Jordan v. Phelps
Jordan v. Phelps
Opinion of the Court
This action is brought against the defendant, -as administrator, to recover two distinct demands, one of $100, for services alleged to have been done by the plaintiff, for the intestate, in his lifetime, and the other of $30, for so much money previously received by the intestate of the plaintiff. The former claim was left to the jury upon conflicting evidence, and under instructions which were not excepted to by the plaintiff. The jury found a general verdict for the defendant.
The other claim was as follows: The intestate in his lifetime had a note against the present plaintiff, for an amount much exceeding $30, towards which this plaintiff paid him $30. Subsequently, the. intestate brought an action on the note, not having indorsed the payment thereon. The present plaintiff, then defendant, drew up and exhibited a specification of defence, stating amongst other grounds a payment of $30. At the second term, he withdrew his appearance, suffered a default, and the plaintiff took judgment for the whole amount of the note, without deducting the payment. The case shows, that the present plaintiff, when sued on his note, knew that he had made a payment thereon; that he had his evidence of that fact; and that he had opportunity to offer it, and obtain the proper reduction of damages; but that he knowingly and voluntarily declined, failed, or forbore to do so. Can he now recover it back, as money had and received by the intestate to his use or otherwise ?
It is maintained, on the part of the defendant, that he had an option, either to give the payment in evidence in that action, or purposely lie by, and if the plaintiff did not himself make the deduction, then to bring an action and recover back
And upon principle, it appears to lis that the result must be the same. Assumpsit must be founded upon some promise express or implied. When a creditor receives a payment towards his debt, making no express promise respecting it, the law implies no promise to repay it. He receives it to his own use, not to the use of the payer. It extinguishes the debt pro tanto, and is a finished and executed act, from which no executory duty or obligation arises.
Again, by the theory of the law, a default is an admission of record of the existence and amount of the debt claimed. By such a judgment, the debtor is estopped, and must therefore see to it, that judgment is not recovered for more than what is due, because he would be bound by that estoppel. And even if he cannot command his evidence, in order to prove his payment seasonably, so as to give it in reduction of the judgment, and afterwards is able to produce such evidence, he cannot maintain an original action to recover back the money paid, (Marriott v. Hampton, 7 T. R. 269;) and he is without remedy, unless he can'bring himself within some of the provisions of law, relating to reviews and writs of error, by which the judgment itself can be corrected. And this principle is founded on high considerations of public policy, which requires as speedy, an end to litigation as justice will permit, and prohibits circuity of action and the multiplicity of suits, in order to determine one and the same right. The court are of opinion, that the directions of the court of common pleas, in this respect, were right.
Exceptions overruled.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.