Watson v. Hahn
Watson v. Hahn
Opinion of the Court
There are five special counts in the declaration and the common counts: A demurrer to the special counts was confessed by appellee as to the first
“At this day came the said parties by their attorneys aforesaid, and the demurrer of the said defendant to plaintiff’s declaration coming on to be heard, was argued by counsel, and the court being fully advised in the matter, and mature deliberation thereon had, is of the opinion that the said demurrer be overruled. Thereupon, on motion of plaintiff, it is ordered by the court that the defendant in this cause plead by the first day of February next.”
At the next term of the court, which occurred after the time limited in this order for pleading, no plea having been filed, appellee discontinued his action upon the common counts and took judgment nil ¿Licit upon the special count, and the damages were assessed by a jury in open court. Upon the assessment of damages, appellant took a bill of exceptions which contains the testimony given upon that occasion, and upon another day of the term he moved to set aside the assessment of damages, but the court refused to do it, and he excepted.
' Error has been assigned upon this refusal of the court .to set aside the assessment of damages, and we think that appellant has the right to be heard in this court upon that point. Chicago & R. I. R. Co. v. Ward, 16 Ill. 522.
In explanation of the evidence given upon the assessment of damages, it is necessary to remark that, in the first and second counts of the declaration, appellant is charged as indorser of a promissory note, and it is averred that judgment was obtained upon the note by appellee against the maker. Upon the hearing before the jury, a witness testified that he had computed the amount due upon the judgment mentioned in the declaration and found it to be $1,672.84, which is the amount for which the jury returned
And this makes it necessary to examine the whole record, for, while it is true that, if we could maintain this judg
Upon the point that there was no joinder in demurrer, we have only to say that appellant, having submitted the demurrers to the court, cannot now complain of the omission. Parker v. Palmer, 22 Ill. 489. From these questions of practice we pass to the weightier matter of the law governing appellant’s liability as assignor of a promissory note. In the seventh section of the act relating to bills of exchange and promissory notes, it is provided that the assignor of a note shall be liable upon it, if the assignee, by suit against the maker, shall use diligence in collecting it, but such diligence is excused, if at the maturity of the paper it would be unavailing. This statute was borrowed from the State of Illinois, in which State it has received judicial interpretation.
In Indiana, also, the maker of a note must be prosecuted to insolvency before recourse can be had to the indorser, and there are many valuable decisions in the reports of that State upon points arising under our statute. It seems that in order to charge the assignor of a note, suitmustbe instituted against the maker at the first term of any court having jurisdiction of the amount and prosecuted with reasonable diligence to judgment, and the property of the maker, so far as found, must be subjected to the payment of the judgment. Bestor v. Walker, 4 Gil. 3 ; Nixon v. Weyhrick, 20 Ill. 600.
In this case the note became due on the 8th of March and on the 22d of that month, and before any term of court in which judgment could have been obtained, Eman
No laches can be imputed to appellee in respect to the time in which judgment was obtained, but the question arises whether there was diligence in obtaining execution of the judgment. And upon this point it can make no difference whether execution was staid by agreement with Emanuel or not. Appellee was not bound to accept the terms upon which Emanuel confessed judgment. He was at liberty to commence suit in the ordinary way, and if he prosecuted Ms suit diligently he could not be prejudiced by the laws delay. Nor can we enter into a calculation of chances to ascertain whether execution was obtained as soon as it might have been obtained in the ordinary course of proceeding. We have no means of determining such a question, and if we had, the statute gives no authority for doing it. The statute enjoined diligence in the prosecution of the suit, and if appellee granted a stay of execution, he did so at his peril. In Rives v. Kumber, 27 Ill. 291, a delay of sixty days in issuing execution upon a judgment against the maker of a note was held sufficient, if unexplained, to discharge the assignor. In Spears v. Clark, 7 Blackf. 283, a delay of thirty days was attended with the same result. Upon subsequent proceedings in this cause, however, it appeared that the ft. fa. was issued within fourteen days from the adjournment of the court in which judgment was obtained; this was regarded as sufficient diligence. Spears v. Clark, 3 Ind. 297. In tMs opinion the Indiana authorities are reviewed, and it seems that a delay of thirty days, after the adjournment of the court, in issuing execution against the maker of a note has not been sanctioned in that State. In the case at bar, as we have seen, execution was delayed from March 22d to June 1st, a period of seventy days, and tMs,
Therefore, as to the real property of Emanuel, delay in execution could not work injury to appellant. Not so, however, as to the personal estate. To secure that an execution was necessary, and to excuse the delay in issuing it, or rather to show that such delay was not prejudicial to appellant, the declaration should show that all the personalty of Emanuel was ultimately secured, or that he had no such, estate at the time judgment was obtained. In this respect the first count is defective. It is averred that Emanuel neither owned or possessed any personal property “liable to be taken in execution,” but the pleader neglected to state the time to which this allegation refers. The averment, “that he .obtained judgment as aforesaid against said Emanuel, at the earliest time in his power, thereby securing all the property of said Emanuel in said county,” is argumentative and otherwise obnoxious to the rules of good pleading.
In the second count it is alleged “ that the said Emanuel never had any goods or chattels liable to be taken in execution after the maturity of said note,” and this, we think, is substantially good. As we have seen, the judgment, with
In the third and fourth counts of the declaration appellee relied upon a promise made in consideration of forbearance to sue. We have given no attention to these counts, as they do not appear to have been relied upon. The fifth count charges liability as indorser, according to the lex mereatoria as it exists in some of the States, by which an indorser becomes liable upon notice of dishonor by the maker. It is hardly necessary to say that under our statute no such liability exists. The sixth count is framed upon that clause of the statute which relieves the assignee from pursuing the maker of a note, when such pursuit would be unavailing. As it conforms to the statute, we do not perceive any objection to it. Our conclusion is, that the district court erred in overruling the demurrer to the first and fifth counts, and for this and the error in assessing damages the judgment must be reversed with costs, and the cause remanded.
Reversed.
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