Hubbard v. Prather

4 Ky. 178
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 1, 1808
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ky. 178 (Hubbard v. Prather) 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
Hubbard v. Prather, 4 Ky. 178 (Ky. Ct. App. 1808).

Opinion

[178]*178OPINION of the Court, by

Judge Bibb.

— Prather and Smiley, declared against Austin Hubbard, in an action on the case; after charging that the defendant being [179]*179indebted to them the sum of £. 45 19s. and after setting forth and making profert of this instrument of writing as executed by the defendant to them, viz :

the c admit that for evidence, reject* that which ought ⅛ J>e received, it exception to the opinion of ths court- . 0.f'evidence *⅛ proper for the Ju;7 to deter-the truth of the evidence, but gchncythereof in point of may to evidence the court are bound which a jury mlght have m-deration and^ comparison of ts*
“ This will certify, that I have this day assigned to Prather and Smiley, forty-five pounds nineteen shillings, out of a bond Shepherd and Hubbard has on Charles Dorsey and Son, for four hundred and seventy-five pounds eleven shillings and five pence, dated April 13th, 1797, and payable the 1st of September 1798, for value received, witness my hand and seal this 6th of A. HUBBARD, August 1798, Testis, RICHD. RAPIER”

The declaration avers, that Shepherd and Hubbard, or the said Austin, received of said Dorsey and Son, the full amount of the aforesaid bond, whereby the said Austin remained still liable to pay the aforesaid sum of £. 45 19s. and being so liable in consideration thereof, assumed to pay, &c. and assigns breach in non payment ; the defendant pleaded non assumpsit, and upon that issue was joined, and also non assumpsit within five years ; to which the plaintiffs replied specially, that the defendant or his partner Shepherd, was possessed of the said bond on Dorsey and Son, for the sum in the declaration mentioned ; that they, (said Shepherd and Hubbard,) did not bring suit on said bond nor deliver it to the plaintiffs to enable them to bring suit; that the defendant had received the money mentioned in the bond, and had assumed upon himself within five years, &c. and thereupon issue was joined,

The plaintiffs gave in evidence the aforesaid writing, and also produced Gab. J. Johnson, who testified that he had enquired of the defendant whether he had not received the amount of the bond from Dorsey and Son, who replied “ that he had not, they owed him a thousand dollars yet.” To this evidence the defendant demurred, and the plaintiffs joined in demurer ; the defendant moved for leave to withdraw the demurrer, to which the plaintiffs objected, but the motion was granted ; after withdrawing the demurrer to evidence, the defendant moved the court to instruct the jury “■ that the testimony did not support the action,” but the court were divided in opinion, and the motion fell, whereupon the defendant took his bill of exceptions, stating [180]*180the exhibit before set forth, and the testimony of Johnson, and that ⅛ was the whole

An assignment of part of an obligation rise ”the"1 as" Eignee to sue in his own name, nor m conjunction with the obli-gees. Such an as-xignmentmakes the affignor responsible to the affignee for the amount assigned -when coilefted, and the la» implies en the part of the affignor to dUi cover of the obligor. lhe of the money by the affignor wasa good B^hoi¿°the a'-sumpsit as laid in the declara- ftatuteot limitations did not begin to run ñe^was'receT ved by the assignor.

The jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs for £. 45 19s. in damages, for which the court rendered iudg-0 jo tnerU.

The said defendant Hubbard prosecutes this writ of error’ (which was made a supersedeas,) and assigns that “ the court erred in not directing, as in case of a nonsuit, when applied to for that purpose.”

u 2d. The declaration and pleadings do not contain r . ,⅜ 1 Q any cause ot action.”

•“ 3d. Upon the whole case, on the merits, the judgment should have been for the defendant in the inferior ,, court.

Upon the first question, a doubt was expressed by a mernb^y Df ghe court, whether the writing declared on . , - 7 ° . . . is to be regarded as evidence, as the execution ot it is not proved by the evidence stated and certified as the whole evidence. But in certifying the evidence, the court have certified that instrument as a part. If the defendant had objected that the instrument ought not to in evidence, until proved by the subscribing witness, then he should have stated his objection as such, instead of stating it in his bill of exceptions as a part of evidence.

1 he instrument oi writing- and the testimony of were in correspondence with, and not variant *rom the pleadings. The variance between the allegata, and the probata, makes a question of law to the court, If the court admit that for evidence, which is not evi-dene®, or reject that which ought tobe received, it is cause of exception

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ky. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hubbard-v-prather-kyctapp-1808.