Kohn v. Hornung
Kohn v. Hornung
Opinion of the Court
Opinion bt
The plaintiff’s action was brought to recover the amount of three promissory notes for $100 each given by the defendant to the Empire Distillery Company to apply on the purchase of thirty barrels of whisky. The transaction was between an agent of the distillery company and the defendant. The whisky was in a bonded warehouse and was not seen by the defendant. The supplemental affidavit of defense sets forth that a sample of the whisky was exhibited by the agent of the distillery company at the time of the contract of sale. Only three barrels of the whisky were delivered to the defendant it having been agreed that the distillery company was to keep the whisky in its warehouse until the notes given by the defendant had been paid, the three barrels shipped having been paid for in cash. It is averred that the whisky delivered on the contract was not in accordance with the sample which was exhibited by the agent but totally unlike and inferior to the sample and absolutely useless to the defendant in his business. It is further averred that by the agreement between the defendant and the distillery company’ if the goods did not prove as represented the defendant was only to pay for the amount of goods used. These allegations we regard as sufficient to put the vendor on proof in an action be
It is said, however, that this defense is not available because the action is on promissory notes regularly negotiated before maturity. This objection is met by the averment in the supplemental affidavit that the plaintiff is in fact only the agent and employee of the distillery company; that he is lending himself to it for the purpose of procuring judgment against the defendant for the amount of the notes; that he paid no consideration whatever for the notes and that he had full knowledge of the facts involved in the transaction. An affidavit similar in substance was held to be sufficient in Moeck v. Littell, 82 Pa. 354, and in Bacon v. Scott, 154 Pa. 250. If this statement is true the Empire Distillery Company is the owner of the notes and a defense on the merits is available to the defendant. We think that on the facts set up in the affidavits of defense the defendant was entitled to a trial by jury.
The judgment is reversed with a procedendo.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.