Kernodle v. Hunt

4 Blackf. 57, 1835 Ind. LEXIS 29
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 30, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 4 Blackf. 57 (Kernodle v. Hunt) 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
Kernodle v. Hunt, 4 Blackf. 57, 1835 Ind. LEXIS 29 (Ind. 1835).

Opinion

Stevens, J.

Debt by Kernodle as assignee of Norris against Hunt upon two promissory notes. The material allegations of the declaration are:—That Hunt made his certain promissory note, &c. to said Norris, by which he promised to pay, &c. 100 dollars for value received, &c.; and that he made his certain other promissory note, &c. to said Norris, by which he promised to pay, &c. 65 dollars, &c. upon condition that Moses Mendenhall’s patent perpendicular grist mill plan should be a good and useful plan; if not, said last-mentioned note should be void, &c.; with an averment that the said patent perpendicular grist mill was a good and useful plan, &c. To this declaration the defendant pleaded five several pleas.

First, That the said notes were voluntary, being made with-, out-any good or valuable consideration whatever, &c.

. Secondly, That the notes were made for and in consideration of the right of making, using,- and vending to others to use, &c. the patent right of Moses Mendenhall’s patent perpendicular grist mill, which was sold and conveyed to the obligor by the said Norris and one Treadway by deed of conveyance, &c.; -and that at the time of said sale and conveyance, and at the time of making said notes, the said patent right was not, nor is it now, of any value or use to him the obligor, &c.; and therefore the notes were given without any good or valuable consideration whatever, &c.

[58]*58Thirdly, That the notes were made for and in consideration j-pg rjght of making, using, and vending to others to use, &c. patent right of Moses Mendenhall's patent perpendicular gi'ist mill, which was then and there sold and conveyed to the obligor by the said Norris and one Treadway by deed of conveyance, &c.; and that at the time of said sale and conveyance, and at the time of mailing said notes, they the said Norris and Treadway represented to him, that the said patent was a good, useful, and valuable improvement for grinding- corn and other grain; and that he, confiding and relying upon said warranty, made the said promissory notes, &c.; when in fact the said patent right was not a useful and valuable improvement, &c., but was and is of no value, &c.; and therefore the consideration was wholly insufficient, <fcc.

Fourthly, The fourth plea is precisely like the third, with an additional averment, that the said Norris and Treadway well knew at the time they represented the said patent right to be a useful and valuable improvement, that it was not useful and valuable, and thereby falsely and fraudulently deceived him, &c.

Fifthly, That the notes were made for and in consideration of the right of making, using, and' vending to others to use, &c. the patent right of Moses Mendenhall's patent perpendicular grist mill, which was then and there sold and conveyed to the obligor by said Norris and one Treadway by a deed'of conveyance, &c.; and that at the time of the sale and conveyance, they the said Norris and Treadway represented themselves to be the true and lawful owners of said patent right, and that they had full power and lawful authority to sell and convey, &c.; and that confiding in that representation, he made the notes, &c., when in truth the vendors had no right or title to said patent, nor had they any lawful power or authority to sell and convey, &c.; and therefore the consideration had wholly failed, &c.

The first and second pleas were severally demurred to, and the causes of demurrer to the first plea specially assigned; which causes are, that the plea is. in general terms, when it should specially show the special matter relied on; and that it concludes with a verification, when it should conclude to the country, «fee. The demurrer to the second plea was sustained, and the one to the first plea overruled.

[59]*59To the third, fourth, and fifth pleas, the plaintiff replied, that he ought not to be barred, &c. because, &c. the said notes, &c. were made for a good and valuable consideration, without fraud, «fee., and concluded to the country, «See. To which replications the defendant demurred., and the demurrers were sustained by the Court, and final judgment rendered for the defendant.

The first question is, was the demurrer to the first plea correctly overruled?

The first plea is good, and consequently the demurrer was correctly overruled. That question is settled in the case of Huston v. Williams, decided by this Court at their May term, 1833. In that case, it is said that a plea averring that a bond is voluntary, and without either a good or valuable consideration, is sufficient without any averments more special; because there are no facts more special in such a case to aver. If there was no consideration, there is nothing to make averments about. Such a plea, however, will not be available on trial, if there was any consideration whatever, no matter how fraudulent or trifling that consideration may have been.

The second plea is so glaringly defective that an examination of it is useless: the demurrer to it was correctly sustained.

The next and last question is, was the demurrer to the replication to the third, fourth, and fifth pleas correctly sustained?

It is a principle not necessary to reiterate, that a demurrer at any stage of the pleadings runs back to the first substantial error; and in this case, if the pleas are insufficient, the defendant cannot complain of the defects in the replication. We will examine the third plea separately. This avers, that the consideration for which the promissory notes were given was a patent right for a certain grist mill, &c.; and that the vendors represented, that the said patent mill was a good, useful, and valuable improvement for grinding corn, «fee., when in truth it was of no value, &c.; and that he the defendant confiding in that representation, purchased, «fee. These averments are entirely insufficient. They set out a consideration, and admit that that consideration was received, and was, has been, and is, without interruption, possessed and enjoyed by the vendee; that he got all he contracted for, and that the title is [60]*60good. No defects or insufficiencies either in title or any thing else connected with the consideration are complained of; there is no charge that any thing was concealed from his knowledge in any way.. The complaint is, that the vendor represented it to be useful and valuable when it was not, and that he confiding in that representation purchased. These allegations are insufficient; no material issue can be made upon them; what one man may esteem very valuable, another may deem worth nothing. There is no averment that the vendee was ignorant of the value at the time of the purchase, and was therefore deceived. But if it werE so averred, that would not of itself be sufficient. 2 Kent’s Comm. 485, 486.—Harvey v. Young, Yelv. 21.—Bayly v. Merrel, 3 Bulst. Rep. 94.—Cro. Jac. 386. Davis v. Meeker, 5 Johns. Rep. 354.—Jendwine v. Slade, 2 Esp. Rep. 572.—Sugden on Vendors, 2.—Chandelor v. Lopus, Cro. Jac. 4.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Blackf. 57, 1835 Ind. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kernodle-v-hunt-ind-1835.