18 Ind. 224 | Ind. | 1862
Suit upon a note executed by one Potter to James Owen, and assigned to Judah. The note is dated February 1st, 1860. The defendant answered:
1. G-eneral denial.
2. That the plaintiffs were not the legal owners of the note.
8. Payment.
4. That the defendant was security for James Owen on two notes; that he had taken up those notes by payment, and now offered to set them off against the' plaintiff's cause of action.
Issues of fact were found. Trial; judgment for the defendant.
The judgment was wrong and must be reversed.
The plaintiffs gave the notes sued on in evidence. It was not necessary that they should have the legal title, though it seems that they did have it. Ho payment was proved. Hor was it proved that Potter had paid the notes on which he was surety for Owen, "but the contrary. He had taken them up by giving his own note, not shown to have been commercial paper, for them which he had not paid. Such transaction did not create a cause of action or set off" in favor of Potter against Owen. Bennett v. Buchanan, 3 Ind. 49. It differed in toto from that in which one procures an assignment by the payee of a note or some third person for himself. In such transaction the assignee obtains a cause of action against a stranger. In the transaction in this case, he took up one' cause of action against himself with others, by exchanging for it another cause of action against himself; and a right of action against a joint maker with him of the note taken up acci’ued to him only by viz’tue of payments actually made on such note for such joint maker.
The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded for further proceedings.