Farquhar v. Collins

10 Ky. 31, 3 A.K. Marsh. 31, 1820 Ky. LEXIS 175
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 28, 1820
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 10 Ky. 31 (Farquhar v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farquhar v. Collins, 10 Ky. 31, 3 A.K. Marsh. 31, 1820 Ky. LEXIS 175 (Ky. Ct. App. 1820).

Opinion

Judge Mills

delivered the opinion.

Gabriel Collins, assignee of James Collins, brought his petition and summons on a note executed by William Far-quhar, for the payment of money, made payable and negotiable at the office of discount and deposit of the United Slates’Bank at Louisville. The note was made to James Collins, and by him assigned to the plaintiff. In defence, the defendant, after having pleaded payment, added several special pleas. In the first, he aljedges, in substance, “That prior to the date of the note, a partnership existed between him and the plaintiff, which partnership was dissolved by a written instrument, (of which profert is made), wherein the defendant agreed to collect all debts due to the firm, and the plaintiff agreed to loose half of such debts which the defendant should not be able to collect, after using due diligence for that purpose: and it was further agreed in said articles of dissolution, that the plaintiff should sell to the defendant all the stock of books, stationary, ike. belong1-[32]*32ing to said firm, at twelve and one half per centum advance on the cost and carriage, and that to secure the payment, the defendant should execute three negotiable notes, payable at different periods; and that he did so execute and deliver said three notes to the plaintiff, and that the note in suit is one of them, and the Iasi «ecoming doe.” He then avers “That debts created by, and due the firm, were lost, to the amount of two hundred dollars and cents, although he had used due diligence to collect them, the one half of which sum he pleads, and insists on, by way of discount to the note sued on.” In the second pica he again sets out the'same partnership in a book bindery and book store — and the articles of dissolution, of which h>- again makes proferí — the purchase of the stock, and his execution of the notes, “made and delivered to the plaintiff” two of which, he alledges, he has paid, and avers, that the one now in suit is the last. He then avers, that at the same time he executed and delivered to the plaintiff one other note, different from the first named three notes, for the sum of three hundred dollars; and that the last named note was executed for the sole and only consideration, that the plaintiff should not engage in, and carry on, in the town of Louisville, the business of selling books and stationary, or in other words, should not keep a hook store therein, so long as the defendant should continue the same business. He avers he has paid and discharged the note for three hundred dollars, and proceeds to alledge a breach of the last nomad agreement in the following words — “And said defendant says, that afterwards, to wit, on the day of January, 1819, and after the defendant had paid off and discharged said note for $300, and when and whilst said defendant was engaged, on his own account, and for his sole use, in keeping in said town, a book store, the plaintiff established, and has ever since carried on, and kept in said town, a book store, whereby he, the plaintiff, became liable, and is still liable, to repay and refund to him, said defendant, the sum of three hundred dollars; and being so liable, lie, the plaintiff, in consideration thereof, afterwards, to wit, on the day of and before the commencement of this suit, assumed upon himself, and to the defendant faithfully promised, ¡hat he wsuld pay him the said sum of three hundred dollars, whenever afterward* thereto required; which sum of $300 Hie defendant pleads end insists upon, iu discount of the plaintiff’s demand sued [33]*33inn.” Tbe third plea is to the /'allowing effect: “And the defendant says, that the plaintiff his action against him ought not to have and maintain, because be says that the plaintiff was, at the time the process teas sited out in this case-, and still is, indebted to him, the defendant, in the sum of three hundred dollars and five cents, for so much money before that time had and received by him, the plaintiff, to the úse and benefit of him the defendant: — and the plaintiff was abo, at the time said prooess was sued out, and still is, indebted to him, the defendant, in the further sum of one hundred and twenty-nine dollars and ninety cents, for labor bestowed, and time expended, at the special instance and request of him, the plaintiff, in collecting, for the use and benefit of him, the plaintiff, the sum of $5100, and being so therefor indebted, he, the said plaintiff. in consideration there f, afterwards, to wit, on the day of in the year in the circuit aforesaid. fore the commencement oj this suit, assumed upon himself, and to the defendant then and there faithfully promised that he* would pay him, the defendant, the aforesaid sums of money, whenever he, the plaintiff, should be thereto requested; which sums, and each of them, the defendant pleads and relies on in discount of plaintiff’s demand.”— Tbe fourth plea is the same with the second. Although the words are somewhat varied and the facts alledged in a slight degree transposed, yet, upon inspection, we discover not one fact, circumstance or averment contained in one, which is not contained and relied on in the other; so that it need not be recited. For the consideration of the second will determine the fate of that. To all the special pleasolhe plaintiff demurred, and the defendant joined in demurrer. The court below sustained that demurrer, and overruled every plea.

The defendant then withdrew the plea of payment, and judgment on nil (licit was rendered against him, and he has appealed to this court; and the questions to be decided involve the validity of these pleas.

We have not thought it necessary to notice many minor objections and mistakes in these pleas, such as three of them being directed against a note, made and delivered to the plaintiff, when the note set out and relied upon by plaintiff, was made and delivered to another, and by him assigned to the plaintiff, together with otiier defects which ttoigiu be named. ,

A plea to lx* good must aver the matter thereofso precisely as to enable the pl’tf io contest it successfully, if in his power An unliqui-dated demand cannot be pleaded as a discount or sfct oil*.

The first plea is clearly invalid. For, without deciding the question Whether, as it arose from the breach of part of the covenant, i^ could be here pleaded, it is too vague and indefinite in not alledging and setting forth what debtswere lost, by whom due, how much from each, and how lost, so that the plaintiff might have been apprised of the defence which he was to meet, in such a manner as to enable him td contest it successfully, if in his power.

The second and fourth plea sets forth a contract by the appellee ndt to exercise a calling in Louisville, while the defendant exercised the same, avers á breach of it, on the part of the plaintiff, and assumes, as a deduction of law; that the plaintiff, on the breach, became liable to restore the money paid for the original stipulation. This legal consequence is erroneous. It does not follow that the plaintiff, by his breach of thwagreemeni not to exercise the calling in that town, became liable to restore the precise liquidated sum paid .to him for coming under this restraint. He would, no doubt, assuming the pleas as true, be liable to an action on the contract, in W'hich damages might be recovered. But these damages might be enhanced far above, or diminished far below, the three hundred dollars paid him, by a variety of circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ky. 31, 3 A.K. Marsh. 31, 1820 Ky. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farquhar-v-collins-kyctapp-1820.