Carpenter v. Schanche
Carpenter v. Schanche
Opinion of the Court
For the apparent purpose of securing the payment of two promissory notes of $100 each, executed by Fred Buchanan, a printer, to the Eacine Hardware Company, a corporation, in settlement for a gasoline engine, the payor gave the agent of the payee an order in writing, directing the
The claim against Buchanan which the order for warrants was given to secure was never assigned to appellant, and the two.promissory notes which evidence such indebtedness have never left the hands of the Racine Hardware Company, and are presumptively still its property. Whether all rights appertaining to the order are dependent upon the ownership of the notes, so that the transfer of such an incident, without the debt to secure which it was given, passed no right to the assignee, is a question that need not, at this time, be determined. The tort made the basis of the action, and which respondent expressly denies, is alleged in the complaint as follows: “That, after said order had been so filed, said defendant, conspiring with said Buchanan, wrongfully, unlawfully and fraudulently, and without the knowledge or consent of said hardware company, and with intent to injure said company, and deprive it of the benefit of said order, and prevent it from receiving said-warrants so issued for said work done by said Buchanan for said county, and preventing said company from receiving the money called for by said warrants, took said older from the files of his office, and delivered the same to said Buchanan,
Reference
- Status
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- Syllabus
- Where plaintiff, the final assignee of certain claims, alleged that the debtor fraudulently destroyed the notice of assignment which had been served on him, and conspired with the assignor, and paid the claims to him, and the debtor produced evidence that an intermediate assignee, before assigning to plaintiff, gave the debtor notice to pay the claims to the assignor, such evidence was a defense, and the error in striking it out on motion, after it had been received without objection, was sufficient grounds for new trial.