Court Opinion

ID: 6281143
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 16:16:30.440572+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:00:12.066812
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Trexler, J.,
There was a petition to vacate the judgment entered in this case. The lower court treated it as a petition to open. The petitioner avers that he, the defendant, in his affidavit of defense alleged that the plaintiff, the endorser, was not an innocent holder, for value without notice and before maturity of the note in question, it *250having been agreed between the parties to the note that it was to be paid in shipments of coal; and after the case was on the trial list, the defendant confessed judgment for the amount of the note, payable in installments. He further states that he was mistaken in the identity of the plaintiff, he having discovered since execution was issued that the plaintiff was cognizant of all the facts in the case and knew that the note was to be paid in coal.
In his deposition taken in support of the petition, the defendant states that A. Sidney Davidson, who was connected with the company, to whom the note was payable, had left him under the impression that the endorsee of the note was the Luce connected with the American Strawboard Company and he, believing this to be so and having no means of proving that the Luce referred to by Davidson knew anything about the transaction involved in the giving of the note, confessed judgment for the amount thereof.
The court refused to open the judgment. The reasons given are convincing. The testimony of the defendant is uncorroborated. It is flatly contradicted by the plaintiff, the present holder of the note. The story is improbable for the defendant states that the man, who he thought was the holder of the note, spelled his name Luz or Luze and the dissimilarity between the names would be notice to the defendant, that the plaintiff was actually the man, he in the first instance thought he was. The plaintiff was, admittedly, not present when the note was given and the defendant’s testimony was not clear that the plaintiff knew of the arrangement between the parties to the note when he purchased it.
Under the well-settled rule that the petition to open judgment is addressed to the equitable powers of the court and the question before us is whether there has been a proper exercise of judicial discretion, we find no reason for interfering with the conclusion of the learned judge of the court below. It was his province to weigh the conflicting testimony and to ascertain whether, con*251sidering the proofs submitted, justice required the opening of the judgment.
The assignment of error is overruled and the order of the lower court is affirmed.