Court Opinion

ID: 6412545
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 11:53:46.728981+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:25.187862
License: Public Domain

Merrick, J.
When the contract which is stated in the declaration was made, both parties supposed and believed that the notes which were the subject of it were the property and in the possession of William P. Tenney. It turned out afterwards that this was a mistake; that the notes, though originally belonging and payable to him, had been previously to that time duly negotiated, and he had then no interest in them. The express object and purpose of the parties to the contract was thereby to cancel and extinguish the indebtedness of the plaintiff to Tenney; but as no such indebtedness existed, there was *74nothing upon which their contract could operate Consequently it wholly and entirely failed, and no action can be maintained against the defendant for any supposed failure on his part to perform it.
The money which was paid by the plaintiff was recoverable by him on demand as soon as it was discovered that the contract was entirely invalid, because it had been entered into upon the mistake of fact above mentioned. It could have peen recovered in this action, had it not been withdrawn from the defendant’s hands and legally appropriated to the plaintiff’s use under the proceedings in the suit against him, in which' the present defendant was summoned as his trustee. He was thus compelled to pay it to one of the plaintiff’s creditors, and in that manner was discharged from any liability to the plaintiff himself. Rev. Sts. c. 109, § 47. Exceptions overruled.