McGinnity v. Laguerenne

The Opinion of the Court was delivered by

Trumbull, J.

This was an action of debt, commenced by the appellees against the appellant, upon’a promissory note and an account. The declaration contains two counts, the first of which is special upon the note, and the second, the common money counts for goods sold, work done, &c., all in one count. After the issues were found for the appellees in the Court below, the appellant entered a motion in arrest of judgment, which motion was overruled and judgment entered in favor of appellees for five hundred and eighteen dollars debt, and one hundred and seventy nine dollars and thirty cents damages.

Several errors have been assigned, only one of which, the overruling the motion in arrest of judgment, we deem it necessary to notice, as that is decisive of the case. The declaration commences in debt, and the first count sets forth that the appellant on a certain day and year, at, &c., “by his promissory note of that date, by him made, for value received, four months after the date of said note, promised the said plaintiffs to pay them or their order without defalcation, the sum of four hundred and ten dollars,” and concludes with a request and refusal to pay. This count is sufficient. It sets forth the legal effect of the note sued upon, and the liability to pay arises from the character of the instrument; hence the usual allegation, “whereby the said defendant then and there became liable to pay^”&c. was wholly unnecessary. Nor is the count bad as a count in debt. The word promised is not used by way of averment to show the liability of the party to pay, but as descriptive of the instrument sued upon.

The second count, however, is of a different character. That is not a special count upon a contract which of itself creates a debt and raises a liability to pay, but the general indebitafus count upon the implied promises of the appellant,and after setting forth that the appellant was indebted to the appellees in a certain sum of money, for money lent, goods sold, work done, &c., it concludes by averring that the appellant “in consideration thereof, promised, the plaintiffs to pay them said last sum when thereunto requested,” &c. This conclusion makes the second a count in assumpsit and not in debt. Had the pleader intended it for a count in debt, he should have used the word agreed instead of the word “promised” or have stated the liability, so as to have avoided the use of the latter word. This case comes directly within the decision made at this term in the case of Cmile shank v. Brown, (ante, 75)]and because of the misjoinder of counts in debt and. 'assumpsit the judgment will have to be reversed. So long as the distinction between forms of action is kept up, parties must observe those distinctions or abide the consequences.

The only distinguishing feature between the common counts in assumpsit and in debt is, that in the one the word promised is used, and in the other it is not. If this distinction is disregarded, it'will be impossible for a defendant to know from the declaration in which form of action he is sued, and consequently he cannot know how to frame his defence, as the pleading as well as the judgment in the two actions is different, and what would be a good defence, as for instance the statute of limitations of five years, if the action were assumpsit, Would be no defence if the action were debt.

The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause remanded with leave to the appellees to amend their declaration.

Judgment reversed.