Court Opinion

ID: 3934114
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:58:56.919136+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:43:08.720788
License: Public Domain

This suit was brought by appellant bank against appellees to recover upon a promissory note for the sum of $500, executed by appellees, payable to E. Bennett  Son, or order, and indorsed before maturity to appellant for a valuable consideration.
Appellees answered that said note was given for a stallion bought for breeding purposes, and that he was warranted to be a sure foal-getter, and that he was not such, and therefore the consideration for said note had failed; that appellant and E. Bennett  Son were partners, and that appellant knew of the warranty given by E. Bennett  Son.
Appellant, by supplemental petition, denied the allegations of the answer, and alleged that said note was bought for a valuable consideration, before due, without notice of any defect therein.
The case was tried before the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment for appellees, from which this appeal is taken. *Page 429 
Appellant having become the owner of the note for a valuable consideration, before maturity, in order for appellees to defeat appellant's right to recover thereon, it was necessary for appellees to show that appellant had notice of the failure of consideration for the execution of said note, or that appellant was a partner of E. Bennett  Son, and was thereby charged with notice of such failure.
In order to establish notice upon appellant, the court permitted appellees to prove, over objection of plaintiff, the contents of a letter written by W.J. Johnson to E. Bennett  Son, without producing the letter or accounting for its absence. The effect of the testimony in relation to the letter was that it notified E. Bennett  Son that the warranty that the horse was a sure foal-getter had failed.
No notice was given to appellant, or to E. Bennett  Son, to produce said letter upon the trial, or secondary evidence of its contents would be introduced. Its absence was not accounted for, and it was essential that such notice should have been given, for, by the terms of the warranty, if said horse was not a sure foal-getter, said E. Bennett  Son were to replace him with one that was.
Under the terms of this warranty, E. Bennett  Son were entitled to a reasonable time after being notified of said failure to replace said horse with another. It was essential, therefore, that they should have been notified of the failure of said warranty, and such notice could not be proved by proving the contents of a letter, unless notice had been given to produce the letter on the trial and the parties had failed to do so. We think the court erred in permitting the defendants, over objections by plaintiff, to prove the contents of said letter.
The court below held that appellant was a partner of E. Bennett Son, and that notice to E. Bennett  Son was therefore notice to appellant of the notice of the failure of said warranty. There is no testimony in the record which shows that appellant was a partner of E. Bennett  Son; but the court below reached that conclusion from the fact that defendants in their answer setting up the failure of consideration charged that appellant was a partner of said E. Bennett  Son, and plaintiff had not denied said allegation under oath. We think in this the court erred.
The defendants by their plea were not seeking affirmative relief against appellant, but were merely pleading matter in bar of plaintiff's right to recover. Defendants were endeavoring to fix notice upon appellant of the failure of consideration of said note; and it was necessary for them, in order to fix the notice upon appellant, to prove either that they had been notified before they bought the note of the failure, or that it was a partner with E Bennett  Son, and thereby charged with notice by reason thereof.
This is not a case that comes within the purview of that provision of the statute which requires "a denial of partnership as alleged in the petition, whether the same be on the part of the plaintiff or defendant," to be filed under oath. Rev. Stats., art. 1265.
It seems from the provision of said article that the denial of partnership *Page 430 
under oath only relates to cases where the plaintiff alleges that it is a partnership, or that the defendants sued therein are partners. It might be, however, that where the defendant by cross-bill sought affirmative relief against the plaintiff, and he alleged a partnership, the same would be considered proved unless denied under oath. But we think it clear that the plea of partnership made by defendants in this case was not such as to require on the part of plaintiff a denial under oath in order to relieve it from proof thereof.
For the reasons above set forth, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.