5 Blackf. 306 | Ind. | 1840
Debt on a promissory note made by defendant and one Sprague, since deceased, payable to Solon Johnson at the bank of Ypsilanti, and by Johnson indorsed to the plaintiff. The declaration is in the usual form. The defendant pleaded, 1. Nil debet. % That before the commencement of the suit, and before notice of the assignment of said note, defendant paid to Johnson, the' assignor, the full amount thereof as follows, to wit, said Johnson and one Sprague, since deceased, on, &c., at, &c., made their certain note in writing for the sum of 688 dollars, payable nine months after date to the order of one Robert Stewart, at the Fulton bank in the city of New- York, and said Stewart, before the payment of the sum of money therein specified, or any part thereof, afterwards, See., assigned said note to the defendant; by means whereof Johnson became liable to pay to defendant the sum of money therein specified; yet, &c. 3. That before the commencement of this suit, and before notice of said assignment was given to the defendant, to -wit,
General demurrers to the replications, and judgment for the defendant.
As the plaintiff, in his declaration, relies upon no other law than the law of the jurisdiction in which-he -has brought his suit, his replications, in which he relies for judgment upon the statute of Michigan, are a departure in pleading, according to the case of Yeatman v. Cullen, Nov. term, 1839. In that case it is said that if a plaintiff, in his replication, desert the ground in point of law on which the declaration rested his cause, it is as much a departure as if he had changed his ground in point of fact. If the plaintiff had wished to avail himself of the benefit of the statute of Michigan, he should have shown it in his declaration. The demurrers to the replications, therefore, were correctly sustained by the Court, Vide Yeatman v. Cullen, supra, and the authorities cited.
It is contended, however, that the defendant’s pleas were insufficient, and that the Court erred in sustaining them.
If either of the pleas is good, the judgment must be affirmed. With regard to the second plea it may be said, that, if Sprague were alive, the set-off relied upon would not be good for the want of mutuality. A separate claim cannot be set off against a joint debt. 1 Tidd’s Pr. 604.—Fletcher v.
As the third plea was good, and the replication to it a departure, the Court did right in giving final judgment for the defendant.
The judgment is affirmed with costs.