76 Ind. 9 | Ind. | 1881
Action by the. appellee, as the endorsee, against the appellants, as makers, of a promissory note, of the following tenor:
“$1,300. Florence, Sept. 18th, 1871.
“One day after date, we, the subscribers, of Florence, county of Switzerland, State of Indiana, promise to pay to the order of Mrs. C. A. Craig one thousand and three hundred dollars, value received, with ten per cent, interest from date, without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws of the State of Indiana.
[Signed] “William G-. Krutz & Son,
“P. A. Bettens,
“John F. McCrary.”
The defendants answered in five paragraphs, and demurrers for want of facts were sustained to the fourth and fifth. Issue; trial by the court; finding and judgment for the plaintiff.
The fourth and fifth paragraphs of answer were in a great measure alike, but the counsel for the appellants have discussed the fifth only, and we therefore notice the fifth only. That paragraph alleged, in substance, that the note in suit was executed for a debt which the defendant William G. Krutz owed to the estate of Joel Craig, deceased, of which the said Cynthia A. Craig, the payee of the note, was ad
For the purposes of a decision of the cause, we attach no special importance to the fact that the note was made payable to Cynthia A. Craig individually, and not in her representative capacity. It was given for a debt due the estate she represented, and, if collected by or paid to her, the money would be assets of the estate in her hands. She might, therefore, have sued upon it, in' her representative capacity, for the rule is firmly established, that wherever the money recovered will be assets, the executor or administrator may sue for it and declare in his representative character. Sheets v. Pabody, 6 Blackf. 120; 2 Williams Executors, 6th Am., ed., bottom p. 881.
The note, having been given for a debt due the estate, was as much the property of the estate as if it had been made payable to the payee in her representative capacity.
The case of Prosser v. Leatherman, 4 How. Miss. 237, cited in Thomasson v. Brown, supra, decides, however, that the debtor may set up, when sued upon a note thus wrongfully transferred by an administrator, the invalidity of the transfer. The point decided, in an opinion delivered by Shakket, C. J., can not, perhaps, be better stated than in the language of the syllabus of the case, viz.:
“It is a good defence to an action on a-promissory note, that the note belonged to the estate of a deceased person, and that the plaintiff received it of the administrator in payment of an individual debt due by the latter, or in exchange for other property, with full knowledge of the fact.”
As the paragraph of answer in question alleges facts showing that the plaintiff, by the assignment, acquired no right to the note, it must be held good on the ground, if on no other, that it shows that the action is not prosecuted by the real party in interest.
The appellee claims it to be “a well settled rule of law, that the execution of a negotiable note is a warranty of the existing capacity of the payee to endorse the paper,” and
The case does not turn upon the capacity, or want of capacity, of Mrs. Craig to endorse the note, but upon the circumstances under which the endorsement in question was made.
The demurrer to the fifth paragraph of answer should have been overruled.
The judgment below is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.