11 Ind. 22 | Ind. | 1858
This was an action by the appellee against the appellants, to recover the value of 11,250 pounds of pork, sold and delivered by him to them.
The defendants answered — 1. In denial; 2. Payment; 3. That the defendants delivered to the plaintiff, the note of jRichard Tyner for 400 dollars, which the plaintiff received in full satisfaction of the claim; 4. That the pork, at the price agreed upon, amounted to 392 dollars, 4 cents; that, at the time of the sale and delivery thereof, viz., on the 30th of December, 1853, and before and afterwards, the plaintiff and Richard Tyner, one of'the defendants, had other private dealings and accounts between them; that afterwards, on the 21st of February, 1854, the plaintiff and Richard Tyner settled their private dealings and accounts, and also for the pork, and upon the settlement, there was found due the plaintiff the sum of 400 dollars, including the price of the pork, and thereupon R. Tyner executed and delivered to the plaintiff his individual note for said 400 dollars, which the plaintiff received in full satisfaction of the claim, and thereupon the price of the pork was credited to Tyner and charged to defendants, and afterwards, on the 23d of June, 1854, the partnership affairs between the defendants were settled and closed accordingly; that the plaintiff still holds the note of Tyner, partly paid and partly unpaid; that on the 10th of November, 1854, said Tyner failed, and since then has been and is insolvent.
The plaintiff replied to the second paragraph denying the payment, and demurred to the third and fourth paragraphs, and the demurrer was sustained as to the third, and overruled as to the fourth.
The plaintiff thereupon replied to the fourth, that the pork was sold and delivered on the 30th of December, 1853,
“$400. Brookville, Ind. February 21st, 1854. For value received, on the first.day of July next I promise to pay to Robert Stoops, or order, four hundred dollars. R. Tyner, per R. H. Tyner.”
Which note the plaintiff received and accepted as a note or memorandum of the amount due him from the defendants for the pork, and not in payment or satisfaction thereof. That at the time of the sale of the pork, and at the time of the making of the note, said Richcwd Tyner was insolvent, and ever since has been, which insolvency he concealed, and which was wholly unknown to the plaintiff; and the plaintiff produces the note and offers to surrender it to be canceled.
The cause was tried by a jury, who found for the plaintiff the sum of 400 dollars, on which there was judgment, over a motion for a new trial.
The first error assigned is, the sustaining of the demurrer to the third paragraph of the answer.
This we cannot notice, as no exception was taken to the ruling below.
The bill of exceptions filed, sets out the evidence, and discloses the points relied upon for the reversal of the judgment.
The material facts, as they appear from the evidence, are, that about the last of December, 1853, the plaintiff sold
These are believed to be all the material facts involved in the case.
The defendants asked the Court to charge the jury as follows, viz.:
1. “ That if they believed the pork was sold and delivered to the defendants, with others engaged in the pork business, on the 30th of December, 1853; and that after-wards, on the 21st of February, 1854, the plaintiff took the individual note of R. Tyner for the amount of the price of the pork, due July 1,1854; and that if, when the note became due on the 1st of July, 1854, Tyner, the maker of the note, was solvent and able to pay the note, and so continued until the 10th of November, 1854, when he failed, permitting two terms of Court to pass without suit on the note, in which he might sue, in this case the verdict must be for the defendant, notwithstanding the note was not originally taken by the plaintiff in satisfaction of the pork debt.”
2. “ That if the note was taken by Stoops in satisfaction of the pork debt, he cannot afterwards, on failure of Tyner, resort to the pork debt and sue the pork firm.”
3. “ That to permit Sloops to take Tyner’s note for this debt, and hold it for more than four months after it fell due, until Tyner’s failure, would be a fraud on Me Carty, who settled the partnership affairs on the hypothesis that it was paid by the arrangement between Stoops and Tyner.”
Which charges were refused, and the defendants excepted.
We are of opinion that the above charges were correctly refused.
The ease of Smith & Marshall v. Rogers & Bement, 17 Johns. 340, is directly in point upon this question, and precisely such a case as this in all essential particulars. The plaintiffs, Smith & Marshall, had sold defendants a quantity of merchandize. After the sale one of the defendants, Bement, wrote the plaintiffs as follows: “ Our firm was dissolved on the 3d instant and I assumed your demand, which you may rest assured will be paid as soon as possible.” The plaintiffs answered as follows: “We observe your partnership is dissolved, and that you have assumed our debt, which we are satisfied with.” Afterwards Bement gave his note to the plaintiffs, who gave him the following receipt: “ Received, Albany, August 13, 1816, from Mr. G. N. Bement his note on demand, with interest, for six hundred dollars, when paid to be placed to the credit of Rogers Sf Bement's account with us; also 2 dollars and 86 cents for balance of said account.” Bement continued to do business until November, 1817, when he became insolvent. No suit was brought against him to compel payment of the note, nor was Rogers called upon for payment of the original debt until after the insolvency of Bement. The Court say — “ This receipt expressly mentions that the note, when paid, is to be placed to the credit of the late firm, evidently retaining the parties who contracted the debt originally, and continuing their liability until the note should be paid off; it was therefore the duty of Rogers to see that Bement complied with the engagement made with
The case at bar differs from Slevin v. Morrow, 4 Ind. R. 425, cited by counsel, as that was a case where notes of third persons were taken as collaterals, the proceeds, when collected, to be applied to the payment of the principal debt. It was held that the plaintiff's were required to use reasonable diligence to collect the collaterals.
The second instruction asked we think was correctly refused because it was not applicable to the case made by the testimony.
The taking of a promissory note from one of several joint debtors, or the note of a third person, for a preexisting debt, is not a discharge of the debt, unless such is the express agreement. Schermerhorn v. Loines, 7 Johns. 311.—Muldon v. Whitlock, 1 Cowen, 290. In the case last cited it is said by Sutherland, J., that “ no principle of law is better settled than that taking a note either from one of several joint debtors, or from a third person, for a preexisting debt, is no - payment, unless it be expressly agreed to be taken as payment, and at the risk of the creditor. Nor does the taldng a note, and giving a receipt for so much cash in full of the original debt, amount to evidence of such express agreement to take the note in payment. The agreement must be clearly and explicitly proved by the original debtor, or he will be held liable.”
In Massachusetts, the law is probably different. French v. Price, 24 Pick. 13. In this case it is held that a negotiable note taken for property sold, or for a preexisting debt by simple contract, is prima facie evidence of payment; but it is there admitted that by the law of England
Holding, then, that the taking of the note of Tyner was not an extinguishment of the original debt, in the absence of an express agreement to that effect, it becomes material to inquire whether there was any evidence of such agreement. We think there was not, and that therefore the charge in question was correctly, refused, as being inapplicable to the case.
The third charge was correctly refused, because it assumes that Me Carty settled the partnership affairs on the hypothesis that the original debt was paid by the arrangement between Stoops and Tyner. Whether he did so settle the partnership affairs, was a question of fact that should not have been assumed, but left to the jury to determine. We have not examined whether the charge is otherwise correct.
The Court, of its own volition, gave charges to the jury, the giving of which is assigned for error; but we see no error in them of which the appellants can complain. If there was any error, it was in charging the law, in some particulars, too favorably for the defendants. The appellants, in their brief, have not pointed out any error against them in the charges given, and we see none.
The defendants moved for a new trial upon the ground, amongst other things, of newly discovered evidence. The affidavit states that they can prove “ that the plaintiff admitted and stated, since Tyner's failure, that he had lost his said debt, and that by taking Tyner's note for the 400 dollars, he, the plaintiff, had discharged Me Carty from the debt.”
We regard this statement of the plaintiff as a mere inference or conclusion of his, from the facts that existed. The language employed does not, as we think, import that at the time of the taking of the note, he agreed to dis
The motion for a new trial upon this ground, as well as upon the ground that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence, was correctly overruled.
Per Curiam. — The judgment is affirmed with costs.