Davis v. Clements
This text of 2 Blackf. 3 (Davis v. Clements) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Agreeably to the case of Leonard v. Bates, May term, 1822, the decision of the Circuit Court in this case, is correct
The defendant does not, as the plaintiff’s counsel supposes, rest this case as to the impeachment of the note on the ground ©f fraud, as he must have done at common law; but he rests his defence, principally, on a.total failureof consideration under our act of assembly: and as there has been a total failure of consideration, he is authorized.by the act of assembly to plead it.
If this note had remained in the hands of Harris, and the action had been brought by him, this plea would have been an unquestionable bar to the action; and the act of assembly secures to the obligor the same equitable defence against the assignee that he would have had against the obligee; we therefore have no doubt but that the plea was properly sustained
The judgment is affirmed with costs.
Vol. 1. of these Rep. 172, and note (2), p. 176.-—Muchmore v. Bates, Ibid, 248. Where, as in the case in the text, the payment of the purchase-money and the execution of the deed ate to he concurrent acts, a suit cannot be sustained for the money until the vendor has executed or offered to execute, the title. Ibid. Nor can tho [5]*5vendee recover for a breach of the contract, in such a case, unless he has paid the whole of the purchase-money; Huntington v. Colman, Ibid. 348,—Meriwether v. Carr, Ibid. 413; and unless he has also made a demand of the deed. Sheets v. Andrews, Nov. term, 1829, post.
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2 Blackf. 3, 1826 Ind. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-clements-ind-1826.