Inasmuch as the
laws, men of the jury, have granted that a special plea be entered in cases
where a man, after having given a release and discharge, nevertheless brings
suit, and as both of these have been given me by Pantaenetus here, I have
pleaded, as you have just now heard, that his suit is not admissible. I did not
think that I should forgo this right, or that, after I had proved among other
things that the plaintiff had released me, and that I had got rid of him, it
should be open to him to declare that I was uttering a falsehood and to try to
employ the argument that, if any such release had been granted me, I should have
put in a special plea to bar his suit. No, I determined to come before you
relying on this plea and to prove both points—that I have never done
the plaintiff any wrong, and that he is suing me contrary to law.
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