Huston v. Williams

3 Blackf. 170, 1833 Ind. LEXIS 3
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 3 Blackf. 170 (Huston v. Williams) 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.

Bluebook
Huston v. Williams, 3 Blackf. 170, 1833 Ind. LEXIS 3 (Ind. 1833).

Opinions

Stevens, J.

The plaintiff declared in an action of debt upon an instrument in writing, which is described in the declaration as a “writing obligatory, signed with their hands and sealed with their seals.” The defendants,, after craving oyer, demurred to the declaration. The Court overruled the demurrer, and the defendants, by leave of the Court, withdrew it an.d pleaded to the merits. The plea of the defendants is a plea of “fraud, covin, and false representation,” in these general terms, without stating the special circumstances, and without averring whether the “fraud, covin, and false representation,” relate to the execution of the instrument, or to the consideration or inducement which influenced the obligors to become bound. To this plea the plaintiff demurred and the Court sustained the demurrer.

The errors assigned are: — 1. The instrument declared on is not a writing obligatory, 2. The Court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the plea.

As to the first error, it is only necessary to say that the withdrawal of the demurrer containing the oyer, withdrew the oyer [171]*171also, and it ceased to be any part of the record;, and we are bound now to presume that the description given in the declaration of the instrument in writing, is correct.

The other error presents much more difficulty. The question is, whether a plea of “fraud, covin, and false representation,” pleaded in these general words, can be a good plea In bar to an action of debt on a writing obligatory;,and, if good, to what extent?

At common law, in an action of covenant or debt on a writing-obligatory, a plea'of “fraud, covin, and false representation,” is a good plea in bar if properly pleaded. But it appears that such a defence only relates to “fraud, covin, and false representation;” in the execution of the writing obligatory, and not to the consideration or inducement, which influenced the obligor to make the bond. Also, illegality, or any act or matter connected with the contract or consideration, which strikes at the contract itself, and shows that it never had any legal entity, and which renders the .bond wholly void, is a good defence at common law; but such defence cannot be given in evidence under a general plea of non est factum, or of fraud and covin: the special facts must be averred. But where the fraud, covin, and false representations, which are set üp as a defence to a bond, are respecting the right, title, amount, soundness, quantity, quality, or value, of the consideration which influenced the obligor to make the bond, the defence is equitable, and not legal, at common law. Neither is the failure in part or in the whole, a legal defence at common law: it is only a defence in equity.

Our statute has made such defences legal, in actions on bonds and writings obligatory, except conveyances of real estate, and instruments negotiable by. the law merchant. Under the statute, the entire want of consideration, or the failure in whole or in part of the consideration, may be-pleaded to actions on bonds or writings obligatory; but the manner of pleading is not changed: the pleading must be according to the common law. A plea that a bond is voluntary and without either a good or valuable consideration, is sufficient without any averments more special, because in such case there are no special facts to aver. But if the defence is founded upon a failure in the whole or in a part of the consideration, or upon the false, fraudulent, and covinous acts and representations of the obligee, [172]*172respecting the consideration which influenced the obligor to become bound, the special facts must be averred.

If, however, the defence is bottomed on the false, fraudulent, and covinous conduct of the obligee, in relation to the execution of the instrument, as where it is fraudulently misread, or another instrument fraudulently substituted for the true one, or where the obligee fraudulently induces the obligor to execute the instrument when he is incapable of judging for himself, either by reason of drunkenness or lunacy, or where the obligee does any other fraudulent act, which shows that the obligor, in truth and in fact, never, in the eye of the law, executed the bond,— the facts may befgiven in evidence under the plea of non est factum, or they may be given in evidence under a general plea of “fraud, covin, and false representation.” Taylor v. King, 6 Munf. 358.—Wyche v. Macklin, 2 Rand. 426.—Vrooman v. Phelps, 2 Johns. R. 177.—Dorlan v. Sammis, note to 2 Johns. 179.—Dorr v. Munsell, 13 Johns. R. 430.—Parker v. Parmele, 20 Johns. R. 134.—Collins v. Blantern, 2 Wils. 347.—Dale v. Roosevelt, 9 Cow. 307.—Stevens v. Judson, 4 Wend. Rep. 471. In this limited sense the plea under consideration is good, and ought to have been sustained, hut no evidence can be given under it, except such as relates to the execution of the instrument.

It may perhaps be thought, that this opinion conflicts with • the opinion of this Court, in the case of Pence et al. adm'rs. v. Smock, 2 Blackf. 315, and the authorities there cited; but it is presumed that a correct examination of that case, and those authorities, will show that there is not perhaps any confliction. The circumstances of the case of Pence et al. v. Smock are these: — John Smock, the intestate, in his life-time, made his bond to Peter Smock, and, after his death, Peter Smock brought suit on it against Pence and Brenton,his administrators; and they pleaded generally, that the bond was obtained of John Smock in his life-time, by Peter Smock, by “fraud, covin, and false representation.” This plea was pleaded by administrators, who the law does not presume were in possession of the particulars of the fraud, they not being parties or privies to the transaction, and were therefore authorised to plead generally; for it is a settled principle of pleading, that general words are sufficient where it is to be presumed that the party pleading is not acquainted with ‘‘the minute circumstances of the case. [173]*1731 Chitt. Pl. 239.---The People v. Dunlap, 13 Johns. Rep. 437. Again, the plea in the case of Pence et al. v. Smock, does not conflict with the opinion in this case, because there is nothing on the record to show that the “fraud, covin, and false representations,” were intended to apply to any .thing other than the execution of the bond. Indeed, the record proves almost conclusively, that they were not intended to apply to anything other than the execution of the bond, because there is another plea showing specially the failure of the consideration.

The authorities relied on by our Supreme Court, in the case of Pence et al. v. Smock, are next to be noticed.

The first is Chitty’s Pleadings. Cbitty, in his first volume, says that fraud and covin is a defence to a bond at common law. He must certainly allude to fraud and covin in the execution of the bond, because no doctrine is better settled than the doctrine that fraud, falsehood, or deceit, respecting the consideration, is no legal defence at common law to a bond. . It is otherwise with respect to simple contracts. But when applied-to a bond, it is a defence in equity only, unless it is made a defence at law by statute.

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3 Blackf. 170, 1833 Ind. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huston-v-williams-ind-1833.