Snyder v. Pharo

25 F. 398, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2270
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 25 F. 398 (Snyder v. Pharo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snyder v. Pharo, 25 F. 398, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2270 (uscirct 1885).

Opinion

Wales, J.

This is an action by the payee against the maker of a promissory note for $1,062, dated at Philadelphia, January 1, 1876, payable to the order of the plaintiff three years after date, and signed by the defendant. Among other defenses, the defendant has pleaded set-off and accord and satisfaction, and filed the same bill of particulars with each plea. The plaintiff has demurred generally to both pleas. The plea of set-off states that before and at the time of bringing the action the plaintiff was and still is indebted in a very large sum of money to the said defendant and George B. Pharo, lately trading as A. R. Pharo & Son, “out of which said sums of money so due and owing from the said plaintiff to the said defendant, the said Horatio W. Pharo and George B. Pharo, lately trading as A. R. Pharo & Son, are ready and willing, and hereby offer, to set off and allow to the said plaintiff the full amount of the said damages,” etc. The bill of particulars is a copy from the books of the late firm, containing itemized charges against the plaintiff for lumber sold and delivered between March 8, 1876, and August 16, 1877, inclusive, amounting in all to $9,286.49, with interest from January 1,1878. It is objected to this plea that it sets up an equitable defense to an action at law. On the other hand it is contended that, as the note was executed in the city of Philadelphia, (though no place of payment is named,) the lex loci contractus should govern the question of the validity of the plea, and that the defense now made, having been uniformly recognized and allowed by the courts of Pennsylvania, in the construction [399]*399of the statute of set-off in that state, it should also he admitted here on principles of interstate comity. Childerston v. Hammon, 9 Serg. & R. 68; Stewart v. Coulter, 12 Serg. & R. 252; Wrenshall v. Cook, 7 Watts, 464; Craig v. Henderson, 2 Pa. St. 261; Solliday v. Bissey, 12 Pa. St. 347; Tustin v. Cameron, 5 Whart. 379; Maberry v. Shisler, 1 Harr. 354, note.

The statute of Delaware restricts the plea of set-off to “mutual debts between parties to an action, due at the time of action brought, in the same right,” etc.; and the facts relied on by the defendant could not be received in the courts of this slate in support of this plea. Am’d Del. St. 649; Shreve v. Wells, 2 Houst. 223. The Pennsylvania statute does not directly or indirectly include tho right of a defendant to sot off against his separate debt one duo to him and others jointly, or as copartners, with or without their consent. P. L. 537. The courts of the latter state, however, by a broad and liberal construction of the statute, have almost uniformly held that, by the authority or with the consent of all the partners, a member of a firm may avail himself of the special defense made in this case. Thus, in Craig v. Henderson, the "court admits that in a suit against one member of a firm it is not permitted to set off a debt duo tho firm from the plaintiff because of the want of that mutuality which is essential to a set-off; but in Wrenshall v. Cook it is said that equity will, under special circumstances, allow a set-off where none can be admitted at law; and the setting off a partnership debt, with the assent of all tho partners, in an action against one of them for his separate debt, is treated as being a purely equitable defense, and is allowed as such.

Two reasons have been assigned for this equitable construction: one that it may save a firm debt due from an insolvent plaintiff, and the other that it avoids circuity of action. Neither of these reasons exists here, since the plaintiff’s insolvency has not been alleged, and if the set-off were allowed, the firm would still have to sue for the balance of their account. In the Pennsylvania courts both legal and equitable principles are administered through the medium of legal forms. The judge sits as chancellor, and the jury as assessors, to assist him upon the credibility of witnesses, and in reconciling conflicting testimony. Todd v. Campbell, 32 Pa. St. 252; Robinson v. Buck, 71 Pa. St. 386.

This system may be the best, tho wisest, and the most direct and expeditious mode of administering justice, but the question now presented to this court is, are we at liberty to adopt the same course here and admit the defendant’s plea ? The question is not a new one, and the authorities leave no room for doubt as to what disposition should be made of it. One of the first cases in which the subject was considered is that of Robinson v. Campbell, 3 Wheat. 212, where it w7as decided that a merely equitable title could not be set up as a defense in an action of ejectment in tlio circuit courts of the United States, although such might be the practice in the state courts. After refer[400]*400ring to the jurisdiction of the former courts at law and in equity, as defined and regulated by the judiciary acts of 1789 and 1792, the court say:

“The remedies in the courts of the United States are to be, at common law or in equity, not according to the practice of the state courts, but according to the principles of common law and equity, as distinguished and defined in that country from which we derive our knowledge of those principles. ”

And, in Bennett v. Butterworth, 11 How. 674, the court, speaking through Chief Justice Taney, says:

“Although the forms of proceedings and practice in the state courts have been adopted in the district courts, yet the adoption of the state practice must not be understood as confounding the principles of law and equity, nor as authorizing legal and equitable claims to be blended together in one suit. The constitution of the United States, in creating and defining the judicial power of the general government, establishes this distinction between law and equity. ”

These cases are cited with approval in Thompson v. Railroad Cos., 6 Wall. 137, and in Van Norden v. Morton, 99 U. S. 380.

Equitable defenses, though admissible under the state practice, are not admissible in United States courts. Parsons v. Denis, 2 McCrary, 359; S. C. 7 Fed. Rep. 317; Butler v. Young, 1 Flip. C. C. R. 276. In U. S. v. Robeson, 9 Pet. 325, it was decided that on common-law principles the assignment of a claim as between individuals could not be regarded as transferring to the assignee a right to bring an action at law on the account in his own name, or to plead it by way of set-off to an action brought against him. The same question was considered in Whittenton M. Co. v. Memphis & O. R. P. Co., 19 Fed. Rep. 273, where all the authorities are collected as late as 1883.

It will be seen that an unbroken line of cases leads to the one conclusion, that under the constitutional distinction between actions at law and suits in equity, in remedy, pleading, and practice in the courts of the United States, a plea of equitable set-off to an action at law on a promissory note cannot be admitted, though such defense would be allowed in'the state where the note was made.

Judgment on the demurrer for the plaintiff.

Under the plea of accord and satisfaction the defendant claims that, after the making of the note and before action was brought on it, “he, the said Horatio W. Pharo and George B.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. 398, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-pharo-uscirct-1885.