12 How. Pr. 452 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1855
The last clause of the I62d section of the Code, declares that, “ in an action founded upon an instrument for the payment of money only, it shall be sufficient to give a copy of the instrument, and to state, that there is due to the plaintiff thereon a specified sum, which he claims. This is such an action. It is founded entirely on an instrument for the payment of money only; and the plaintiff has, in his complaint, brought himself within the very letter of the provision cited. Had there been no such provision, it would have been enough for the plaintiff to have given, in his complaint, a copy of the note, and alleged that the defendant made the note and delivered it to him. (Chappell agt. Bissell, 10 How. Pr. R. 274.) This is all that the 142d section of the Code requires.
The legislature, as I understand the provision referred to, authorized the plaintiff, instead of making such allegations, to give a copy of the instrument, and state how much was due
In the case under consideration, the plaintiff relies upon no facts not appearing upon the face of the instrument itself, to constitute his cause of action. The note, of which he has given a copy, when produced upon the trial and proved, will, of itself, furnish him with prima facie evidence of his right to recover the amount alleged to be due thereon, and the defendant’s liability. To such a case, and such a case only, the provision in the 162d section of the Code applies. In such a case, the giving of a copy of the instrument, with an allegation that a specified sum is due thereon, is made equivalent to an allegation of the execution and delivery of such instrument by the defendant to the plaintiff.
The plaintiff is, therefore, entitled to judgment upon the demurrer.