Milliken v. Brown

1 Rawle 391, 1829 Pa. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 15, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 1 Rawle 391 (Milliken 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
Milliken v. Brown, 1 Rawle 391, 1829 Pa. LEXIS 100 (Pa. 1829).

Opinion

The opinion of,the court was delivered by

Huston, J.

A suit was originally brought in the Court of Common Pleas of Mifflin county, by Foster and David Milliken, trading, &c. against John Brown, William Brown, jr. and John Watson, under the firm of John Brown §• Co., and a judgment obtained on the 4th of February, 1819, for five thousand eight hundred and eighty-nine dollars and ninety-six cents. On the 18th of March, 1819, the defendants gave bail absolute for the payment of the' money, in order to obtain stay of execution for one year, according to the act of assembly. Notwithstanding this, David Milliken, one of the plaintiffs, procured á writ of Fieri Facias to be issued in Mifflin county-on the 23d of March, 1819; and, the sheriff of Mifflin county endorsed a return ■ of nidia bona thereon, although the furnace, forge, and stock of the' defendants were in that county, and although both John and William Brown, jr., who lived in that county at that time, had each of them large real and personal estate, and this well known to the plaintiffs and sheriff. On the 24th of March, David Milliken procured aTest alum Fieri Facias to be issued, directed to the sheriff oí Lancaster county, where John Watson lived, and was of considerable wealth; but who, living at a distance, knew nothing of the spit or judgment, or bail for stay of execution, David Milliken called on John Watson with the Fieri Facias, who, being uneasy at the idéa of so large an execution against him, agreed to pay four hundred dollars at once, and did pay it: and further agreed to pay-, and.did pay into the [396]*396hands of Christian Haldeman sixteen hundred dollars, more, within a few days, for the plaintiffs. This was expressly on an agreement to exonerate hita from all further liabilityon that judgment, as was expressly proved by Mr. Haldeman, and the receipt given by Milli/een, which Was in these words::—“May 4th, 1819, received by the hands of Christian Haldeman from Dr. John Watson, sixteen hundred' dolíais, the balance 'of two ■ thousand dollars, his part, of a judgment Foster Milliken Sr Co. v. John ■Brown S? Co., for Foster- MillikinSy Co., David • Milliken.’7 Nothing further was done" until the expiration of the year, when a suit was brought against' William Brown, Esq., father of John and William, on the recognisance of bail, reported in 10 Serg. Sr Bawle, 189. Afterwards, in consequence of the opinion given in that case, among Other reasons, the judgment was opened so far as to let the defendants into a defence; and they pléaded payment, with leave, &c., a release and issues' taken. At a Circuit Court in Jlpril, 1828, the cause came on to be tried. John Brown was then absent from this state. After the jury were sworn, there was taken, by consent, a judgment against William Brown, jr. for one-third of the original debt and interest to that time, with an agreement, that this was not to affect the claim of the plaintiffs against John Brown; that the names of William Brown, jr. and John Watson were, to .remain on the record, but they were not to be affected by any judgment "which might be recovered against John Brown: and the-jury were discharged. . ' '

At Jlpril Circuit. Court in 1829, -for Mifflin county, the cause came on before" the Chief Justice, who directed the jury, that the acts, the receipts and the agreement of David Milliken, discharged . John Watson; and-also, discharged John Brown, the only defendant before him: and verdict for the defendant, motion for new trial overruled, and judgment and appeal.

It is understood that it was not contended at the Circuit Court, and certainly, it was not much insisted on here, and could not have been with effect, that John Watson is not'totally discharged; but, it was contended, 1. That although a release will discharge one of several co-defendants, and will also be a release of ail, yet, it must be a technical release.under seal: but, that a receipt, a paper not under seal, will not have that effect, and that a receipt, though in writing, is always open to explanation, and cited, Putnam v. Lewis, 8 Johns. 304, and Johnson v. Weed, 9 Johns. 310, which certainly say so; and also 2 Johns. 449, and Rowley v. Stoddard, 7 Johns. 207, which do say; that a receipt in full to one defendant, does not discharge the Co-defendants, but that a technical release under seal will.

The courts of New York have been composed of, men of -such knowledge and character, that their decisions are entitled to great respect; and it is with diffidence - they are questioned’. We are obliged,, however, sometimes 'to question them, and to decide con[397]*397trary to them, or to give up, not barely a course of our own decision, but our whole system of jurisprudence. They have separate courts of law and equity, and' they have kept up the line of distinction between these as pointedly, perhaps I might say, as fastidiously, as it. was done in England before Lord Mansfield’s time, and certainly more than is done now.' We, on the contrary, exercise the two jurisdictions by the same°court and jury, at the same time, and instead of giving a verdict and judgment against a man in one court, with a full knowledge that he will be relieved in another, we, if he is entitled to relief, give it at once in the trial of the cause. One of the most marked distinctions arising from this is, thata writing, especially if under seal, is received in their courts of law, (except a receipt, and why it is an exception I do not know, though perhaps they do.) But, mistake or fraud must be proved there, and relieved against in Chancery: here it is doné in a court of law. ■ ■

There wasa time in the history of the law when, like everything else of that day, it was a system of metaphysics and logic; and, when the cause was decided without the slightest regard to its justice, solely on the technical accuracy of the pleaders on the several sides: defect of form in the plea, was defect of right in him who used it. This period of juridical history, however, was in some respects distinguished by great men, of great learning, and abounds with information to the student. At the time I speak of, payment of debt and interest on a bond, the next day after it fell due, was no defence in a court of law;'nay, it was no defence to prove payment without an acquittance before the day; nay, if you pleaded and proved a payment, which was accepted in full of the debt, yet, you failed unless your plea stated that you paid it in full, as well as that it was accepted in full; or, perhaps, because you pleaded it as a payment, when you ought to have pleaded it as an accord and satisfaction. An act of parliament or two, and the constant interference of the Court of Chancery, granting relief, have changed this in a great measure; but, it is not a century since it was solemnly decided, that if a creditor, finding his debtor in failing circumstances, and being afraid of losing his debt, proposed to give him a discharge in full if he-paid half the money, and the debtor borrowed the money, and paid the one half on the day the bond fell due, and got an acquittance in terms as explicit as the English

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Rawle 391, 1829 Pa. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milliken-v-brown-pa-1829.