Sargent v. Southgate

22 Mass. 311
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Mass. 311 (Sargent v. Southgate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sargent v. Southgate, 22 Mass. 311 (Mass. 1827).

Opinion

Parker C. J.

delivered the opinion of the Court. In 1 regard to the two first items claimed by the defendant as paid on account of the note on which he is sued, we think there is no doubt, from the evidence, that those sums were so paid. Watson, the payee, requested the witness to ask the defend ant for fifty dollars, stating that he had a short time before received sixty dollars and was unwilling to ask so soon again; and when the witness asked for the note to take with him, Watson answered, there was no need of it, he had got the other sum without the note. The witness then went to the defendant and asked for fifty dollars for Watson, which he received and gave a due bill for it in Watson’s name. This sum, and the other sum of sixty dollars, for which Watson gave his promissory note, were unquestionably paid on account of the defendant’s note to Watson. The form of the evidence, to wit, a promissory note and due bill, is no reason why they should not be used in defence of the note, the intention of the original parties being plain, and the present plaintiffs being subject to the same defence as Watson would be were he the plaintiff, they having received this note long after it was due, and received it in fact as agent and trustee of Watson to collect, and pay his debts with the proceeds

[316]*316With respect to the other demands, consisting of a note for fifty dollars, dated January 1, 1823, and a note for twenty dollars, dated June 2, 1823, and the balance of account due from Watson to the defendant, as there was no direct evidence that they were for moneys advanced or articles delivered specially on account of the note in suit, the defendant cannot avail himself of them in defence, except under our statutes of set-off, he having filed these demands according to those statutes. Considering that these demands arose while Watson had possession of the note in suit, that he was an embarrassed man and had a right to call on the defendant for money, there can be little doubt that it was in fact paid by the defendant and received by Watson towards payment of the debt; but the evidence does not prove it to be so.

After a good deal of deliberation with a view to other cases before us, as well as this, we have come to the conclusion, that the defendant may avail himself of these just and equitable claims against Watson, under the statute of set-off. That statute is remedial and ought to have a liberal construction; it was intended to prevent the nominal creditor from recovering what may be due to him by the form of the contract, when in truth he is the debtor ; and it is in extension of this sound principle of justice, that he alone is substantially the creditor in whose favor the balance exists, that the courts allow judgments between the same parties to be set off, and that the legislature subsequently provided that executions also should be placed one against the other, whatever may have been the cause of action originally between the parties. It is true that the statute of set-off contemplated mutual demands between the same parties, but the common law or law merchant treats the holder of a promissory note which was dishonored when he took it, as the party to the contract, for all purposes of defence, when he shall put his note in suit. The principle as stated by Bayley, in his treatise on bills, is, that he “who takes a bill after it is due, takes it subject to all the objections and equities to which it was liable in the hands ol the person from whom he takes it.” Bayley (Phillips and Sewall’s ed.) 82. Many authorities are cited by the Ameri [317]*317can editors of this book, which fully support this broad and general principle.1 It is very obvious that this principle cannot be applied in many instances where the necessity of it will frequently occur, unless the operation of the statute of set-off can be made to apply to those who are not the original parties to the contract. It is quite common for those who have given negotiable securities, to make advances to their creditors on the faith and expectation of an allowance and adjustment, although not in the direct form of payment of their notes. Death or insolvency of the payee often occurs, and manifest injustice is done if the party so advancing is tc be treated as a debtor to the whole amount, and as a creditoi for what he may have so advanced. If his note is transferred while unimpeached, it is but right that he should suffer, for he has promised every bona fide holder according to the face of the note. But he who takes it with notice of grounds of defence, or after it is due, which the law charges as notice, is holden to take it altogether on the credit of the indorser, knowing, or boing presumed- to know, that if the promisor had any dealings with the payee which would justify a defence, the note is chargeable with that defence in his hands. Now by our statute the promisor can, by giving notice, avail himself of moneys paid, goods sold and delivered, or services rendered, m an action on a promissory note by the payee. This is in fact a defence legal and equitable, and it is clearly within the principle laid down by Bayley and others as applicable to notes taken when overdue ; and if it cannot be applied because the note is indorsed, then the principle fails to an extensive degree, in cases where it would be most just and equitable to apply it. We think it would cease to be a general principle, and would only be a rule for particular cases not more meritorious than those which would not come within it.

The cases of Holland v. Makepeace, 8 Mass. R. 418, and Clark v. Leach, 10 Mass. R. 51, are relied upon principally, to support the objection. The case of Holland v [318]*318Makepeace is within the excepted cases in the English and New York reports. Makepeace claimed to set off against a debt due from him to Coates, which had been assigned to Coates’s creditors, he having failed, a note exceeding in amount the debt for which he was sued, which he had purchased at a discount after the failure of Coates. It was held and rightly, that he should not change his condition to the prejudice of the creditors of Coates, by a voluntary purchase of a debt. It was unjust towards the creditors, and came neither within the letter nor the spirit of the statute of set-off. There is nothing in the case analogous to that which is before us, and the decision therefore does not stand in the way of the principle which we think justice requires us to adopt, and which the spirit of the law will sanction.

There are expressions in the opinion of the Court, as delivered by Sedgwick J., which without doubt are unfavorable to the relief sought for in this case, but the reasoning in support of opinions often goes beyond what the case requires, and such reasoning, though entitled to respectful consideration, is never held to be binding on courts in subsequent cases ; and it ought not to be, for it is only the facts before the Court which call for a decision of the law, and a different state of facts may require a modification of the principle, or the application of a different one.

The judge considered the provision of the statute of 1784, that if upon the trial, a balance shall be found in favor of the defendant, he having filed his account in set-off, he shall recover the same, in the same manner as if he had brought his action therefor, as conclusively showing that the statute could not be applied against the indorsee of a promissory note.

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Savage v. Davis
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Clark v. Leach
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Bluebook (online)
22 Mass. 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sargent-v-southgate-mass-1827.