Dana v. Gill
Dana v. Gill
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Ginn, assignee of Holeman, instituted an action of covenant against Dana, for the recovery of commonwealth’s paper or its value, upon a note due -the 1st of August, 1820, assigned on the 16th of June, 1826, and dated 21st February, 1824. Dana plead payment, accord and satisfaction, and set-off. All the pleas relied on defences, against the assignor, before no» tice of the assignment. At the March term, 1828, the plaintiff was non-suited. At the same term the court made the following order. “It is ordered that the, non-suit rendered herein, be set aside, upon payment of costs.” At the next term, the plaintiff joined the first and replied to the second and third pleas. At the March term, 1829, the defendant moved the court to strike the cause from the docket, upon the ground that Jthe costs of lh« non-suit, entered at March, 1828, wens
In Jacob’s Taw Dictionary, a non-suit is said to- be “a renunciation of a suit by the plaintiff, or demandant, most commonly upon the discovery of some error or defect, when the matter is so far proceeded in, that the jury is ready to deliver their verdict.” In Bacon’s Abridgment, title, Non-suit, it is said, “where a plaintiff is demanded and doth not appear, he is said to. be non-suit.”
A non-suit, as may be seen by these authors, does not, except in some particular cases, constitute a bar to another suit for the same cause, and in this respect it differs from a retraxit. The only consequence of a non-suit, in" the general, is to subject the plaintiff to the payment of costs. Non-suits, when entered, may be set aside, sometimes without tire payment of costs, and sometimes upon payment of costs, as may be seen in a note; Bacon’s Abridgment, title, Non-suit, letter A. Now, it is contended here, that as the non-suit was set aside, upon payment of costs, that their payment constituted a condition precedent, which must be performed during the term at which the entry was made, and if not, that the order setting aside the non-suit, is altogether inoperative. There is no direction given by the court, as to the time within which the costs should be paid.' Their payment is not limited to the continuance of the term, and it seems to us to be an arbitrary construction so to consider it. What effect, then, shall that part of the order have, which declares the non-suit to be set aside upon payment of 'costs ? We answer; no other than to-impose an obligation upon the plaintiff, to pay the costs occasioned .by his default, and if he does not, it may furnish a good cause for attachment, to compel their payment or justify sueing out execution for the amount. In .this case, it was proved ihat the costs were paid, before the motion to strike the
The defendant in the circuit court proved that the assignor, Holeman, and himself, were partners in, and joint owners of, a printing establishment and newspaper, denominated the-Commentator, and were to share the profits and conduct the business for their common, benefit; that Holeman received a warrant on the treasurer, dated 23d December, 1825, for §‘1,235, payable to-Holeman and Dana, or to- Holeman, or to bearer, and gave evidence conducing to show, that as apartner of Holeman, he was equally interested in the amount of said warrant, and that warrants of that character were paid in notes on the bank of the commonwealth; see the act appropriating monej’, approved December 21st, 1825. A witness proved that said §‘1,235 had not been carried to, or entered upon, the account book of Holeman and Dana. The plaintiff'moved the court to exclude the foregoing evidence. The court refused, but instructed the jury, “that the fact of said Holeman having received the said sum of §1,235, for the use of the partnership between him and the dc*fendant, taken in connexion with the fact of his having omitted to bring the same into the partnership accounts, was not evidence from which they might infer that the money, or any part of it, had been applied by Holeman to the payment of the note sued on.”
This instruction presents the second question for consideration. The evidence upon which the instruction was predicated, did not, in our opinion, conduce, in the smallest degree, to support either the plea of accord and satisfaction, or that of set-off. If the evidence was admissible, the plea of payment alone justified its
As the record furnishes no proof whatever, in relation to the condition of the partnership, and the accounts of the partners, and the balance which might be due from one to the other, had their accounts been fully stated and settled, is it admissible to select the item which should have been placed upon the books of the firm, growing out of the appropriation, by the legislature, of the said $1,235, and to introduce it in the manner attempted,as evidence in this cause? We think it is not. On articles of partnership, partners may have remedy against each other, for a violation of any stipulation, in the action of covenant.
In general, where the accounts are stated, and a balance is struck, and one of the partners promises to pay it, an action of assumpsit may be maintained against him for tire money. The action of account was tolerated in favor of one partner against another; but this action has gone into disuse. These were the usual remedies between partners at common law; see Watson on Partnership, 394 to 409. They have been superseded in a great measure, by applications to a court of equity where intricate accounts constitute the subjects of con
One partner is not responsible to another for talffrig by force, and delivering over to a third person, the goods of the firm. Montjoy vs. Holder, Litt. Select Cases, 448. These doctrines result from the identity of the interest of partners in the money and goods of the firm. It follows from them, that Holeman was not responsible to Dana in an action at law, for any part of the bank notes received by him upon the auditor’s warrant, regarding these notes as paid on the partnership account. We cannot perceive how the failure to make an entry of the transaction on the books of the firm, should alter the case. The presumption is irre-sistable, that the warrant was paid at the treasury before the date of the assignment, and before the note sued on became due. There is no evidence of any agreement between the parties, by which Dana’s interest in the warrant was to be appropriated in payment of the note. Under these circumstances then,, connected with the law of the case, we are of opinion,, that the evidence did not furnish the least ground upon which the jury could indulge an inference in support of the plea of payment. The court should,, therefore, have excluded the evidence, leaving the $1,235, to be settled when the partnership transactions! are closed. The consequence-is, that the instruction-of the court did not prejudice the defendant.
The chief justice is of opinion, that, as there was-no proof of any other unsettled partnership account between the parties, and as Holeman- received the mo
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.