Hamilton v. Stewart

Tompkins, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The administrator of Rundlett brought his action in the circuit court against Stewart, and judgment being given against him, this writ of error is prosecuted to reverse the judgment.

This suit was by petition in debt on a note dated 14th November, 1836. The letters of administration made proferí of, were dated on 10th September, 1836.

Five several pleas were pleaded; on two, issues of fact were taken; on the three last, were joined issues of law.

The third plea was, that neither the plaintiff, as administrator, nor the deceased in his lifetime', ever informed the defendant where the goods should be delivered.

Fourth plea. There was no demand of goods.

Fifth. That the defendant, before the commencement of the suit, had no notice that the plaintiff was the owner of the note.

To the third plea, the plaintiff replied that defendant never applied to either the intestate or to the plaintiff, as administrator, to inquiie where the goods should be delivered.

To this replication the defendant demurred. The plin-tiff demurred to the fourth and filth pleas.

The circuit court overruled the demurrer of the plaintiff to the fourth and fifth pleas, because the plaintiff’s petition was insufficient to entitle him to maintain his action.

The point made by the counsel of the defendant is, that from the plaintiff’s own showing, his intestate was not alive at the dale of the note declared upon, and therefore, could not have been the payee. If the note was not given at the time it bears date, the fact should be stated, and the true time stated.

This is the point and argument made, and the rule correctly stated as suits are brought at common law. The statute, however, which gives the mode of ceeding to recover debts, prescribes the form of the petition. The plaintiff is required to state that he is the *268legal owner of a bond, note, &c. against the defendant, to the following effect: [He then inserts a copy of the instrument sued on, and adds, “yet the said debt remains unpaid,” &c.]

By the third section of the act, the petitioner is required to leave the instrument on file in the' clerk’s office when he presents his petition.

The form prescribed by the act precludes the plaintiff from making any statement of the true time when the instrument was executed, and no inconvenience can arise to the defendant on that account, for the instrument sued on is left on file for his inspection; and if he did make the note on a day different from that on which it appears to be dated, he can recollect it as well as the plaintiff; if not, then he may prepare himself both by his pleadings and his testimony, to show that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover. As the date of a note is by no means material,and as the statute requites a copy to be inserted in the petition, that petition does not her come the subject of a demurrer, because the note sued on bears date after the death of the maker.

The plaintiff might, on trial, have been able to prove that the note wars made on a day before the death of the intestate, and whatever he might have been required to state in a declaration at common law that is incompatible with this statutory mode of proceeding, he must be allowed to prove on the trial, if the defendant, by his plea elect to put it in issue.

The circuit court, then, in my opinion, should not have decided the plaintiff’s petition to be insufficient, because it did not state the true time -when the instrument sued on was made. Its judgment ought then, in my opinion, to be reversed, and such being the opinion of the rest of .the court, it is reversed, and the cause remanded.