Fisler v. Porch

10 N.J. Eq. 243
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 10 N.J. Eq. 243 (Fisler v. Porch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisler v. Porch, 10 N.J. Eq. 243 (N.J. Ct. App. 1854).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The gravamen of the bill is, that the assignment by James Abbott to the defendant of the bond and mortgage of John G. Baker was without consideration, and intended as a power of attorney only, in order to authorize the defendant to collect the money due on the bond.

Considerable evidence was taken to show the imbecility of the old man; and, upon the argument, the defendant’s counsel endeavored to establish, from this evidence, that James Abbott, at the time he made the assignment, wras so infirm in body and mind as to render him incompetent in law to dispose of his property. But this case cannot he determined upon the question of James Abbott’s legal competency to transact business. The evidence, so far as it has been introduced for such purpose, is irrelevant. No such issue has been made by the pleadings, and of course none such is before the court for its determination. The bill does indeed allege, that James Abbott was an old man, being at the time of the assignment about eighty-six years of age, very infirm, and unable to transact busi[248]*248ness. But it does not allege this as a reason for disaffirming the contract; on the contrary, it is stated as the reasonable inducement which prompted him to constitute the defendant his agent, with authority to enforce the payment of the obligation.

The only question, therefore, for the decision of the court is, whether the assignment conveyed to the defendant, as the absolute owner, the interest of the obligee in the bond, or was intended by the parties as a mere authority and power to collect the money due upon it ? The defendant is called upon to disclose the character of the transaction and the consideration which .passed from him to James Abbott for the assignment.

The defendant, by his answer, denies that the assignment was without consideration, or made to him as the mere agent of James Abbott to collect the money due upon the bond, or in any other way or for any other purpose than as an absolute and full assignment for the defendant’s own use and benefit. He admits that no consideration was given by him at the time, but avers the true consideration to have been, a mere parol agreement on his part to provide for James Abbott during his lifetime, to pay such debts and liabilities as were then outstanding against him, and to discharge the expenses of his burial. He avers that he has paid the consideration; that from the time of the assignment up to the time of the death of Abbott, he provided for him suitable and sufficient board, clothing, and other necessaries and comforts of life, and paid off and discharged sundry debts and liabilities, and also paid the expenses of his burial, and that he has fully discharged the consideration, as he agreed and assumed.

The first question is, how far is this answer evidence for the defendant ? The general rule is, that the answer of a defendant, so far as it is responsive to the bill, is evidence for the party. This is the rule, as broadly stated, but it has its limits and its exceptions. It is no evidence [249]*249where it asserts a right affirmatively in opposition to the complainant’s demands. In this case, the defendant is called upon to disclose what consideration he paid for the assignment. If his answer had been, that he paid the amount of the principal and interest due on the bond at the time of the assignment, his answer would be evidence of the fact, and the court would not put him to the proof. But he answers, he paid no consideration at the time, but merely promised that he would make certain payments and perform certain duties at a future time. Ilis allegation, that he has performed his promise, cannot avail him. He is bound to establish the fact by proof. In Thomson v. Lambe, 7 Ves. 587, Lord Eldon says, “ he was clearly of opinion, a person charged by his answer cannot, by his answer, discharge himself, not even by his examination, (before the master) unless it is in this way: if the answer or examination states that, upon a particular day, he received a sum of money, and paid it over, that may discharge him ; but if he says, that upon a particular day he received a sum of money, and upon a subsequent day he paid it over, that cannot be used in his discharge, for it is a different transaction.” In Hutchinson v. Tindall, 2 Green’s C. R. 357, and in Hart v. Ten Eyck, 2 J. C. R. 62, and in a note to the last case, 91, the numerous authorities upon this subject will be found collected and commented upon. I think the current of these authorities will be found to accord with the views I have expressed in regard to the answer in the present case.

Let us examine, then, the case upon the evidence. The defendant has, in the first place, endeavored to prove the agreement between Abbott and himself, as to the assignment. Two witnesses were present, as he alleges, at the time it was made, Prudence DeHart, a daughter of Abbott, and who is the subscribing witness to the assignment, and the defendant’s mother, also a daughter of Abbott.

Prudence DeHart testifies she subscribed the assignment [250]*250as' a witness. She does not recollect hearing her father say, at the time of the assignment, what the defendant was to do, or give for the bond. Her father told her that Samuel would pay his board, and that whatever he broke' or destroyed while there Samuel would pay for it. This witness certainly fails to prove the agreement alleged in the answer. His telling her that Samuel would pay his board, &c., is quite as consistent, and indeed more so, with the allegation of the bill, that the bond was assigned merely to enable the defendant to collect the money to make the payment, as with the allegation of the answer, that such payment was a part consideration for the absolute assignment of the bond. It certainly is very strange that James Abbott’s daughter should have been the subscribing witness to the instrument by which her father conveyed away all the property he had in the world, and that a bond and mortgage of $3000, and yet, that this daughter should not know, if it was meant as an absolute transfer of his property, what consideration he received for it. She says she did not hear all the conversation; but this does not account for the strange fact, that this bond should be assigned under the circumstances, and that she should have witnessed the assignment, and not have understood from the parties what the consideration was, and particularly, as there is no pretence that the transaction was a secret one, nor any disposition in either of the parties to conceal its true character from the witness. It is quite as strange that James Abbott should have continued to live with this daughter for more than a year after this, and that she should never have heard from her father upon what terms he had disposed of his property. The witness, however, says, that she did hear her father say often that he had no property, for he had assigned it all to Samuel Porch. I do not mean to intimate that this witness has concealed anything in her testimony. She was called as a witness for the defendant against her own interest. If this assignment should be declared not to be [251]*251an absolute assignment, she takes under the will of her father an equal share with other legatees named in the will of the money due upon the bond in dispute.

Edith DeHart, the mother of defendant, is the other witness alleged to have been present at the time of the assignment.

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.J. Eq. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisler-v-porch-njch-1854.