The plaintiff declares on the common counts in assumpsit for the price of a yoke of oxen sold by him to the defendant. The Court of Common Pleas having rendered judgment for the plaintiff, the defendant moves for a new *561trial. The motion at great length sets out the claims of the parties and the evidence whereby these claims were supported. The question however resolves itself into one of law, arising upon facts found by the court below to be substantially as follows:—
The plaintiff sold to the defendant a yoke of oxen. About ten days after the sale he called on the defendant for payment. The defendant had no money, but had a note against one Hall, payable at bank to the order of the defendant. The plaintiff took this note, and, as defendant claimed and testified, received it towards payment, as far as it went, for the oxen. The plaintiff on the other hand claimed and testified that he took the note as a mere means of payment, being told by the defendant that the note upon presentment at the bank would bring the money. Both parties seem to have been ignorant of the nature of such a note, for the defendant did not indorse it, although payable to his order, and nothing appears to have been said by either party about an indorsement.
The court, regarding the testimony of the parties as of equal credit and equally balanced, and there being no. other testimony to turn the scale, decided that as matter of law the burden of proof was on the defendant, and that the defendant not having established his defence the plaintiff was entitled to judgment. The defendant now insists before us that the court erred in holding that under the circumstances the burden of proof rested upon him.
We think the decision of the Court of Common Pleas is correct. That court found, as matter of fact, that the defendant became debtor for the oxen. The defence was that this debt had beep satisfied. The burden of proving satisfaction was of course on the defendant.
The mere'fact that he had delivered to the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff had received from him, Hall’s note, did not make a primd facie case of payment. Th§ purpose of the delivery might be as collateral security, and as'mere means of satisfaction, or it might be as payment and satisfaction. The fact of delivery is equally consistent with either purpose.
*562• The defendant contended that the non-indorsement of the note is significant in his favor, as showing that he did not intend to be holdon for its goodness. The plaintiff contended that if the note had been received in satisfaction the legal title would naturally have been transferred to him by endorsement, which endorsement might have been without recourse if the note was really to be taken at the plaintiff’s risk. Whatever weight these suggestions of counsel may be entitled to on- the question of fact, we think there is nothing in the fact of non-endorsement which changes the burden of proof. The defendant must prove his defense. He must satisfy the triers that the note was taken in satisfaction. All the circumstances attending the transaction, including this of non-endorsemezrt, az’e proper tobe takezz izzto cozisideration, but the law attaches no special significance to the absence of the defendant’s ziame on the note as elzanging the burdezi of proof.
Besides the questiozi thus far discussed, the defezzdant says that it appeaz’s frozn the finding that whezi Hall’s zzote becazne due he had property and the ziote was collectible, and that the plaintiff, instead of enforcing collection, took a zzew zzote from Hall without the defendant’s krzowledge or consezzt, azid that by thus doizzg the defendant is discharged, Hall having become insolvent before the zzew note becazne due. If these are precisely the facts, azzd all the facts, the defendazzt would seem to have a good defezice, for if the first note of Hall was received as mere security, yet if the plaintiff without the defendant’s cozzsent gives time to Hall or discharges him from the old debt, the law is plain that the defendant may by these acts be discharged from further liability.
But izz answer to this claim of the defendant it appeaz’s, 1st, that the defezzdant pleaded the general isszze and gave no notice of any such defezzee as that- now made ; 2d, it does not appear that any such defence as that now under cozzsideration was presezzted to the attezztion of the Court of Common Pleas; 3d, the finding izidicates that the matter zzow relied ozz as a defence was cozznected with other facts which might essentially qualify the main fact relied on.
*563It does however appear in the record that the defendant claimed before the court below that, the plaintiff having delivered up the first note to Hall and accepted the second without the knowledge of the defendant, the law will presume that the -plaintiff received the first note in payment and gave credit to Hall, and that the burden of proof was on the plaintiff to show that it was not so received. It will be noticed that the defendant does not here rely upon the subsequent conduct of the plaintiff as being in itself a defence, but he relies upon it as changing the burden of proof in respect to the purpose for which Hall’s note was originally received. The record does not show except by inference what disposition of this claim was made by the Court of Common Pleas ; but the result shows that the court did not place on this evidence the artificial value claimed for it of changing the burden of proof. This evidence of the plaintiff’s subsequent conduct is admissible against him, and has some bearing on the main issue between the parties whether the first note of Hall was taken and received at the time it was taken in satisfaction and payment, but the law gives no artificial force to evidence of this kind, but properly leaves it, with all its attendant circumstances, to whatever force it naturally lias in carrying conviction to the mind of the trier.
We do not advise a new trial.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.