Vanvacter v. Patterson
Vanvacter v. Patterson
Opinion of the Court
— Debt by Vanvacter against Patterson. The action is founded on a sealed note made by the defendant to one Bagnell for 200 dollars, dated March the 27th, 1838, payable in three years from December the 25th, 1838, and assigned by Bagnell, March the 15th, 1839, to one Marsh, and by him to the plaintiff. The defendant pleaded the statutory plea of payment to Bagnell before notice of the assignment by him to Marsh; and alleged as matters of set-off three notes; one made by Bagnell to the defendant, August the 11th, 1840, for 65 dollars payable December the 25th of the same year; one made by Bagnell to one Hanna, July the 2d, 1840, for 90 dollars payable December the 25th, 1840, and assigned by Hanna to the defendant May the 27th, 1841; and another made by Bagnell to one Brandenburgh, August the 16th, 1840, for 60 dollars payable December the 25th, 1840, and assigned by Brandenburgh to the defendant April the 10th, 1841. The plaintiff replied, that the defendant had notice of the assignment of the note mentioned in the declaration by Bagnell, as the assignment is therein alleged, before he received the notes described in the plea; conclusion to the country, and issue. . The cause was submitted to the Court without a jury.
On the trial, the plaintiff produced the note and assignments set out in the. declaration, and proved that Marsh, on the 15th of March, 1839, notified the defendant of the assignment by Bagnell to Marsh; and that the defendant then admitted
We do not think the Court committed any error in suffering the notes and their assignments mentioned in the plea to go in evidence. Their existence was admitted by the pleading ; and it was proper they should be read. But it was erroneous to admit the parol evidence. The issue was, whether the defendant, before'he acquired the matters of set-off, had notice of BagnelVs assignment of the note declared on to Marsh. The evidence was foreign to that issue, and should, therefore, have been excluded. To let in such evidence, the defendant should have framed his plea differently. He should have shown that Bagnell,. after his assignment to Marsh, again became the legal owner of the note, and that the defendant held the matters of set-off during such second ownership, or that he acquired them without notice of BagnelVs second transfer. Such a plea would have conformed to the facts of the case, and would, under the statute regulating the assignment of notés not negotiable by the law merchant, have barred the action, unless the plaintiff could have replied and proved notice to the defendant of BagnelVs assignment to the plaintiff, before the defendant procured the notes relied on as set-offs.
As the issue stands, -it was supported by the plaintiff by his proof that the defendant had notice of BagnelVs assignment
— The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &c.
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