Vance v. Boyce
Vance v. Boyce
Opinion of the Court
The judgment of '.the court was pronounced by
This action is brought by the plaintiff in her own right as surviving wife, .and as executrix,of-the last - will, and tutrix of the minor children, of the late Gilbert Vance. She alleges herself to be the owner of a certain promissory note, dated at New Orleans on the .1st May, 1884, pnyable live years after date, and drawn by the defendant, in favor of Thomas Barrett, far the sum of §4,600, with ten per cent interest after maturity until paid. The note was payable at the counting house of Thomas Barrett & Co. in New Orleans, and was protested for non-payment. It bears the endorsement of Thomas Barrett, and Thomas Barrett Sf Co. in liquidation. There was judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendant lias appealed, and has argued,his case, orally and in writing, in person.
It appears that the note was discounted by the Merchants Bank in New Orleans, which acted as agent of the Bank of the United States, and the proceeds were carried to the credit of Gilbert Vance, who was the lust endorser. This appears by the discount record. The witness examined .for .the defendant thinks that the proceeds.of this were used, with the proceeds .of other notes discounted for Vance, in taking up paper, held for the account of the Bank of the United States, of .which T. Barrett Sf Co. were the drawers, and Gilbert Vance, the endorser; but the witness, not having access to the books of the bank, cannot speak positively as to how the proceeds of the note were used.
On the trial of the cause the defendant made an affidavit for a continuance, in which he stated that he expected to prove that Gilbert Vance was an accommodation endorser, and designated the commissioners who have.charge of the books of the bank, as having the means of ascertaining the fact, by affording access to the books, and thereby showing the relation in which .Vance stood to this paper. The court belo.w held that the defendant was not entitled to a continuance, but required the plaintiff .to make .certain admissions, one of which was that the commissioners of the Merchants Bank would swear that, from entries made in the books of the Merchants Bank in their possession, it appears .that Gilbert Vance endorsed the note sued on, as an accommodation endorser for Thomas Barrett Sf Co. in liquidation. To this decision the plaintiff, as well as the defendant, excepted, and this admission must be .considered as part of the evidence on which the suit was tried.
The books of the Merchants Bank could only show the disposition made of the proceeds of discounts, and the apparent relations of parties as exhibited by the notes and bills in which the bank operated. The theory of accommodation paper the commissioners might .not be sufficiently conversant with, to enable them to state with precision what state of facts creates the relation of an ac
The defence urged against her right to recover is that, before the note fell •due,:the defendant was, and still is, a creditor of Thomas Barrett and Thomas Barrett Co-, for an amount greater than that of the note sued on, -which the defendant pleads in compensation of the note; -but the allegation is of such a character that under it no court of justice could award to him a sous;
The defendant has endeavored to bring into this defenoe matters which relate exclusively to the concerns of the Bank of the United States and the Mer-chants Bank, and which can have no connection with the controversy between ■the present parties; and, in relation to the other points which have been presented by the defendant in his written argument, we have examined them all, .and find them entirely untenable. Judgment affirmed-
The answer alleged that “ before tho note foil due defendant, was, and still is, a creditor Thomas Ban-ell and Thomas Barrett, tj- Co., for an amount exceeding that .of the note •sued-on,” without specifying tho amount of the credit. — II.
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