Backus v. Spaulding

129 Mass. 234, 1880 Mass. LEXIS 222
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 129 Mass. 234 (Backus v. Spaulding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Backus v. Spaulding, 129 Mass. 234, 1880 Mass. LEXIS 222 (Mass. 1880).

Opinion

Colt, J.

This action is upon a promissory note, not negotia ble, for $3180, signed by Jonathan S. Baker, the defendants'" testator. It is brought in the name of Backus, the payee, for the benefit of the firm of Stoddard & Kellogg, to whom it was assigned a few days before its maturity, and who gave notice of the assignment to the defendants soon after.

When this note was given, Baker was liable, as accommodation indorser, upon a note of Backus for $2500, which was then overdue. After the assignment of the note in suit to the plaintiffs in interest, and notice of it to the defendants, and after it became due, but before this action was commenced, the $2500 note was paid by the defendants as executors of Baker, and they now insist that the amount of the same shall be allowed in set-off in this action. They allege that, when the note in suit was given, it was agreed between Baker and Backus that the amount which the former should be obliged to pay on account of his liability as accommodation indorser for the latter should go to reduce the note in suit, by way of set-off. But the judge properly ruled that there was no evidence of this agreement which could be submitted to the jury. The evidence was that the negotiable quality of the note was destroyed by the erasure of the words “ or order; ” that Backus was insolvent, and known to be so by Stoddard & Kellogg at the time of the assignment to them; and that they were advised by the defendants before the assignment not to buy the note, because the estate of Baker had claims more than enough to meet it. But these facts are all consistent with the non-existence of the alleged agreement; and their weight as evidence is not increased by the consideration that Backus was not present at the trial, and did not give his deposition. The failure of a party to call a witness, who may be supposed to know of the fact in dispute, cannot be treated as affording positive evidence against him, or as adding to other evidence, unless the witness is within reach, and his testimony is needed to explain evidence already in. Backus does not appear to have been within reach, and there was nothing tending to show the existence of an agreement which the plaintiffs in interest were called on to explain. Commonwealth v. Clark, 14 Gray, 367.

A more important question is whether, independently of the alleged agreement between the parties, the set-off claimed can be [236]*236properly allowed. In dealing with that question, the note is to be treated as taken by Stoddard & Kellogg simply as assignees of a chose in action. The right of the defendants to apply in set-off the amount paid, after notice of the assignment, in discharge of the liability of Baker as accommodation indorser or surety for Backus, must be settled by the rules which govern in actions at law. The assignees of the note took it subject to all legal defences and all right of set-off existing at the time of its maturity between the parties to it. Their rights against the maker of the note are determined by the rights of the payee at that time.

The facts in the present case show that when Baker’s note became due, after notice, of the assignment, the defendants, as representatives of Baker’s estate, had no debt against Backus, the payee, which could be availed of by way of set-off to diminish or extinguish the amount then due. An accommodation indorser or surety has no debt against the principal maker until he has paid the amount for which he is liable as surety or indorser. His liability is collateral, and his claim on the principal is contingent and uncertain, because it cannot be known that he will ever pay the debt, and until he does he suffers no injury. Jenkins v. Brewster, 14 Mass. 291. Houghton v. Houghton, 37 Maine, 72. Houston v. Fellows, 27 Vt. 634.

The statutes of this Commonwealth, relating to the set-off of mutual demands between plaintiff and defendant, declare that no demand shall be set off unless for the price of real or personal estate sold; or for money paid, or money had and received; or for service done; or unless it is for a sum that is liquidated, or that may be ascertained by calculation; or that existed at the commencement of the suit, and then belonged to the defendant; or unless it is due to him in his own right. They also provide that, if the demand on which the action is brought has been assigned, and the defendant had notice of the assignment, he shall not set off any demand that he acquires against the original creditor after, such notice. Gen. Sts. c. 130, §§ 1-10.

In Sargent v. Southgate, 5 Pick. 312, it was decided, after much consideration, that, in an action by an indorsee against the maker of a negotiable note indorsed when overdue, and thereto] e [237]*237subject to the equities existing between the maker and payee, the defendant could not in his defence make use of a note made to him by the payee before the note in suit was assigned, unless he proved that the note was given as evidence of payment, or unless he filed it under the statute in set-off. It was said in reference to negotiable promissory notes when overdue, as distinguished from mere choses in action which require notice of their assignment, that this right of set-off must be confined to demands which accrued to the defendant while the payee was actual holder, and would not extend to demands which accrued afterwards, although no notice of the transfer of the note was given to the maker. And in Baxter v. Little, 6 Met. 7, it was decided that, where the first indorsee negotiated the note after maturity, in an action by the second indorsee, the defendant could not set off any claim which he had on the first indorsee, except such as existed at the time of the transfer of the note. See also Ranger v. Cary, 1 Met. 369, 375.

In Jones v. Wolcott, 15 Gray, 541, a surety who had signed a note for the purpose of raising money to satisfy a judgment recovered against him for the default of his principal, but who had not paid any money on account thereof, was held not entitled to set off the judgment against a debt due from him to the principal, or to set it up in defence against such debt. A surety cannot be said to “ acquire ” a demand against the principal debtor, under our statute, until he pays the debt for which he is liable.

We find nothing in the decisions of those States where the law of set-off depends upon similar statutes, which differs from the law of this Commonwealth. In Martin v. Kunzmuller, 37 N. Y. 396, under a statute which provided that a demand existing against the plaintiff at the time of the assignment, and belonging to the defendant before notice of such assignment, might be set off, if it were such as might have been set off against the plaintiff while the contract belonged to him, it was decided that, in an action by the assignee, the defendant could not offset a note made by the assignor which fell due after the assignment of the contract in suit, and it was said that an allowance to a party by way of set-off was always founded on an existing demand in presentí, and not on one that might be claimed in futuro, [238]*238The same doctrine was laid down by Denio, J. in Myers v. Davis, 22 N. Y. 489.

In Carpenter v. Coit, 1 D. Chip.

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Bluebook (online)
129 Mass. 234, 1880 Mass. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/backus-v-spaulding-mass-1880.