Belcher v. Dickinson
This text of 75 S.E. 78 (Belcher v. Dickinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The administrator of Wells sued Dickinson in debt, for the recovery of a promissory note. ' A special plea that the considera[751]*751tion had wholly failed was admitted over the objection and ex-' ception of plaintiff. ISTo replication was put in; plaintiff rested the case on his exception to the filing of this special plea. Judgment was entered for defendant, and plaintiff prosecuted this writ of error.
If the special plea was properly filed, the judgment is right. Since there was no reply to the plea, it was confessed. Shires v. Boggess, 68 W. Va. 137. If it met the case made by plaintiff’s declaration, defendant was entitled to judgment. Plaintiff insists that the plea presented no defense to his case, and that it was error to permit it to be filed.
An examination of the plea convinces us that it presents a good defense to that which is averred in the declaration. It avers matters showing a failure of the consideration for which the note was given. The declaration avers certain matters of agreement between the parties in-relation to the transaction in which the note was executed; the plea sets forth indeed a different agreement and shows that according to the terms of the same the consideration for the note failed. If the averments of this plea were not true, plaintiff should have joined issue on it. If they were true, as we must take them to be on this record, the case presented by plaintiff is denied.
Plaintiff submits that the consideration for the note was stock in a. corporation sold by his decedent-to defendant; and that, therefore, the plea which avers failure of consideration by a loss of title to land is no defense. But the plea as well as the declaration, shows that each share of stock sold defendant represented the ownership of one acre of land. The plea avers that by the 'agreement under which the stock was sold defendant was to receive good title to as many acres of land as he purchased shares of stock. It avers that the land represented by the stock was so imperfect in title that the consideration, to the value of the note sued on, failed. The plea in fact avers that land was the real consideration for the note, and that defendant did not get by his purchase of stock the number of acres that he was to have thereby. It sufficiently shows that the real consideration for the note failed. The plea is good under Code 1906, chapter 126', section 5.
The contract referred to in the declaration as annexed thereto. [752]*752and sought to be made a part of the declaration in that way, can not be looked to in determining the propriety of the plea. A contract can not be made a part of a declaration by mere reference or exhibition. Riley v. Yost, 58 W. Va. 213. Plaintiff argues a particular interpretation of this contract to show that defendant’s plea does not meet the case. But he must be confined to the averments of the declaration in testing the applicability of the plea. We have said that the plea answers the declaration. Whether, if issue had been joined, on the plea, and the contract had been introduced as evidence on a trial of that issue, the contract would have defeated the plea, we are not called upon to answer. Certain it is, the applicability of the plea to the case can not be- tested by the contract, as plaintiff seems to assume. The applicability of the plea must be tested by the averments of the declaration. •
An affirmance of the judgment will be-ordered.
Affirmed,.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
75 S.E. 78, 70 W. Va. 750, 1912 W. Va. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belcher-v-dickinson-wva-1912.