DeWitt v. Perkins
This text of 22 Wis. 473 (DeWitt v. Perkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff, knowing tbe defendant, and tbat be was in fair credit and able to resjmnd, purchased, shortly before its maturity, a promissory note against him for three hundred dollars and interest for six months, paying therefor only tbe sum of Jive dollars. As between tbe defendant and tbe payee, tbe note was invalid for want of consideration. Is tbe plaintiff a bona fide holder for vaule, so as to protect him against tbe defense of a want of consideration? We answer, no. Tbe consideration paid by him was merely nominal. It is as if tbe note bad been given to him, and be should claim tbe protection afforded a bona fide bolder for value. It appears on tbe face of tbe transaction tbat it was not a negotiation of tbe note in tbe usual course of business, but tbat tbe sum exacted on tbe one side and paid on tbe other was to give tbat tbe semblance of a sale, which otherwise was intended as a mere gift, or, what is worse, a shift to get tbe note out of tbe bands of tbe payee so as to cut off the- defense of tbe maker, for tbe payee’s benefit. Either view is equally fatal to tbe action of the plaintiff, provided tbe defense of a want of consideration is established.
Again, tbe buying of a note against a solvent maker, tbe purchaser knowing him to be such, for a mere nominal consideration, is very strong, if not conclusive, evidence of mala fides. It is constructive notice of the invalidity of tbe note in tbe bands of tbe seller — such as to put tbe purcha[475]*475ser upon inquiry, which, if' he fails to make, he acts at his peril. Brown v. Taber, 5 Wend., 566; Mathews v. Poythress, 4 Ga., 287, 299 et seq., and cases cited; Anderson v. Nicholas, 28 N. Y., 600; Whitbread v. Jordan, 1 Younge & Collyer (Exch.), 308, 328; Jones v. Smith, 1 Hare, 68 ; 1 Parsons on Notes and Bills, 254, 259-60. The proof offered to show a failure of consideration should-have been received, and the case submitted to the jury on this ground.
The court likewise erred in not requiring the witness Lakin
The other question put to the same witness, and answer declined on the same ground, was as to a matter which in its very nature never could have been the subject of a privileged or professional communication to the witness. It was, whether hq, the witness, had ever advanced any money on the note to. any person. If the advancing of money by an attorney upon a note is a privileged communication, then it,is difficult to conceive what single act of an attorney may not be.
[476]*476By the Court — Judgment reversed, and a new trial awarded.
Mr. Lakin was the plaintiff’s attorney in this action. — Rep.
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