Clark v. Pease

41 N.H. 414
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 41 N.H. 414 (Clark v. Pease) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Pease, 41 N.H. 414 (N.H. 1860).

Opinion

SaegbNt, J.

That the case presented is clearly one of duress, there can be no question. The abuse of any process, either civil or criminal, to compel a party, by imprisonment, to do any act against his will except to pay the debt for which he is arrested, is entirely illegal, and the act .may be avoided on the ground of duress. Richardson v. Duncan, 3 N. H. 508; Severance v. Kimball, 8 N. H. 386; Shaw v. Spooner, 9 N. H. 197 ; Burnham v. Spooner, 10 N. H. 523; Breck v. Blanchard, 22 N. H. 303. Here the arrest was without any warrant or lawful authority. Such duress is a perfect defence, upon all the authorities, to an action between the original parties.

The note in this ease was not only void as between the original parties, on the ground of duress, but was given to [419]*419compromise a charge of crime, and was wholly illegal upon that ground. Plumer v. Smith, 5 N. H. 553. But the principal question raised here by the ruling of the court is, whether such a note is absolutely void in the hands of any holder; and if not, then another question arises upon the exception which was taken by the plaintiff which is this: after an indorsee has made out a primd facie case by proving the indorsement, &c., and the defendant has shown that the note was obtained from him by duress, upon whom rests the burden of proof? Must the defendant prove that the plaintiff was not the bond fide holder, and that he did not pay a valid consideration for it, as the plaintiff claimed ? or, the duress being proved, does that throw the burden of proof upon the plaintiff, to prove how he came by the note, and the consideration he paid, &c., as the defendant claims ? We will examine these questions in the order in which we have stated them.

I. Is this note absolutely void in the hands of any holder, however innocent, who has paid a valid consideration for it before it was due.

¥e find that the law holds certain persons to be incompetent parties to make contracts, on account of want of capacity. It has, therefore, wisely taken care of the interests of those who either have not judgment to contract, as in the case of infants, or who, having judgment to contract, cannot in law have any funds or property to enable them to perform the contract, as in the case of a feme covert; and therefore it has in general rendered the contracts of infants voidable, and those of married women absolutely void. Oh. on Bills 18. By our law an infant has not capacity to bind himself absolutely by a promissory note, as maker or indorser. Story Prom. Notes, sec. 78. So a married woman is incapable, in any case, of becoming a party to a note or bill so as to charge herself with any obligation whatever ordinarily arising therefrom. So contracts made with an alien enemy are absolutely void, upon [420]*420the ground of disability to contract. This principle has its origin and confirmation in the law of nations. Persons insane, or imbecile in mind, have not the mental capacity to contract. This disability flows from the most obvious principles of natural justice, because persons in that condition — lunatics, idiots, and persons non compos mentis— being bereft of their reason, are, by the rules not only of •municipal law but of universal justice, held to be utterly incapable of making contracts, and generally their contracts are absolutely void. Story Prom. Notes, secs. 85, 94, 100, 101; Edwards Bills & Notes, ch. 2. There are some other parties that are held to be incompetent to contract, but these are the principal; and there are also some exceptions to some or all of the general rules above stated, which are not now important to be noticed. These doctrines are all familiar as elementary principles.

Contracts, therefore, purporting to be entered into by either of the above parties, are either void, or voidable, as the case may be, alike as against the other party to the original contract, and also, where the contract is assignable, they are void as to such incompetent parties, or are voidable by them, in the hands of any assignee or indor-see. These rules of law are founded upon the most common principles of natural justice and of public policy.

There are numerous other contracts, which, though made between competent parties on both sides, are nevertheless void as between such original parties. A contract made on Sunday, where the transaction of such business is prohibited, is an illegal contract, and void as between the parties. So a contract based upon an illegal consideration — as usury, gaming, spirituous liquors sold without license contrary to law, the compounding of a felony, &e. —is void as between the parties. So a contract without consideration, nudum pactum, and one where the consideration has failed, as between the immediate parties, is void or voidable. So a contract entered into by compulsion [421]*421under duress, or obtained by fraud, or circumvention of one in a state of intoxication, is void as between tbe parties. Other cases might be stated (see Oh. on Bills 82-87), but these are sufficient for our present purpose. Where the contract itself is illegal, or is founded upon an illegal consideration, the parties are usually both violators of the law, and stand in pari delicto. In such case any contract for the payment of money or the performance of any service cannot be enforced as between the parties; nor, if money has been paid or property transferred by one party to the other under such contract, where both parties are alike in fault, can it he recovered back, because in such cases, “Potior est conditio possidentis.” But in cases of duress, fraud, or circumvention, the fault was all upon one side, and the innocent party, upon whom the duress or the fraud was practised, may not only avoid the contract entered into under these circumstances, but if he pay money, or deliver property, he may recover it back again. Now bills and notes stand upon the same foundation as all other contracts do, in all the above respects, so long as they remain in the hands of the original payee. But bills and notes have another attribute, which other contracts ordinarily do not possess, — that is, negotiability. Where a bill or note has been negotiated, and passed into the hands of a bond fide holder before it is due, and for a valuable consideration, in such ease the holder acquires rights which did not belong to the payee. He stands in a different relation to the promissor. These additional rights and privileges have been conferred upon such holder by law, for good and sufficient reasons, too well known and understood to need to be stated, but which are incident to, and dependent upon the attribute of negotiability, which these instruments possess.

And it may be laid down as the general rule, as the general principle applying to this class of cases, that such a note, thus negotiated and in the hands of such a holder, [422]*422is not liable to any defence which the maker had as against the original payee. To this general rule there are some exceptions, among which are—

1. When a statute not only prohibits the making of a contract, but provides that the same shall be void to all intents and purposes; or where the law provides that any contract made or securities given upon any illegal consideration’shall be absolutely void, then the note which embodies such contract, or is based upon such consideration, is held void every where and in the hands of every holder.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.H. 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-pease-nh-1860.