Muse v. Farmers Bank
Muse v. Farmers Bank
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of .the court.
This case comes before us upon a writ of error and supersedeas to a judgment of the circuit court of Pittsylvania county. The Farmers Bank of Virginia at Danville brought an action of debt in that court against Finney & Muse, as makers, and three others, as indorsers of a negotiable note payable at that bank. The defendant, Finney, alone appeared, and filed a plea of nil debet, which was verified by his affidavit; and thereupon, on motion of the plaintiff by his attorney, it was ordered that the cause be discontinued as to him. The other defendants not appearing, judgment by default was rendered against them for the debt claimed in the declaration.
This judgment has been assailed by the learned
The learned counsel for tbe defendants insists that the present case is distinguishable in several particulars from that of Bush v. Campbell. For example, it is said that all the defendants were in that case parties, apparently at least, to the contract. Their names were signed to the bond, and the plaintiff could not know they were not really so until the trial of the issues upon the pleas of non est factum. Whereas, in the* present action, the plaintiff has sued the wrong person, one having no connection with the instrument declared on, real or apparent. And it is argued, that the statute giving joint actions upon negotiable notes against makers and indorsers, authorizes one, all, or any intermediate number, to be sued, but it does not permit a defendant to be included who is neither maker nor indorser.
The learned counsel is unquestionably correct in saying that the statute he refers to does not authorize the joinder of a person who is neither maker nor indorser. That proposition does not admit of discussion. And if that statute stood alone the argument would be unanswerable. But it must be read in connection with the provisions of the section already cited, which provide that although the plaintiff may be barred as to one or more of the defendants, he may nevertheless have judgment against the others. These provisions apply as well to joint actions upon negotiable instruments, as upon instruments not negotiable. In either case the object and effect of the statute is to avoid the expense, delay and trouble of a new suit against parties who are liable. There is no good reason why it should not apply in the one case as in the other. Ho one, of course, should be joined in the
In the present ease the declaration is against William A. J. Finney and Henry L. Muse, late partners trading under the style of Finney & Muse. The record states that the said William A. J. Finney comes by his attorney and says he does not owe the sum of money in the declaration mentioned. It’ may be that there were two persons of the same name, and that process was served upon the wrong person. As nothing of the kind appears by the record we cannot presume that such was the fact. One thing is very' clear, that the defendant named in the declaration and writ bears the same name as the person upon whom process was served, and by whom the plea of nil debet was filed. That plea verified by afl'adavit, put the entire declaration in issue. Under it any fact may be relied upon which shows that the party pleading does not owe the debt. The plaintiff' may have been satisfied that the defendant Finney did not sign the note, nor authorize any one else to sign it for him; or that the partnership had been dissolved before the note was executed by Muse. Either of these matters was sufficient for the discharge of Finney without affecting the liability of the other defendants. This court will presume rather that Finney did not owe the debt, as
The learned counsel for the defendants, varying his ground of attack upon the judgment, insists that the conduct of the plaintiff in discontinuing the suit against the defendant Finney, amounts to a retraxit; the effect of which is to preclude the other defendants from recourse upon Finney for contribution or indemnity.
But clearly the order in question was not a retraxit; as that can only be entered by the plaintiff in person in open court.
The term “discontinuance” is not applied in pleading merely to those cases in which the plaintiff leaves a chasm in the proceedings of his cause. The word is also frequently used to indicate that the “ plaintiff' discontinues his action.” The judgment in such case is no more than an agreement not to proceed farther in that suit against that particular defendant. Such judgment is not a bar to any future action against the same party. And this is precisely the effect of the order of discontinuance entered in the present case. Coffman & Richardson v. Russell, 4 Munf. 207, is a direct authority upon this point.
Upon the whole, we think there is no error in the judgment of the circuit court, and that the same must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.