J. T. Council v. . J. S. Willis and A. W. Fadgen
This text of 66 N.C. 359 (J. T. Council v. . J. S. Willis and A. W. Fadgen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The facts, so far as they are necessary to be • stated, are, that defendants had judgment at law against plaintiff; which judgment the plaintiff filed a bill in equity to enjoin, and did enjoin temporarily; but the injunction was-afterwards dissolved, and then the defendants failing to make the'money on their judgment at law, obtained judgment against. *360 the plaintiff upon the injunction' bond, at June Term 186J. And this motion is to vacate the judgment obtained on the injunction bond. These is no irregularity apparent on the ^record, and therefore the motion was properly overruled. The ■ fact relied on as affording merit to the plaintiff’s cause, was a ■receipt exhibited from the Sheriff, who had the execution in the original judgment at law for collection, which receipt was dated 5th Oct. 1854, and was for so much, in full payment of the execution.
The proper way for plaintiff to have availed himself of this receipt was to plead it in satisfaction of the judgment and not offer it upon motion to vacate. Why vacate a regular judgment because it had been satisfied? If, however, the receipt were what it purports to be, we should regret that the plaintiff should lose the benefit of it, by a technical slip, and if there were any other way to give him the substantial benefit of it, we would do so, but it was conceded, that the payment to the sheriff was is Confederate Treasury notes, which had ceased to have value in the payment of old debts; as -this was, and their worthlessness was notice, both to the Sheriff and to the plaintiff, that they would not be received by the creditor. Probably for this reason the payment was not pleaded. So it would seem that the plaintiffs defence was as uncon-scientious as it was informal.
No error.
Pee Oueiam. Judgment affirmed.
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66 N.C. 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-t-council-v-j-s-willis-and-a-w-fadgen-nc-1872.