by the act of congress of June 13, 1898. It was held in Chartiers, etc., Turnpike Co. v. McNamara, 72 Pa. 278, that the act of congress of 1866, prohibiting the admission in evidence “ in any court ” of an unstamped paper, applied to state as well as federal courts. That decision was made by a divided court, and has never commanded the general acquiescence of the profession. The decisions in other courts of high authority are against the power of congress to interfere even indirectly with the rules of evidence in state courts. Whether the same construction would now be given to the act of 1898 may therefore be open to doubt. But the question does not arise in the present case, for the affidavit is not that the note was not duly stamped but that “ it does not appear from the plaintiff’s statement of claim ” that it was so stamped. This is merely an argumentative denial, and amounts at most to a technical objection to the pleadings, which is not the office of an affidavit of defense, and still less of an affidavit to open a judgment.
Judgment affirmed.