DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 154
Citation Numbers: 3 Pa. Super. 461, 1897 Pa. Super. LEXIS 42
Judges: Beaver, Orlady, Reeder, Rice, Smith, Wickham, Willard
Filed Date: 2/16/1897
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Opinion by
This was an action of assumpsit on a negotiable promissory note for $550, given by one Albert Kuhns, with the defendant, Joseph Yetzer, as indorser, to the plaintiff, for the stock and fixtures of a saloon.
The defendant claimed that subsequently, at the request of plaintiff’s agent, Kuhns transferred the title to the stock and fixtures, and consented to the transfer of the saloon license to one Joseph Steigerwald, upon the sole consideration of the plaintiff’s promise made to Kuhns, to release the defendant from any further liability on the note in suit. Although the defendant was not a party to the transaction, it is not disputed that the promise inured to his benefit, if it was made, and was a complete defense to the action.
The plaintiff, on the other hand, claimed that, some time after the note was given, he again became the owner of the fixtures by virtue of a sale on a landlord’s warrant against Kuhns, and that Kuhns consented to the transfer of the license upon consideration that he and his wife should be permitted to remove their other property from the premises. The plaintiff denied that there was any promise to release the defendant, or that that entered in any way into the consideration for the transfer to Steigerwald.
Here then was a plain and simple issue of fact, if there ever was one. Both sides introduced evidence, of direct and of circumstantial nature, to support their respective contentions, and the learned trial judge, without reviewing, or commenting on the same, submitted the question to the jury in language which could not have been misunderstood. He said: “ So that the whole issue presented for your consideration is this: Was there a promise on the part of Kershner ” (plaintiff’s agent) “made to Kuhns that if the license and stock were transferred,
But it is urged that the court erred in not instructing the jury as to the legal effect of the acceptance by the plaintiff of a note for $400 from Steigerwald. But what was the legal effect? If the plaintiff promised to release the defendant from liability in consideration of the transfer to Steigerwald a complete defense was made out, and the fact of the plaintiff’s taking a note from the latter added nothing to its strength. If, however, there was no such promise, and the transfer to Steigerwald was, as between him and Kuhns, without consideration, still we cannot say that the mere fact that the plaintiff took a note from Steigerwald would, of itself and without more, prove payment in whole or in part of the defendant’s obligation. The evidence both as to the consideration' and as to the time when this note was taken is vague and unsatisfactory. So far as the evidence shows, it was a transaction wholly between the plaintiff and Steigerwald. There is no evidence that either the defendant or Kuhns knew anything regarding it, or that they stipulated that Steigerwald should assume and pay their debt; or that the plaintiff accepted the note as payment thereof. When a creditor accepts the note of a third person in payment of his debt, a novation takes place. The liability of the debtor is discharged, and that of the maker of the note substituted for it. The mere acceptance of such note, however, does not constitute a novation without some evidence that it was taken in
We see no error in the rejection of the evidence specified in the third assignment of error. Its admission would have opened up a collateral issue as to the plaintiff’s reasons for objecting to the admission of the proposed purchaser as his tenant. He may have had perfectly good reasons for so doing. And whether his reasons were good or bad, he had a legal right to object to the change of tenants. The argument that it was improbable that Kuhns would consent to the transfer of property of value to Steigerwald without receiving anything for it and without being released from the note in controversy was a proper one to be addressed to the jury, but the proposed evidence would have added nothing to its force. If the offer was to show that the plaintiff had prevented the sale it was irrelevant. If its purpose was to show that the property was worth as much or more than the face of the note, there was a more direct way of proving the fact. Besides that, there was no dispute as to the value of the property.
The stenographer’s notes of the trial show that the testimony was closed on September 25, and that the court then adjourned. On the following day the defendant offered to rebut, by his own testimony, certain testimony introduced by the plaintiff as to declarations made by him. No reason was given for not introducing the testimony at the proper time, and the plaintiff gave very plausible reasons for not reopening the case. How far they were sustained in the discussion before the court below we have no means of knowing. It is sufficient to say, that to admit or exclude additional evidence after the evidence is formally closed, is a matter within the discretion of the trial court; and it has sometimes been said that its decision is not reviewable.
Judgment affirmed.