Messner v. Hendricks
Messner v. Hendricks
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This is an action of assumpsit on a promissory note, dated April 12, 1909, for $832, due in three months. There is no dispute about the validity of the note as it was a renewal of a like note, dated January 12, 1909, due in three months for the same amount. The defendant admits that he owed the plaintiff the amount of the first note and that the one in suit was given to take up the one of January 12, 1909. The whole dispute between the parties is in regard to the payment of the note in suit. The affidavit of defense does not attempt to alter, reform or set aside the written agreement between the parties, dated March 26, 1909, but it does aver, quite strongly, and in detail, that the amount named in that contract, to wit, $2,582, which defendant agreed to pay to the plaintiff, was, first, by an oral agreement, and, subsequently, by said written agreement, made precisely $832 more than plaintiff was to receive for doing the electrical work in thirty-two houses at East Washington lane
“That prior to the completion of said contract of March 26, 1909, and before the plaintiff was entitled to receive title to said property under the terms of said contract, the defendant gave to the plaintiff a renewal of said note for $832, dated April 12, 1909, payable in three months from the date thereof.” Now it seems quite clear that if the affidavit of defense speaks the truth, which it must be assumed to do for present purposes, then the plaintiff has received payment in full for the note in suit and it ought, as said in the affidavit, “to be destroyed and all liability thereon cease.”
The learned court below granted judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense. In our opinion the court took a wrong view of the force and effect of the affidavit of defense. It simply avers payment of the note of which the one in suit is but a renewal and sets out very fully how the note was paid, through the compliance of the parties with the terms of the contract of March 26, 1909. If the defendant had set out in the affidavit that on a certain day, at a certain place, he met the plaintiff and paid him in cash $832, in full of the note in suit and that the plaintiff did not have the note there but said he would go home and destroy it, but in
The learned court below attached much importance to the fact that the contract of March 26, 1909, made no mention of the note, either the original or the renewal thereof, nor of its payment; and further, that the note in suit was executed and delivered about seventeen days after the execution of said written contract. This is true; but the note in suit being only a renewal of the one of January 12, 1909, it is not difficult to see that the defendant may not have thought that the renewal note at all changed the situation. Moreover, this is in some degree explained in the quotation we have made from the affidavit that at the time the defendant gave the note in suit, the terms of the contract of March 26, 1909, had not then been fully complied with. Of course it was foolish for the defendant to so renew the note of January 12, 1909, by executing and delivering the one in suit, without anything in the contract or in any other writing to show that compliance with the terms of the contract of March 26, 1909, was to satisfy the note in question, but the law must be administered so as to protect foolish persons, if it can be done in a manner not to conflict with well-settled rules of law and practice established to aid in the administration of justice.
The defendant having fully averred in the affidavit full compliance with the terms of the contract of March 26, 1909, and that such compliance paid and canceled the
The assignment of error is sustained and the judgment is reversed without prejudice, etc., and a procedendo is awarded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.