Eastman v. English
Eastman v. English
Opinion of the Court
Suit on the following described instrument:
“$1,000. Warsaw, III., Sept. 25th, 1857.
“ Four months after, date I promise and agree to pay to the order of H. W. Sample and M. T. Hunt, as commissioners of the Western Division of the Mississippi and Wabash Eailroad, one thousand dollars, with ten per cent per annum interest from date, for value received, payable and negotiable at the banking house of J. H. Lucas & Co., St. Louis, Mo.
(Signed) William English.”
The defenses set up were: 1st, A general denial; 2d, payment; 8d, failure of consideration; 4th set-off, upon which the plaintiff took issue. Also, the defendant pleaded a special statutory defense under the laws of Missouri, to the effect that a note which did not contain the words “ negotiable and payable, without defalcation and■ discount,” is subject, in the hands of the assignee, to any defense or set-off on the part of the maker, existing at or before the date of the assignment.
To. this plea, the plaintiff demurred, which was sustained, without exception by the defendant, who went to trial on the other issues, and bad judgment rendered against him for the balance due on the note, and interest. Appealing, he now complains that the court erred in rejecting certain evidence, and refusing certain instructions applicable alone to his defense, founded upon the statutes of the State of Missouri, which had been ruled out upon demurrer; and the sustaining of said demurrer thereto is not assigned for error, nor made a ground in a motion for a new trial in the court below. It is true that he might have raised again the question of the sufficiency of his special statutory plea, by assigning the sustaining of the demurrer thereto as one of the grounds of his motion for a new trial, and in that way indirectly have reached the errors which he has assigned in regard to his evidence and instructions. But this he did not do, and we have no right, in the present condition of the record, to enter upon and discuss questions, although elaborately argued by appellant, both at bar and in his brief,
Affirmed.
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