Yates v. Valentine

71 Ill. 643
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 71 Ill. 643 (Yates v. Valentine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yates v. Valentine, 71 Ill. 643 (Ill. 1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

When a subsequent promissory note is given for the same consideration as a former one, it is a question of fact for the determination of the jury, whether the former note is thereby satisfied. If the subsequent note was executed and accepted by the respective parties for that purpose, the satisfaction is complete. Hart v. Boller, 15 Serg’t & Rawle, 162; Brewer v. The Branch Bank, 24 Alabama, 440; Thatcher v. Dinsmore, 5 Mass. 299; French v. Price, 24 id. 13; Hutchins v. Olcott, 4 Vt. 549; Homes v. Smith, 16 Maine, 177. This is in harmony with the previous rulings of this court upon the question. Ralston et al. v. Wood, 15 Ill. 168; Miller v. Lumsden, 16 id. 162; Strong et al. v. King, 35 id. 19; White v. Jones et al. 38 id. 159; Hough v. Ætna IAfe Ins. Co. 57 id. 318.

Applying the principle to the facts in the case before us, we can not see how the court below could reasonably have rendered a different judgment from what it did.

The note given by the defendant to the plaintiff was indorsed by the plaintiff in blank, and placed in the hands of Ablowitch. This invested Ablowitch with the apparent ownership and legal title. The defendant had no notice that there was a secret agreement between the plaintiff and Ablowitch, by which Ablowitch, in fact, only held the noteas collateral security; nor of the subsequent settlement -between them, whereby the plaintiff became entitled to repossess himself of the note. Under these circumstances, the defendant is justified in having considered Ablowitch as the lawful owner of the note, and in treating with him for its payment. When Ablowitch accepted the defendant’s notes, payable to himself, for the principal and interest due on this note, he surrendered it to the defendant-. We can conceive of no act showing more decisively that it was intended by the parties that the note was satisfied, and should be canceled. It was intended that the defendant should thereafter be bound by the terms of the notes then given, and the old note was given him that it might cease to exist as an evidence of indebtedness against him.

When the note was thus satisfied, the defendant was under no obligation to again assume a liability on account of it, to the plaintiff. The plaintiff, by placing Ablowitch in the possession of the note, with full evidence of his- legal right to collect it, and permitting him to retain this possession, occasioned the misfortune from which he now suffers. His recourse is against Ablowitch, whom he thus trusted, and not against the defendant, who acted in good faith, and without notice of the plaintiff’s rights.

The judgment is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Ill. 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yates-v-valentine-ill-1874.