Foster v. Ross
Foster v. Ross
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the majority of the Court.
In this case the declaration describes the cause of action as a writing obligatory, sealed by the defendant. The issue Was on the plea of payment; and on the trial it being necessary, according to a former decision of the Court,
A majority of the Court are of opinion, that although the instrument in other respects corresponded with its description in the declarations yet not being a specialty the variance was too great to permit it to go to the Jury.
In my opinion the defendant, by the plea of payment, admitted the- existence of the contract as described in the declaration ; and by the endorsement on the writ, in which a copy is set out. Under this issue it was unnecessary to produce the note on trial, unless for the purpose of ascertaining whether any, and what, credits had been entered on it; and, as to its admissibility in evidence, there could be no other question than the question of its identity. All doubt as to this would disappear by reference to the endorsement on the writ. But i think that the declaration alone sufficiently identified the instrument, and that a recovery under it would unquestionably have been a bar to a subsequent action on the same instrument. The variance was only in the technical name given to it, .and
The opinion of the- Court in the case referred to, is not to be found in the fies. It toas so held by the majority of the Court at Ca-kawba; but the Reporter does not recollect the name of the ense,
ante, 187.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.