McClellan v. Perry, 37 Ill. App. 157 (1890)

June 30, 1890 · Illinois Appellate Court
37 Ill. App. 157

John J. McClellan v. James G. Perry.

Negotiable Instruments—Note—Consideration—Failure of—Replication —Sufficiency of.

1. The allegation that a certain note is canceled, will not fulfill an agreement to return the same upon the delivery of other notes in its place.

*1582. In an action upon a promissory note, the defendant contending that the same was assigned to the plaintiff after maturity, and that the consideration therefor had wholly failed, this court holds that the plaintiff’s replication to the defendant’s plea setting forth the circumstances under which the same was given, was bad, it containing merely the pleader’s conclusion, and not a statement of facts, and that the demurrer thereto should have been sustained.

[Opinion filed June 30, 1890.]

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County; the Hon. Julius S. Grinnell, Judge, presiding.

Mr. Lemuel H. Foster, for appellant.

Messrs. H. T. & L. Helm, for appellee.

Garnett, J.

This was a suit commenced December 21, 1888, on a promissory note made by appellant March 30, 1888. Appellant set up by special plea that the note was assigned to appellee after maturity, and that the consideration therefor had wholly failed; that Vanuxem, Waller & Slocum held a promissory note of the defendant for $586, dated August 20, 1887, and it was agreed between defendant and Vanuxem, Waller & Slocum in settlement and payment of the note for $586, that they, Vanuxem, Waller & Slocum, would receive from defendant in settlement and payment thereof, two notes of defendant., dated March 30,1888, one for $200, payable sixty days from date, and one for $273.80, payable four months from date, and that Vanuxem, Waller & Slocum would surrender the note for $586, and in pursuance of that agreement defendant executed and delivered to Vanuxem, Waller & Slocum on March 30, 1888, his two notes of that date, one for $200, payable sixty days from its date and the other for $273.80 payable four months from its date, both to the order of defendant, indorsed by him and delivered to Vanuxem, Waller & Slocum; that they, upon receiving the two last described notes, promised in writing to deliver up to defendant the note for $586, and to cancel the same, and that the note for $273.80 is the samenote sued on; that Vanuxem, Waller & Slocum,although *159often requested by defendant to deliver up the note for $586, have wholly neglected and refused to do so and the same is still outstanding. To this plea the plaintiff replied that at the time of the settlement of the note for $586, the same was, by the agreement set up in the plea, canceled and satisfied and no longer existed or continued after the date of the settlement as an existing liability of the defendant, and that the aforesaid cancellation and satisfaction of the said note was the true and real consideration of and for the note sued on. Defendant demurred to the replication. The demurrer was overruled and there being other issues of fact in the case, judgment was afterward given for plaintiff on a trial of such other issues.

The only question we think material on this appeal relates to the sufficiency of the replication above set out. It was not a statement of facts, but merely the pleader’s conclusion. INo fact can be gathered from it that did not already appear in the plea, and if the facts stated in the plea warranted the conclusion found in the replication, the plaintiff could easily have demonstrated it by demurrer to the plea. But the facts stated in the plea do not warrant the conclusion. The agreement, of itself, was of no value to the defendant. The delivery to him of the $586 note was the essential thing. That was the only prudent agreement he could make, and the other parties having assented to the terms, it is most extraordinary if they, or their assigns, with notice, can set aside this central feature of the contract, and leave the defendant exposed to the hazard of having to pay the $586 note to a purchaser for value before maturity.

We have no hesitation in saying the demurrer to the replication should have been sustained. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.