Wilson v. Wright

41 S.C.L. 399
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 41 S.C.L. 399 (Wilson v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Wright, 41 S.C.L. 399 (S.C. Ct. App. 1854).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

O’Neall, J.

In this case, it appears that John D. Wright made his note with one Robert McCann, to John Wilson, or bearer, for fifteen hundred dollars, due 1st January, 1852. Before the note became due, the payee, Wilson, for a valuable consideration, transferred the note to Jesse W. Norris, and indorsed it. Norris, not obtaining payment when the note fell due, sued, separately, the maker, J. D. Wright, and also the indorser, John Wilson, and recovered judgments. Wilson paid the amount of the judgment against himself, and took an assignment from Norris of the judgment against Wright, and is about enforcing th.efi.fa. This is an application to have satisfaction entered on the judgment against Wright, on account of the payment by Wilson of the judgment against himself.

How that, which was never intended to be satisfaction, and which by the assignment is conclusively shown was intended to operate in discharge of the indorser merely, and as a purchase of the judgment against the maker, can have the implied effect of satisfaction of that judgment, I never have been able to comprehend. I have never believed that the law was so unreasonable as to imply anything against truth. It and justice have been by me always regarded as the foundations of implication, or, as Comyn, in his 1st yol. of Contracts, p. 5, tells us, of implied contracts; they are “ such as reason and justice dictate.” Testing this application by that rule, it cannot be that reason ever would draw such a conclusion, as that satisfaction should be made against a plain intention. So it cannot be justice that he, who is ultimately liable for a debt, should be discharged by a payment made by one liable after him, to discharge himself alone, and with the intent to keep the debt still against him who was liable before him. So much for general reasoning.

[402]*402It is necessary now to clear the case of some decisions made in this State, as it is supposed arriving at a conclusion in favor of the application. It is very true, in Noonan vs. Gray, (1 Bail. 437,) the first principle extracted by the very accurate reporter would seem to favor the notion, that the judgment against the maker would be extinguished by the payment by the indorser of the judgment against him, and that even an assignment would not prevent that effect. But it will be seen he speaks of a subsequent assignment, not one made contemporaneously with the payment. That may constitute a distinction between that case and this, sufficient to prevent its extension; and certainly it should not be extended, for the principle laid down by the reporter was, I know, not satisfactory to the bar, or the bench. 1 very well remember it was pronounced to be unsound by one of the most eminent lawyers in the State, (Mr. Petigru,) in the argument before Johnson, Harper and myself, in the Court of Appeals at Charleston, in Allston vs. Allston, 2 Hill, 362, (

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Related

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17 Mass. 615 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1822)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 S.C.L. 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-wright-scctapp-1854.