Davis v. Bartlett

12 Ohio St. (N.S.) 534
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1861
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ohio St. (N.S.) 534 (Davis v. Bartlett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Bartlett, 12 Ohio St. (N.S.) 534 (Ohio 1861).

Opinion

Sutlirr, C.J.

There is presented by the record in this •case but a single question for our consideration: upon which party was the burden of proof, under the issue made by the pleadings ?'

It is here to be observed that the pleadings in the case, the petition and answer, were filed previous to the amendment of April 8, 1857, and under the original provisions of section 84 of the code, which provided that “ the only pleadings ■allowed are the petition by the plaintiff; the answer or demurrer by the defendant; the demurrer or reply by the plaintiff ;” and of section 101, that there shall be no reply except upon the allegation of a counter-claim or setoff in the answer;” and of section 127, that “ every material allegation of the petition not controverted by the answer, and every material allegation of new matter in the answer constituting a counter-claim or setoff not controverted by the reply, shall for the purposes of the action be taken as true ; but the allegations of new matter in the answer, not relating to a counterclaim, or setoff, or of new matter in the reply, shall be deemed to be controverted by the adverse party, as upon a direct denial,” etc.

The allegations of the petition, that the defendants made and delivered their negotiable promissory note to Woolsey, and that Woolsey before it fell due, for a valuable consideration, indorsed and delivered it to the plaintiff, is not denied [538]*538in the answer. The plaintiff’s right to recover is, however,, sought to be barred by the allegation of neAV matter in the-answer, constituting a defense. But, as we have seen, by the provisions of the code then in force, this matter in bar, so set up in the answer, is to be regarded as traversed by the plaintiff. It Avas, therefore, incumbent upon the defendants to-prove the matter so pleaded in bar, in order to entitle them to the benefit of it. Thus far, it is apprehended, there can be no two opinions entertained by counsel of the respective parties.

But it is insisted by counsel of the defendants, that although it is true, that the burden of proof, under the pleadings, was upon the defendants, and that it was incumbent upon them to show the truth of the matter alleged and relied upon to bar the plaintiff’s right of action; yet, it is said, that the bill of exceptions shows that if the defendants made such proof as showed a defense against the note in the hands of Woolsey, that then the burden of proof Avas thereby shifted from the defendants upon the plaintiff. And the defendants rely upon both principle and authority to support this proposition.

. In the first place, then, how' stands the case upon principle? We have seen that the facts constituting the cause of action stated in the petition were not denied by the answer; but the defendants relied upon two substantive facts stated' in the answer as a defense : 1. That the note was without consideration in the hands of Woolsey, the payee: and, 2. That the plaintiff, at the time he purchased and received the note,, had notice of the fact; and both these facts, so alleged in the answer, are, in law, traversed by the plaintiff. It is admitted that when the case was thus set down for trial upon the single issue made by the denial of the truth of these averments set up in the answer as a bar, it was incumbent upon the defendants to prove the matter so alleged, in order to constitute a bar to the plaintiff’s right of action; and neither one of the facts constituting a defense, and both being denied, it was incumbent upon the defendants to prove-both facts so averred. It is also shown by the record, that under the charge of the court evidence was required to be-[539]*539given by the defendants to prove only one of the facts so averred in 'the answer, to-wit, the fact that the note in the hand of Woolsey was without consideration.

But it is said by the defendants that the proof of the failure of the consideration of the note while in the hands of Woolsey, the payee, raises a presumption of the knowledge of that fact on the part of the plaintiff. It is difficult to perceive how this presumption can be made to appear. It stands admitted on the record that the plaintiff purchased the note for a valuable consideration; and, as all men are presumed to know the law, the plaintiff must be presumed to know, that if the note, in the hands of Woolsey was without consideration, it was not collectible, but worthless. How, then, when the admission is, that the plaintiff bought and paid for the note, can it be said, in the absence of any proof, and contrary to his denial, that the plaintiff so buying and paying for the note, knew it to be worthless ? Such a conclusion is by no means inferable from those facts. Nor is it possible to gain such a deduction, as the presumption of knowledge by the plaintiff, from the fact of the existence of the want of consideration for the note. It is not pretended that the evidence at all connects the plaintiff with the transactions between Woolsey and the defendants, in relation to which the note was executed to Woolsey. The answer only avers that the plaintiff purchased the note with knowledge of its want of consideration; and there is shown by the record no avenue of such knowledge to the plaintiff from which it can be presumed. On 'the contrary, even if it be conceded that the proof clearly showed the fact of want of consideration for the note, while so held by Woolsey, the record shows the cause of action to have been a promissory note, indorsed to the plaintiff, which of itself implies a consideration; and that the same was a negotiable note, which not only imports value,’ but a willingness on the part of the maker, that any third person may purchase it, and a promise to pay to such third person. There is nothing, therefore, in the record to show any circumstances cautioning the plaintiff against making a purchase of the note, cr intimating to him any defect, or de[540]*540fense which the makers could avail themselves of. It is not such a case as that of an erased, interlined, or altered instrument, of which defect the purchaser may he presumed to have had notice, by actual view.

I am, therefore, unable to perceive that upon principle it can possible be claimed that the denial of knowledge on the part of the plaintiff is overcome — not by proving his knowledge, but by proving the existence of the fact of failure of consideration, which he so denied knowing, at the time of his buying and paying for the note. By no logical reasoning upon the facts presented by the record, can such presumption of knowledge on the part of the plaintiff arise. The conclusion is certainly illogical. The burden of proof, would then, upon principle, appear to remain upon the defendants as to this, as well as the other fact, which together constitute the defense set up in the answer.

Let us now recur to the authorities relied upon to show that the burden of proving that the transfer of the note by the payee (if fraudulent in his hands) to the plaintiff was in good faith, and, for a valuable consideration and without any knowledge of fraud or want of consideration, was on the plaintiff.

The case of McKesson v. Stanberry, 3 Ohio St. Rep. 156, is doubtless the case most relied upon by the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio St. (N.S.) 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-bartlett-ohio-1861.