By a receipt, signed by the appellee, Harding, dated December 19, 1866, and in evidence, it appears that on that day he received from R. M. Whipple & Co. five notes, amounting in all to §32,179.47, made partly by Whipple & Co., and partly by Whipple only, and all becoming due within seven months thereafter.
That as collateral security for those notes Whipple & Co. delivered to. Harding, among other things, the note about which this controversy arises, made by the appellants as C. & F. Hawkins, dated December 20 (the year is omitted in' the receipt, but in fact it was 1866), due in three months after date) for $3,500. Between Whipple and the appellants this was an accommodation note, though upon the conflict of testimony it must be assumed that Harding had no notice of that fact, at least early enough to affect him in this suit. On the 8tli day of May, 1867, the notes of Whipple & Co:, and Whipple, being partly due and all unpaid, Harding recovered a judgment against the appellants upon their note, in the Superior' Court of (then Chicago, now') Cook County. At some time about which the testimony conflicts, Whipple stating it to have been in May, 1873, and Harding in July, 1869, Harding surrendered to Whipple all the notes made by Whipple & Co., and Whipple, described in’the receipt. Why that was done, under what circumstances, the testimony of Whipple and Harding, who alone have any knowledge upon the subject, is in irreconcilable conflict. Their interests in the suit are ecpral. If the appellants pay, Harding gets his money, and Whipple must reimburse them.
Whipple says he paid the notes; Harding says that they were not paid, but the form of the indebtedness was only changed. In all points where the opportunity is open to them, they contradict each other.
The effect of this conflict is, that the case stands as if neither of them had testified.
There is, then, no explanation of the fact that the notes are in the possession of Whipple, and produced, from, his possession, on the hearing. From this alone the law will infer their payment. Walker v. Douglass, 70 Ill. 445; Sutphen v. Cushman, 35 Ill. 186.
It is obvious that the note of appellants, being an accommodation to Whipple, could only be collected by Harding, while, and to the amount, if less than the note, that Whipple owed him. He took “ the paper somewhat in the character of a trustee. He is entitled only to that part of the face value * * * which may be necessary to satisfy his own claim.” Tiedeman Corn. Pap., Sec. 304.
The possession of the principal notes by Whipple, raising the presumption that he had paid them, there was thereafter in Harding no right to collect from the appellants on the judgment. The judgment was rightly entered in his favor, for the principal debt was then unpaid; but it stood as a pledge or collateral security, as the note upon which it was founded did. The change of the form of the indebtedness did not change the relations of the parties. Upon this partial view of the whole case, it can not be contended that the judgment of May, 1867, should be enforced. If there were no more of the case, the prayer of the bill of the appellants should be granted, and a perpetual injunction against the claim of Harding awarded. Harding defends upon two grounds:
First. His answer to the bill states “ that a short time after December 19, 1866, and long before the maturity of said $3,500 note, this defendant, by virtue of a certain transaction with said Whipple, became the absolute and sole owner of said note,” and an amended answer states “ that shortly after the said collateral was deposited with him by the said Whipple, and before said notes upon which it was deposited as collateral became due, he bought the note of said complainants described in said bill, of the said Whipple, and paid in cash or its equivalent to the said Whipple, the value thereof at par in full.”
Both answers deny notice, when purchasing, of any defense by the appellants against Whipple. These allegations of the answers are new matter, not in response to allegations of the bill, and to be of any avail to Harding must be proved by him. 1 Dan. Chy. 844, where there is a great collection of cases in the note.
All the evidence in support of the allegations quoted is the testimony of Harding himself. Ho blame can attach to a witness for a want of recollection of long past transactions, but a court can not find- and act upon the truth of an allegation, from the testimony of a witness who can not remember and tell, with reasonable certainty, what the facts to which the allegation relates were. His testimony is made voluminous by much questioning, but as to the present matter, the result is this:
“Judge Blackman: How, Mr. Harding, are you certain which state of facts is true, that you held this note as collateral for an additional loan, or purchased it ? Which are you sure about now ? ”
“A. I have never said I was sure. It is twenty-three years ago or more. I have never said I was sure. I said it was my best recollection. I know this: That in some way I owned it, and never surrendered it as collateral at all, or that that debt was paid for which it was collateral, never. One of these two things is certainly true—or three things, as you may put it. I am certain of that. I have always said that it was never paid. I think my original statement is true.”
The “ original statement” here referred to was, in effect, that if he had not bought the note of the appellants, when the form of the indebtedness of Whipple to him was changed? then he continued to hold it as collateral; but if he had bought it, that he did not continue so to hold it, but that his recollection was, that he had taken the note before the judgment, for its face, from Whipple, and he got credit for it upon the five notes, or some other indebtedness.
So much of the testimony here repeated as denies the payment of the five notes must be disregarded, as it is set off against the testimony of Whipple, leaving the presumption of payment from the fact of the notes being in Whipple’s possession without rebuttal.
The whole effect of the testimony is in the words, “ I know this, that in some way, I owned it.” Whether he owned it or not, was a mere conclusion of law which the court would draw, if the facts could be ascertained. The certainty in the mind of the witness that he owned it, or the emphasis with which he asserts that ownership, gives the court no aid in drawing a conclusion. His belief of ownership was not based upon his recollection of the facts; these he had forgotten.
It is clear that his present certainty comes from his remembrance, that when he did know the facts he thought he owned the note. Whether he then judged rightly would depend upon his accuracy as a lawyer, and his impartiality where his own interests wTere involved.
In principle it is the same character of testimony as was held incompetent in Massure v. Noble, 11 Ill. 531, where an attorney, who had filed a petition for partition, the petition being lost, was permitted to testify u that the petition and all the proceedings were regular and in proper form, and that the petition set forth all that was necessary as to the rights of the parties, and other matters necessary and proper.” And see McGeoch v. Hooker, 11 Ill. App. 649.
The allegations of ownership are, therefore, unproved. The answers relying upon that defense, and in no way claiming a present existing lien upon the note or judgment founded thereon, as collateral security, the case stands that Harding has no just claim upon the appellants.
He can not now claim to hold as collateral, for that is inconsistent with his answers. Parkhurst v. Race, 100 Ill. 558; Johnson v. Johnson, 114 Ill. 611.
The ordinary presumption in favor of an indorsee, holding commercial paper, that he took it for value before maturity without notice, etc., does not apply here, because the origin of the title of Harding to the note is shown, and if he claims a new and further title, he must prove it. That presumption applies to the taking of the paper; nothing afterward.
With what right Harding first held the note being known, the presumption is that he continued to hold it in that right. 1 Greenl. Ev. Sec. 41. This ground of defense fails.
Second. On the 6th day of April, 1887, within less than five weeks of twenty years after the entry of the original judgment, Harding sued the appellants in the Superior Court in debt upon the judgment.
The appellants pleaded nul tiel record, and he recovered a new judgment for $8,200. He now urges that the appellants, not having successfully defended that suit, are cut off from any relief in chancery.
Undoubtedly the appellants occupied the position of sureties for the payment of the debt of Whipple, even though Harding did not know that their note was an accommodation note. But that position does not help them now.
Whatever may be the conflict of authority elsewhere (Brandt on Guar. Sec. 209), the law of this State is settled, that when a surety is sued at law, he must, if he can, make his defense there, and if he neglects to do so, he can not afterward have relief in chancery. Ramsey v. Perley, 34 Ill. 504; Smith v. Powell, 50 Ill. 21; Mellendy v. Austin, 69 Ill. 15.
And it is also true that by the course of judicial legislation in this State, it is a defense for a surety at law that the creditor has wrongfully deprived the surety of recourse to collateral security held by the creditor, to which the surety had the right of subrogation. Rogers v. Trustees, 46 Ill. 428; Phares v. Barbour, 49 Ill. 370; Kirkpatrick v. Howk, 80 Ill. 122.
And this even when the contract to which the surety is a party is under seal. Rogers v. Trustees, 46 Ill. 428.
Mow, though the common law is that to an action for money, due by deed, payment after the day is not a good plea (2 Saunders R. 48b), and it was only by the statute of 4 Anne, not in force here, that such payment could be pleaded, yet there has always, since 1827 at least, been in force in this State a section corres ponding to Section 29 of the present Practice Act, recognizing the plea of payment as a good plea in any action upon a contract.
It is within the equity and spirit of that section to recognize, as a defense to an action upon a contract, whatever, either at law, or by the rules of equity, to which courts of law can give effect, operates to discharge or extinguish the claim upon the contract.
The statute of 4 Anne extends to judgments, but we have no equivalent legislation.
In debt upon a judgment, payment is no plea. Kettleby v. Hales, 3 Lev. 119, and see Sewall v. Sparrow, 16 Mass. 24; Gulick v. Loder, 13 N. J. L. 68.
The common law rule is that no specialty can be avoided, but by an instrument of as high a nature; and a judgment, being a security of the highest character, can not be avoided by a writing not under seal. Sewall v. Sparrow, 16 Mass. 24; Shep. Touch. 323; Broom’s Leg. Max. 877. The remedy was by audita quereta. Com. Dig. that title A. Matter in jpais, like error in the record, was no defense to an action upon the judgment, and could only be made available by a direct proceeding to avoid the judgment.
This ancient stringency of the common law has been departed from in this State only in two particulars. One in allowing, under the equity, as I have shown, of Sec. 29 of the Practice Act, defenses in actions on contracts, analogous or equivalent to payment. The other is, that in actions apon instruments, which are covered by the statute concerning negotiable instruments, want of, or fraud in the consideration, may be shown in defense. White v. Watkins, 23 Ill. 480.
But as to sealed instruments, not within that statute, fraud in the consideration can not, at law, be made a defense. Johnson v. Wilson, 33 Ill. App. 639, where the point is decided and the authorities collected in the opinion of Mr. Justice Moran.
Mor to such an instrument can it be made a defense at law that the parties have modified or changed it by a subsequent agreement not under seal. Ill. C. R. R. v. B. & O. & C. R. R., 23 Ill. App. 531, where by court and counsel the cases are collected ; and this is so, though the defense is made by a surety, and the change is by a written, but not sealed, contract, upon adequate, valuable consideration. Chapman v. McCrew, 20 Ill. 101.
As to judgments, I do not find that any case has ever arisen in this State in which it could have been made a question whether there should be a departure from the strict rule of the common law as to a plea of payment.
In Rae v. Hurlbut, 17 Ill. 572, it was held that in an action upon a foreign judgment, a plea of set-off was not good at common law, nor warranted by our statute, and therefore was bad.
By statute the common law is to “be the rule of decision,” until repealed by legislative authority.
The boasted flexibility of the common law consists, not in abandoning settled rules, but in applying them to new combinations of circumstances, and new agencies of civilization. Legislation was required to change entails into life estates with remainder in fee; joint tenancies into tenancies in common; joint into joint and several covenants and obligations; to make the word “ heirs,” or some equivalent unnecessary to carry a fee; to relieve from the penalty of a bond on payment of the actual damages for a breach of the condition; though the hardship arid injustice resulting from the old rules have been often flagrant.
The appellants could not have pleaded successfully, when they were sued upon the judgment of 1867, that the note upon which that judgment was founded was an accommodation note to Whipple, and that the debt for which he pledged it as collateral to Harding, had been paid to Harding by Whipple since the rendition of that judgment.
Ho such defense was cognizable at law. There was no neglect on the part of the appellants in not attempting the impossible. Their remedy was and is only in chancery.
The delay of the appellants in not filing a bill in chancery, while the action upon the judgment was pending, a period of more than twenty months, is not made a ground of defense. It is therefore waived. Walker v. Dennison, 86 Ill. 142.
But such delay is not laches within the rule of equity. Mass. Ins. Co. v. Boggs, 121 Ill. 119.
And besides, this is not a case in which the complainants are seeking to obtain from the defendant something that he has, but they seek to prevent him from taking from them by legal process something that they have. The rule ought to be different as to laches, where the relief asked is in fact merely defensive, from what it is when the relief asked is aggressive.
The apjrellants are not chargeable with laches in not filing their bill before the action upon the judgment was commenced. The testimony does not show that any demand was made upon them to pay that judgment, after the surrender by Harding of the Whipple notes, until after the record of the judgment had been destroyed by the fire of 1871.
Ho execution could then issue. Harding was taking no steps to revive or renew it. Delay on his part was operating for their safety.
The judgment existed only in the memory or memoranda of witnesses, and that he left it in that condition for fourteen and a half years, is a foundation as much for the presumption that he had no just claim, as that they had no defense.
On the whole case the decree of the Superior Court must be reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to that court to enter a decree perpetually enjoining the appellee, Harding, from enforcing his judgment.
Reversed and remanded.
Waterman, J., dissents.