Court Opinion

ID: 6228533
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-17 20:16:38.06926+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:57:46.046030
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Coulter, J.
This is a proceeding commenced before an aider-man, under the $100 act of 1810. A judgment was rendered against the defendant after the examination of witnesses on part of plaintiff below, on the day appointed for hearing, of which the defendant was duly notified. Upon his application, afterwards, the judgment was opened, and a new trial granted, upon which trial judgment was again rendered in favour of plaintiff. From this judgment the defendant appealed to the Common Pleas. The plaintiff filed his declaration containing several counts, to which the' defendant pleaded; and the cause being on the trial list, and the defendant not appearing, the judgment of the alderman was affirmed by the court, under the 2d rule of the Common Pleas, which is as follows: — “ On appeals from the judgments of justices and aldermen, on the calling of the trial list, if the defendant does not appear, and the plaintiff does appear, the court may affirm the judgment of the justice or alderman.” We see no objection to the power of the court to make such a rule, nor any Y&lid reason against its propriety. There was no trial in court, *175nor judgment pronounced upon the pleadings as they existed in court: no action of the court founded upon those pleadings.
The plaintiff in error files two exceptions:
1st. Upon the face of the record, the plaintiff below had no cause of action against the defendant, the instrument declared upon not being negotiable. This assignment of error, if valid, will apply to the record before the justice, because the indorsee brings the action in his own name against the indorser. The plaintiff in error cites the case of M’Cormick vs. Trotter, 10 S. & R. 94; to shew that the holder, of a promissory note not negotiable, cannot sue in his own name ; but that was a suit against the maker of the note, which renders the case totally different from the present. He cites, also, the case of Fahnestock vs. Schayer, 9 Watts 102, to establish that the holder cannot maintain an action in his own name on a note for specific goods, transferred to him by indorsement. But that was a check or draft accepted by the defendant, payable in specific goods, and indorsed after acceptance, where it was ruled that the holder could not maintain an action in his own name against the acceptor, because he, the acceptor, was entitled to set off against the plaintiff, and because the note was not negotiable. That, however, is the same principle as M’Cormick vs. Trotter, the acceptor being in the same category as the maker of a note. The case of Gray vs. Donahoe, 4 Watts 400, only establishes that a note payable in current bank notes, is not negotiable, and cannot be transferred by an endorsement in blank. Here the endorsement by Elkinton is “pay the bearer,” which is equivalent to an assignment.
More apposite to the present case is Rankin vs. Woodworth, 2 Watts 134, where it was held that the holder of a note, which is payable to bearer, may maintain an action in his own name. And still more apposite is the case of Leidy vs. Tammany, 9 Watts 353. A promissory note payable to A, without words of negotiability, was, some time after it fell due, indorsed by A, and payment demanded by the holder from the maker; held, that the holder could maintain an action in his own name against A, the payee. Here is a note — and admit that it is not strictly negotiable, because it is payable in specific goods — yet it is a chose, and may be transferred for value. It is so transferred by the payee, and made payable to bearer. Now, who could bring the action against the payee, who transferred for value, if the holder cannot ? He would go free. But, in Leidy vs. Tammany, the contrary was held, and so justice demands. This exception is formal and technical, and the 2d proviso in the 4th section of the $100 act, as it is generally called, provides, that upon any such appeal from the decision-, determination or order of two justices of the peace to any court of Common Pleas in any county, the cause shall be decided in such court on its facts and merits only, and no deficiency *176in the form or substance of the record returned, nor any mistake in the form or name of the action, shall prejudice either party in the court to which the appeal shall be made.* Justices of the peace and alderman are not bred to the science of the law, and it would be incongruous to hold them to the strictness of pleading which prevails in Westminster Hall.
There was a trial on the merits before the alderman, and, if the plaintiff in error did not moot the matter in question before the appellate court, he eannot now convert this court into a certiorari tribunal, to examine alleged error in the proceedings of aldermen.
In Levan vs. Carver, 1 Ash. 30, it was ruled that on an appeal in an action on a note not negotiable, brought in the name of the holder, it cannot be objected that the action is misconceived; the mistake in form being cured by the act of 1810. And in Lyon vs. Chalker, 2 Watts 14, it was decided that if an action be brought before a justice of the peace, in the name of the holder of a note not negotiable, the form of the action may be altered, on appeal, so as to stand in the name of the payee for the use of the holder. These were actions against the maker of the note, where, in order to let him into equities against the payepf of a note not negotiable, it was necessary to preserve the form of the payee suing for use of the holder. But no such necessity exists in the case of the holder against the endorser to bearer. All the equities which can exist are open between them. They are the contracting parties.
The 2d error is that a general judgment upon the several counts in the declaration is erroneous.
But, there was neither verdict nor judgment upon any of these counts. The court affirmed the judgment of the alderman, that judgment was rendered for the amount of the note, or, as the alderman calls it, the due MU, with interest till judgment; and could not have been predicated upon the counts in the narr. We are of opinion, however, that the counts are good, and that the holder might bring an action in his own name, against the indorser and payee of the note, and that it could be sustained on the indebitatus counts, (Leidy vs. Tammany,) as well as upon a count on the special circumstances. None of the counts being bad, a general judgment on those counts would be good.
Judgment affirmed.

Note. — The words “two justices” in the proviso, is evidently a mistake in transcribing the act. The meaning and intent is an appeal from the judgment of one justice, under the provisions of that act. Comfort v. Leland, 3 Wharton 82; McCahan v. Hirst, 7 Watts 175.