Cleaden v. Webb

9 Del. 473
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Del. 473 (Cleaden v. Webb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleaden v. Webb, 9 Del. 473 (Del. Ct. App. 1873).

Opinion

Bayard.

There is such a thing known to the law as an estoppel in mercantile transactions and the circulation and transfer of commercial or negotiable paper, and the wisdom of the law as well as the policy and commercial prosperity of the public, certainly forbids that any man should out of his own mouth he allowed to impeach or impugn the validity and credit of his own promissory note after he has deliberately subscribed his name to it, and seen it *477 negotiated an'd the money realized upon it in the usual course of such dealings and transactions. 2 Smith’s Ld. Ca. 565.

JBy the Court.

The question in this ease is, whether the maker of a negotiable and negotiated promissory note is a competent witness for the defendant to impeach the validity of it, in an action upon it by an indorsee against the payee and indorser of it. At common law, and before there had been decisions in the courts of England upon the question, he would have been a competent witness in such a case for the defendant and for the purpose stated, unless he had been shown to be directly interested in the result of it. But in this case the witness called has been released from all liability to the defendant for any costs that may be incurred by him in this suit, and, therefore, it is not necessary to notice the first ground of objection taken to his competency. In the ease of Walton v. Shelley, 1 T. R. 296, the principle was first ruled that the indorser of a promissory note was not a competent witness to prove that the consideration of it was usurious, on the ground of public policy, and because no one should be allowed to allege his own turpitude to invalidate such a security after giving it credit by signing his own name to it as a good and valid note, inasmuch as the statute then in force against usury made such a note absolutely void even in the hands of a bona fide purchaser without knowledge of the usury, which to the apprehension of JLd. Mansfield and the other judges sitting in that case, was a consequence and a consideration of sufficient weight to induce them to decide that the indorser of the note could not be admitted to give testimony to invalidate it even upon that ground. But it seems this ruling was not approved by the bar or the bench of England at the time it was made or afterward, for in ten or twelve years from that time, it was expressly overruled in the case of Jordaine v. Lashbrooke, 7 T. R. 601, in the same court, under the sanction of a name scarcely less renowned in the judi *478 cial annals of the kingdom than that of Lord Mansfield himself, Lord Kenyon, his immediate successor then presiding in it. In that case the action was upon a bill of exchange against the defendants who had accepted it, drawn to the order of another firm which had indorsed it to the plaintiff. It bore date at Hamburgh, but was in fact drawn in England without any stamp upon it, and the defence wTas that for that reason under the stamp act no action could be maintained upon it, and that it was therefore illegal and void. And to prove that fact a member of the firm which indorsed it was called as a witness and was objected to as incompetent for that reason, and the ruling in the case of Walton v. Shelley was the authority chiefly relied upon to establish his incompetency as a witness to invalidate it on the same grounds held in that case; but the court held after an an able argument of the question by counsel, that he was a competent witness to prove the fact, and to invalidate the instrument, notwithstanding he had indorsed it; and that ruling has since been uniformly followed in that country. And the rule now received there is, that any party to an instrument, whether negotiable or not, is a competent witness to prove any fact in an action upon it, to which any other witness would be competent to testify, provided he is not shown to be legally infamous, and is not directly interested in the event of the suit. And in this State we have also heretofore uniformly followed this ruling upon the question; and the courts in several of the States in this country have done the same. In others, decisions are to be found which go to the exclusion of a party to an instrument in every case, when offered as a witness to defeat it, in the hands of a third person. In others, referring the rule of exclusion to the grounds of public convenience or policy, the courts have restricted its application to the case of a negotiable security, actually negotiated and put in circulation before its maturity, and still in the hands of an innocent indorsee, wdthout notice of the alleged original infirmity, or any other defect in the contract. And this last ruling upon the question is the *479 limit and extent to which the cases have gone, which have been decided in the Supreme Court of the United States, and which have been cited and referred to in the argument. And in this latter case which we have just stated, the weight of authority in this country may be considered as against the admissibility of the witness to impeach the original validity of the security; although the contrary is still holden in some courts, whose decisions in general, are received with the highest respect. 1 Greenl. Ev. sec. 385 and n. 1.

With such a contrariety of rulings on the subject in the courts of this country, and with the uniform current of decisions in England since the case of Jordaine v. Lashbrooke, we deem it our duty to follow the ruling heretofore made in several cases in this court upon the question which have been in accordance with those in England, until it shall have been reversed or modified by a higher court in this State. But if we were now prepared to adopt the rule on the subject which seems to have been recognized and established in the Supreme Court of the United States, and which is now said to have the weight of American authority in its favor, and which restricts the exclusion of such a witness to the case merely of a negotiable security actually negotiated and put into circulation before its maturity and still in the hands of an innocent indorsee, without notice of the alleged original infirmity, or any other defect in the contract, how could it require us to reject or exclude the witness called in this case, since the plaintiff has offered no evidence, and we have none before us as yet, that he is an innocent indorsee, or bona fide purchaser or holder of the note in question without any knowledge or notice of the character of it, or of the usury with which it is alleged to be tainted ? It may be said in reply to this inquiry, and may also be admitted, that he is to he presumed in law to be the rightful holder of it for a valuable consideration, hut at the same time it must he observed that if this ruling is adopted and applied in the present case the admission of the testimony of the witness can *480 not affect him, or invalidate the note in his hands on the ground of the alleged usury without proof that he had notice of it when he received it. If, however, the plaintiff was not in fact such an indorsee, or holder of the note, then, if we understand the particular rule referred to, it would not in that case exclude the testimony of the witness.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Del. 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleaden-v-webb-delsuperct-1873.