Filed Date: 8/15/1817
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
It appeared from the record in this case, that the defendant, Gideon Hensley, executed his sealed note to Allen Ross, dated the 11th day of March, 1811, whereby he promised to pay the said Allen Ross $100, on or before the 25th day of December next following, in hemp or cotton at the market price, &c., the produce at Fitspatrick Ginn; which note was on the 11th day of May, 1811, assigned by indorsement thereon by the said Allen Ross, his name being thereto subscribed. On the 12th day of February, 1812, the plaintiff brought suit against the defendant, by warrant
The question made by the bill of exceptions is, was the note competent testimony to go to the jury upon the trial of the cause, it being originally commenced before a • justice by warrant ? The act of Assembly, 1809, ch. 54, § 1, says, “ It shall and may be lawful for .a justice of the peace, in this State, to have jurisdiction of all debts and demands from $50 to $100 inclusive, where the balance is due on any specialty, note, or agreement signed by the party, or on a settled account signed by the parties, in addition,” &c., and may give judgment, &c. The plain object of the Legislature by this law was an increase of the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace in certain cases; these cases are particularized, and specified in the act. They are limited to the balance due on any specialty, note, or agreement signed by the party,- or settled account signed by both parties. A balance of $100 or less being part' of a greater debt which previously subsisted, is within the words of the act. This balance of $100 the plaintiff claims in the present suit, and demands no more ; his warrant says so. To prove this demand or balance, he offers a note showing an original debt of nearly. $101, including interest, and it is contended that this proves too much. To this the plaintiff answers, True my original debt was $101-; 'but my balance which I claim is $100 ; I demand no more. - The question,
® The law is, that the admissions of a party to the suit against his interest is evidence in favor of the other side, whether made by the real party on the record, or by a nominal party who sues as trustee for the benefit of another, or whether by the party who is really interested in the suit, though not named on the record. Phillips’s Evidence, 72. Thus, in an action of debt on a bond conditioned to pay money to L. D., for whose benefit the action was brought, it was proved that L. D. had said in a conversation about this bond, that the defendant owed nothing, upon which the jury found for the defendant; and on motion for ■a new trial, which was refused, the court said it was to be considered as if L. D. was the plaintiff, the action being for her benefit. 1 Wils. 257. This case proves that a parol admission that nothing is due on a bond, is good and binding on the party. A fortiori it must prove also that an admission that part is not due is also good, and that it would have been competent in the present cause to have shown any admission of the plaintiff reducing his original debt below the sum first due, and constituting it a balance instead of the whole. Upon the argument in this case it seemed to be contended, that though the excess of the plaintiff’s debt upon the note beyond $100 might be abandoned, yet that this should have appeared either upon the note itself or in some other way substantially before the note was offered in evidence. The cases above referred to disprove the former part of this proposition, to which in addition may be cited, and also for the purpose of disproving the latter part of it, Phillips’s Evid. 79; 1 Dall. 65; 4 Johns. 460. These authorities show that admissions by the party to a suit are evidence, whether made before or after the commencement of the action, whether before arrest or after, whether in writing or by parol. Indeed, the proper time to ascertain the quantum of the plaintiff’s claim is certainly upon the trial; the * trial is the means by which this is effected, and the result of the
See Rice v. R. R. Bank, 7 Hum. 39; Craighead v. State Bank, Meigs, 199; Haisten v. Hixen, 3 Sneed, 691; Brown v. Moore, 6 Yer. 272; Peyton v. Peacock, 1 Hum. 135; Nichol v. Ridley, 5 Yer. 63; Van Hook v. Story, 4 Hum. 59; Hendrick v. Hendrick, 1 Tenn. 265; Irby v. Brigham, 9 Hum. 750; Overton v. Hardin, Brownsville, 1869; King’s Digest, 5794 et seq.