48 Ky. 357 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1849
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Cook brought this action by petition and summons, on a note for $750, executed by Otweil to Scarce, on the 20th of September, 1847, due one day after date, and assigned to Cook on the 2d of October, 1847. Otweil pleaded by way of set-off, a joint and several note for $350, executed by Scarce and one Giltner, to A. Haley, dated and due in November, 1835, and assigned to Otweil on the 22d of September, 1847, which, together ■with an alleged payment of $362 37 cents, he offers to-set-off, &c. &c. By agreement, each party had leave to prove whatever might have been specially pleaded or replied; and the law and fact having been submitted to the Court, a judgment was rendered for the plaintiff disallowing the note relied on as a set-off, but allowing the payment of $362 37, which had been credited on the note sued on. In the revision of this judgment the sole question presented is, whether the note of Scarce
Upon the face of the pleadings and on the facts already stated, the questions are; 1st. Whether Otwell, having acquired the note of Scarce while his own note was held by Scarce as payee, can set it off against the subsequent assignee of Scarce; and, 2d. Whether if he can thus set-off the separate note of Scarce, he caii avail himself, in the same manner, of the joint and several, note of Scarce and Giltner. Each of these questions has been decided in the affirmative. The first in the case of Triplett vs Bradley, (6 Monroe, 355,) and the last in the case of Dunn vs West, &c., (5 B. Monroe, 376,) and other cases.
But under the leave to give special matter in evidence, it was proved that Otwell did not hold the note for his own benefit, but that Giltner, one of the obligors therein, being the surety of Scarce, and fearing loss from his suretyship in this note,-had, by executing his own note with surety to Haley, the payee of the note in which he was bound with Scarce, procured the assignment of this note to Otwell, for the very purpose of having it set-off by Otwell against his note to Scarce, and upon OtwelPs promise to procure the set-off if he could, and in case of success, to pay to Giltner such sum as might be thus set-off. And it is contended that under these facts, Otwell cannot set-off the note of Scarce and Giltner in this action, either because by the effect of the transaction stated, the note has been paid by Giltner, one of the obligors, and ceased- to be a subsisting demand against Scarce, or because if the note be a subsisting demand, it is held by Otwell not as his own or for his own benefit, but exclusively for the use of Giltner, and without any interest on his own part.
As Giltner executed the new note to Haley- as the consideration for the assignment of the original note to Otwell, to be used as a set-off against OtwelPs debt to Scarce, and in this way to operate for his own benefit and indemnity, it would be subversive of the express intent of the parties, and of the obvious import of the transaction, to say that the original note was thereby
Assuming that the note offered to be set-off is still subsisting, the whole force of the answer to the plea
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial in conformity with this opinion.