Hoover v. Wood
Hoover v. Wood
Opinion of the Court
By the Court —
This action was brought in the district court of the second judicial district, on a note for the sum of two hundred dollars, dated March 27th, 1857, payable on demand, for value received, to J. D. Allen or order. On the 30th of March, A. D. 1858, L. W. Hoover filed the following answer :
“ The above named defendant, for himself alone,*80 for answer and defense to the declaration of the said plaintiff, admits the execution of the said note in said declaration mentioned, but avers that the consideration for said note was illegal; for that the said J. D. Allen, prior to the making and delivery of said note, preferred and made against the said defendant the charge and accusation of embezzlement, to-wit: The felonious appropriation to his own use of goods and chattels of the said J. D. Allen, by the said defendant, of the value of two hundred dollars. That the said J. D, Allen, prior to the time that the said note was executed, promised and agreed, to and with the said defendant, to compound and adjust the matter between them, to-wit: The matters of which the said charge and accusation of embezzlement was made against the said defendant.
‘‘That upon this agreement of the said J. D. Allen with the said defendant, and in consideration therefor, the defendant executed the said note, and this the defendant is ready to verify.”
To this ansrver the defendant in error demurred, and the court below sustained the demurrer, and rendered judgment in his favor for three hundred dollars damages, to be discharged on the payment of two hundred and twenty and twenty-five one-hundredths dollars, with interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent, per annum. The error complained of is in the ruling of the court in sustaining the demurrer.
By the demurrer, the defendant in error admits the truth of the answer, but says that, in law, it is not sufficient to prevent a recovery.
It has been held, and we suppose it to be the law, that a party can receive compensation for a felony, and that, by so doing, does not necessarily result in compounding. Wharton’s Criminal Law, page 833, chapter 5.
For these reasons, we think the demurrer was properly sustained; but the court below erred in giving judgment for three hundred dollars, to be satisfied on the payment of two hundred and twenty and twenty-five one-hundredths dollars, and interest at the rate
ORDER. — -We, therefore, render such judgment in this court as, in our opinion, should have been rendered below, to-wit: That the said Samuel N. Wood recover, of the said L. W. Hoover and J. D. Hutchinson, the sum of two hundred dollars, and the further sum of twenty and fifty-five one-hundredths dollars damages, and their costs in this behalf expended in the court below, said judgment to bear date on the eighth day of April, A. D. 1858, and the further sum of one-half the costs of this court; and that the said Hoover and Hutchinson recover, of the said Samuel N. Wood, one-half of the costs which have accrued in this case, in this court.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- L. W. HOOVER and P. S. HUTCHINSON agt. S. N. WOOD, Assignee of J. D. Allen
- Status
- Published