Cox v. Williams

7 Mart. (N.S.) 301
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 15, 1828
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Mart. (N.S.) 301 (Cox v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox v. Williams, 7 Mart. (N.S.) 301 (La. 1828).

Opinions

Mathews, J.

.delivered the following opinion. This suit is brought by the endorser a negotiable note for the sum of 1950 which was made payable to Isaac Baldwin The defendant in his answer pleaded want of consideration or rather failure of the consideration, in consequence of which he made the promise to the payer of the note; and that it is subject to all objections in the hands of the plaintiff, to which it would have been liable in those of the original holder and payee.

The court below gave judgment in favor of the defendant, from which the plaintiff appealed.

[302]*302This case was formerly before the appellate court; and was remanded on a bill of exceptions taken to the introduction of Baldwin as a witness, to prove that Cox, the present plaintiff, altho’ he appears in the shape of an endorser, was the real payee of the note in question, which was obtained through the agency of the witness. This fact is now fully established by the testimony of Baldwin, and the case must be examined as if pending between the original parties to the instrument.

In proceeding thus to investigate it, a concise history of the transactions which led to the execution of the note becomes necessary.

The appellant had a claim agaiant one L H. Gardner, which he placed in the hands of Baldwin, as attorney, to collect. This claim was in the hands of the agent at the time of the death of Gardner. The estate of the latter was sold at probate sale, and the widow of the intestate became the purchaser of a family of negroes, which made a part of the succession, for the price of 2450 dollars, and to secure payment, the present defendant bound himself as her surety. Afterwards he was dissatisfied with the conduct of Mrs. Gardner, in relation to the management of her pecuniary concerns, [303]*303and took the negroes which she had bought under a sale from the court of probates at the same price she was to have given for them, and gave his own note to Cox, the creditor of L, H. Gardner’s estate, for that amount. On the receipt of this note, Baldwin, the agent of Cox, credited the estate of Gardner with the amount thereof, in an account which he filed in the office of the parish judge of Rapides. Subsequent to these proceedings, Jackson Sf Reynolds inforced a judicial mortgage which they had on the property of L. II. Gardner to the amount of 1300 dollars, and subjected the negroes in the possession of Williams to its payment. The record of a suit heretofore decided by this court, is made evidence in the present action. In the former case, Baldwin sued for the use of Cox on a note similarly situated with that now under consideration. The answers of the nominal plaintiff in that suit, proved a discharge given to the estate of Gardner, Cox’s original debtor. His testimony in the present case proves the same fact, but it is here accompanied by a statement of an account between the witness* as agent for the appellant, and the succession of Gardner, wherein the latter is credited (amongst other [304]*304matters) with the amount of the notes given by the appellee and made payable to the agent of Cox, the original creditor. This additional evidence, (which the witness now says is the only acquittance he ever gave in favor of Gardner's estate); it is contended on the part of the appellee, disproves his answers to the interrogatories in the former suit; upon the evidence of which this court then held that the acceptance of Williams’ notes and discharge of the original debtor operated a novation.

We are however of opinion, that the introduction of this document, has no tendency to distinguish the present from the former case. It was made out before witnesses and deposited in the office of the judge of probates, as evidence of payment, or a release of the obligation, to the succession of the deceased, in consideration of having accepted a Iiew debtor in pursuance of the true spirit and meaning of our laws on the subject of delegation. In the case of Barron vs. How, reported in vol. 2, p. 144, this court held that an acknowledgment of a receipt of the promissory notes, of the person delegated, as payment, produced novation. This was nothing more [305]*305than a credit given by the creditor to the original debtor in discharge of his obligation, in nature of a payment by delegation. A receipt is evidence of payment, but payment may be established by other evidence; and whenever such evidence shows that anything has been accepted as payment, the debt is extinguished, whether it be by a transfer of obligations on other persons, a payment in money, or a dation en pavement.—Proof which shows that credit has been given on account with the original debtor in consideration of a delegation made by him to his creditor, is evidence that the latter accepted the debt thus delegated in payment; and on failure of the person delegated to pay, he would not be permitted to annul the credit thereby given to his original debtor, and pursue the latter on his original obligation. A debt once extinguished by novation cannot be again revived, unless by the consent of both parties to the original contract. From this view of the case it may be easily perceived, that we are of opinion that the production of the document in question does not weaken the evidence procured from Baldwin on interrogatories in the former case, nor does it in any manner invali[306]*306date his testimony in the present; wherein he explicitly declares that his intention was to discharge the estate of Gardner from all lia-bihty to Cox, his constituent, and to receive the appellee as substituted in the place of that estate.

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7 Mart. (N.S.) 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-williams-la-1828.