Mitaine v. Ferguson
Mitaine v. Ferguson
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit is brought hy the endorsee of apromissory note of hand against the first endorser thereof. The defendant admitted his endorsement, pleaded the general issue and denied specially that the plaintiff was the legal and bona fide holder of the note sued on. The case was tried hy a jury .who found a verdict in favor of the'defendant, and the plaintiff appealed.
The evidence shows that the note was given in consideration of a part of the price of a female slave, and that the same was endorsed hy the defendant at the time of the purchase thereof hy one Chapman from one Platet, hy whose endorsement, said note, paraphed Ne Varietur, was transferred to the plaintiff. Proof has also been adduced that due notice of the dishonor of the note was given to the endorser, and that the plaintiff’s name was on the bach of said note at the time of its protest.
During the progress of the suit, plaintiff amended his petition and issued a writ of sequestration, hy virtue of which, the slave having been found in the defendant’s possession, was taken by the sheriff in his custody; and after the, return of the writ, defendant was allowed to bond the property as his own.
On the trial of the cause, defendant introduced a witness who testified that “ a man calling himself Jean Baptiste Mi-taine came to him this morning, and told him that the first suit set for trial to day was under his name, hut that he had nothing to do with it, and that the endorser had paid him.” No plea of payment however is set up in the defendant’s answer, who, on the contrary, limits his defence to the plea that the plaintiff is not the bona fide holder of the note. -
We are at a loss to conceive on what grounds the jury may ^ave kage¿ their verdict: — It is perfectly clear that the defen-¿¡arit ]lad no right to inquire whether the plaintiff, in whom the legal title to the note sued on, appeared to he vested, was the agent or the real owner of it, unless, by a fictitious assignment.; it was attempted to deprive him of substantial grounds of defence which he may have had against the true owner; nothing however is set up in the answer which has any tendency to show that the defendant has any equitable defence to oppose to the payment of the note, and it is certainly immaterial to him whether the plaintiff recovers for his individual benefit or as the agent of another; as the judgment here will have the effect of Res Judicata against any one who hereafter claim an interest in the note. 3 Martin N. S. 291, 392.- — 5 La. Rep. 48.
It is however contended that there is proof that the amount sued for has, from the declarations of the plaintiff, been paid. to him by the endorser: — The evidence of this fact appears to us to be very loose and indefinite; the endorser alluded to cannot be the defendant who, as we have already said, has not set up any plea of payment; and it is difficult to believe that if he had really discharged the obligation, he would not have availed himself of this defence, instead of relying solely upon an -exception which seems inconsistent with his actual pretensions; indeed, the allegation that the plaintiff is not the true owner of the note, takes away any idea that the defendant would ever have paid him its amount. The vague declarations of the plaintiff that he had nothing to do with the note and that the endorser had paid him, cannot be construed in any other manner but as meaning that he was acting as the agent of his previous endorser (Platet) by whom he had been paid; and if so, the defendant, who, in the absence of any valid defence, must pay it to the apparent legal holder, has nothing to do with this matter. — We think that the verdict of the jury is manifestly erroneous, and our judgment must be in favor of the plaintiff.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MITAINE v. FERGUSON
- Status
- Published