Mitchell v. Sanford
Mitchell v. Sanford
Opinion of the Court
The case of De Sylva v. Henry, 3 Por. Rep. 132, we think is not distinguishable from the present. There the plaintiff paid to the defendant the sum of money, which was intended to be applied, as a partial payment of a note, which the latter had against him, but which was never thus applied ; afterwards, the defendant sued the plaintiff on the note, and recovered a judgment for the full amount.
As soon as seventy-five dollars were handed by the plaintiff to the defendant, to be credited on the note, it was a payment pro tanto, and the note was thus far extinguished. The entry of a credit was not essential to consummate the payment, but could only have been required, in order that convenient and accessible proof of the fact might be furnished.
The charge is unobjectionable, if, conceding the truth of all the evidence, and the inference fairly deducible from it, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover. That he was not entitled to a verdict will sufficiently appear from what we have said. The judgment is consequently affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.