16 Wend. 659 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1837
The note was properly in evidence under the money counts, and proof that it was not in fact given for money but for work and labor, could not change the form of the remedy. Hughes v. Wheeler, 8 Cowen, 77. It was a mere question of pleading, and the rule is, that a promissory note, as against the maker, may be given in evidence under the money counts, upon whatever ” consideration it may have been made.
The defendant relies on the case of Rosa v. Brotherson, 10 Wendell, 85. The very brief and imperfect statement of facts in the report of that case is calculated to give the decision a wider influence than was intended by the court. I have looked into the original papers, and find that the note was made by the defendant, Brotherson, on the 15th June, 1829, for $100, and was payable to William A. McClelland or bearer, nine months after date. In July following an arrangement was entered into between the maker and payee, by which the note was satisfied, and McClelland promised to deliver it up to the maker. This he afterwards refused to do, and transferred the note to Rosa, the plaintiff, in payment of a debt of $55. When collected, the plaintiff was to apply the balance of the money on a debt due from McClelland to one Clowes. From this state of facts it will be seen that the note was not a valid or available security in the hands of McClelland at the time of the transfer, and that it was fraudulently put in circulation by him, against the express agreement of the parties. It then became a
There is a further difficulty in the way of this defence. It is not denied that the plaintiff took the note on a sufficient consideration as between himself and Wheeler, the payee, nor that he took it in good faith without any notice of the set-off. The plaintiff is the owner of the note; he does not sue as the trustee for another, but is the real party in interest. The right to set off a demand against Wheeler depends on the statute, and that has not provided for this case. 2 R. S. 354, § 18, To entitle the defendant to a set-off, he must have a demand against the plaintiff in the action, unless the suit be brought in the name of a plaintiff who has no real interest in the contract upon which the suit is founded. Sub. 7. The 8th subdivision is confined to an action upon a contract, other than a negotiable promissory note or bill of exchange, which has been assigned to the plaintiff. It provides for cases where the real plaintiff or party in interest' necessarily sues in the name of another. The 9th subdivision provides for a set-off where a negotiable promissory note or bill of exchange has been assigned to the plaintiff; but the right to set off a demand against any former holder of the paper is restricted, in terms, to the case of a note or bill assigned to the plaintiff after it become due. The 10th subdivision is confined to the case of a plaintiff suing as the trustee for another, or where he has no real interest in the contract. In this case the plaintiff is not a trustee, but is the party in interest, the real owner of the note; and the paper was transferred to him before it became due. It is impossible to say that the case comes within the statute.
Motion denied.