34 Barb. 198 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1861
The supplemental answer provided for by section 177 of the code is undoubtedly, in one sense, a substitute for the former plea puis darrien continuance in actions at law, as claimed by the plaintiffs’ counsel. But it is also in the same sense a substitute for the supplemental answer allowed under the former practice in suits in chancery. The general rule in actions at law was, that the plea puis darrien was a waiver of all former pleas, and made the only issue to be tried in the action. This was not so, however, when the latter plea was not inconsistent with the former pleas. (Rayner v. Dyett, 2 Wend. 300.) In suits in chancery, on the contrary, a supplemental answer was never regarded as a waiver of the first answer. It was, as its name implied, an addition to the first answer, and in substance and effect an amendment to it. And the defendant, in his supplemental answer, was not allowed to contradict the
The judge at the circuit was right, therefore, in compelling the plaintiffs to open their case, and produce their evidence in support of the action in the first instance, inasmuch as the answer put in issue the making of the note and its delivery by the defendant, as well as its transfer to the plaintiffs.
The plaintiffs, as appears by the case, then proved the making and delivery of the note by the defendant, and its transfer in the usual course of trade to themselves before maturity. This evidence was not controverted by the defendant in any particular. The defendant in effect conceding that he had executed and delivered the note in question, and as part of his evidence, he proved that the note was given in consideration of the sale of a quantity of watches and watch hands, by one Goodwin to him, which had been charged in account, and that the same account, after the commencement of this action, had been assigned by Goodwin to the plaintiffs and was contained in the judgment roll, which the defendant introduced as evidence on his part. Thus the case stood upon the issues made by the original answer. There was no dispute about the fact that the defendant had executed and delivered the note, nor that the plaintiffs were iona fide holders. This brings us to the consideration of the important question in the case, to wit, whether the former action and judgment upon the account constitutes a bar, as against the plaintiffs, to the maintainance by them of their action upon the note. It appears by the record that the plaintiffs were defeated in the action brought to recover the account. There has been, therefore, no former recovery, of the consideration of the note, to bar the action. That action was not upon this note, but
It is not claimed on the part of the defendant that the plaintiffs, by taking an assignment of the account and attempting to collect it, have waived any of their rights, as bona fide holders of the note, and placed themselves in the same situation in respect to it that Goodwin, the payee, would have occupied had he been plaintiff; nor do I see any ground upon which the assignment and action could produce any such legal result. The defense rests simply upon the estoppel, by the record of the former judgment, and as this created no estoppel, and the evidence, independent of it, made out a clear case for the plaintiffs, a verdict should have been ordered in their favor instead of for the defendants. There must therefore be a new trial, with costs to abide the event.
Smith, Knox and Johnson, Justices.]