Frants ex rel. Stine v. Brown

17 Serg. & Rawle 287, 1828 Pa. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 27, 1828
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 Serg. & Rawle 287 (Frants ex rel. Stine v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frants ex rel. Stine v. Brown, 17 Serg. & Rawle 287, 1828 Pa. LEXIS 25 (Pa. 1828).

Opinion

[288]*288The opinion of the.court was delivered by,

Huston, J.

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Lebanon county, debt on bond, plea payment with leave, &c. ■

■ The plaintiff gave in evidence a bon,d executed by Philip Brown on the.29th of March, 1819, for eight hundred dollars, payable on the 1st of May, 1824, assigned to Philip Stine, in presence of one witness, on the 22nd of May, 1819. The defendant read his notice of special matter intended to be given in evidence under his plea; a copy of which had been duly furnished to the plaintiff. It was, that after the execution of the bond in question, Frants, who had sold lan.d to Brown, purchased mills, &c., from Adam Breckbill, and, after paying a part in hand, was to give bonds with security for the instalments; viz. four hundred dollars yearly, till 1835: that Brown being indebted to him, Frants applied to Brown to be security with him in the bonds, who refused; but, on being promised that he should have a credit on his own bonds to Frants for any money he might be compelled to pay as surety for Frants, he agreed; and on the 6th of April, 1819, signed fifteen bonds as bail of Frants to Adam Breckbill.

That he had been compelled to pay, and- had paid four of these bonds, -amounting much more than the bond in suit; that these payments were made after being sued on the several bonds as they fell due, and before the bond in question became due, and before he had notice of the assignment of it; and that Jacob Frants has been long insolvent.' . .

The court rejected the first part of the offer; viz. proof of the parol agreement by Frants with Brown, that he should have credit on his own bonds for any money he might be compelled to pay as surety for Frants, but received evidence of payment made by him before notice of the assignment to Stine, and in consequence of liability incurred before that assignment.

The defendant then proved payment by Brown; viz., th'e three first of the four hundred dollar bonds and part of the fourth, which was also taken up by him, and a promissory note for the balance, before the present bond fell due, or any proof of notice of the assignment; and whether these payments were a defence in the pi’esent suit, was really the only question at the trial, and here.

But, other matters were offered and received at the trial, and evidence given to rebut, &c., &c. After the defendant had proved the payment of the bonds in which he was surety, the plaintiff offered to prove that Stine had furnished ifunds to Brown, to enable him to take up those bonds, and.they proved that Brown received from Wilsmyer, about one hundred and seventy dollars of rents of .lands which hád belonged to Frants, and that Frants confessed a judgment to Brown, on which, in 1821, he levied on Frants’s personal property,' and the sheriff paid him, Brown, six hundred and forty dollars. They also proved that Frants, in consideration [289]*289of one dollar, and of the great losses Brown had sustained, and to indemnify him for responsibilities for Frants, had conveyed to Brotan, in 1S33, an undivided interest in a lot of- ground, &c., which he, Brown, sold in 1825, for two hundred and forty dollars. ■

The defendant, then, to repel-this, offered to prove, and did prove, that Brown was security of Frants to another person; viz. Henry Breckbill, and as such was sued; that the judgment just shown, was confessed by Frants to secure Brown against this, and that the six hundred and forty dollars raised on this judgment, never went into Brown’s pocket, but was instantly paid to Henry Breckbill; and, to shovv the responsibilities incurred for Frants, they offered and were.permitted to show, that Brown had signed eleven bonds falling due annually up to 1835, ’ as bail to Adam Breckbill, for Jacob Frants. That Frants, in'1821, assigned all his property, which had been sold, and all applied to other debts of Frants, except seventy dollars which by Frants’s direction, had been paid to Brotan.' .

.Much was said in the discussion here, about the admission of this last testimony; but, it was strictly repelling testimony, and applied directly to what had been just given by the plain.tijff. If the, counsel will, as they too often do, go out of the real case -trying', and give testimony which appears applicable to the case, but which, when explained, eventuates..unfavourably -to their client, they must not complain. No doubt, the proof that Brown was liable for Frants.to Henry, as well as Adam Breckbill, and that he is still liable, and will be for many a year, were.calculated to raise, in the language of the coünsel, an impression favourable to the defendant; but this proof was rendered legal and even necessary by what the plaintiff had just introduced. The jury were told, that from the evidence it appeared, that before the assignment of the bond in suit, the defendant had become bound for Jacob Frants, who then held this bond, in large sums of money, a part of which bad. become due, and the defendant had, by suit, been compelled to pay an amount exceeding the present,demand of the plaintiff before he knew of the assignment, and before the. money on the present bond became due; that this was a defence against the payment of this bond in the hands óf the assignee, and the correctness of this opinion was the principal matter contested in this appeal. , - ■ ,

. It may appear strange and is strange, that the construction proper to be given to an act passed more than a century ago, and one applying to the daily transactions of men, and of constant occurrence in courts of justice, should be. at this day a subject of serious dispute. We have, in our earliest book of reports, 1 Dall. 23, the report of a trial, the arguments of .counsel at full length, and nothing added to them, in any argument I have ever heard, and a full opinion by a judge, of whom from the opinions of his which have [290]*290reached us, we may. safely say he was a great lawyer,- This case did not decide every possible question which could arise under this act, but it decided,, that the assignee takes the bond at his peril, that he stands in the same place as the obligee, so as to let in every defalcation which the obligor had against the obligee at the time of the assignment or notice of the assignment. The English statutes .of set-off have been often brought in to affect the construction of this act, and our defalcation act, which takes in many cases not embraced in the statutes of sét-off, is, in these cases, .studiously kept out of view. The statutes of set-off apply to accounts or debts existing mutually at the time of suit, brought; a' bond may be assigned many years before it is due, of course many years before a suit can be brought on it. The obligor, by some other bond or note, or by some-contract or bargain, may have claims on the obligee which will become due before- the time when the,bond is payable. This matter came before the Supreme Court in 1802. Gordon’s Assignees v. The Insurance Co. of N. A., 3 Yeates, 327.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Serg. & Rawle 287, 1828 Pa. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frants-ex-rel-stine-v-brown-pa-1828.