Freeman v. Brittin

17 N.J.L. 191
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 15, 1839
StatusPublished

This text of 17 N.J.L. 191 (Freeman v. Brittin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freeman v. Brittin, 17 N.J.L. 191 (N.J. 1839).

Opinion

Hornblower, C. J.

Two questions were raised and very fully discussed on the argument:

I. Was Woodruff a competent witness to prove the facts offered to be proved by him ?

II. Were the facts offered to be proved, material to the issue ?

Upon this latter question, no opinion was intimated at the Circuit; but if this court shall be of opinion that Woodruff was a competent witness, there will be no use of sending the cause back to the Circuit, if the matter offered in evidence, was immaterial to the issue. It may therefore become necessary to examine both points: and,

I. Was Wm. B. Woodruff a competent witness?

He was offered to prove two things: 1, That he obtained the note at a discount exceeding the legal rate of interest: and 2, That in doing so, he acted as agent for the plaintiff, and had no personal interest in the transaction.

After admitting, for the sake of the argument, the general proposition to be true, that an indorser cannot be a witness, upon the score of commercial policy, to discredit an instrument, which he has indorsed, the counsel for the defendant, ably and ingeniously contended, that Woodruff was competent to prove, that he was not an indorser for valuable consideration; that he never owned the note; that it was discounted with the plaintiff’s money; that the witness acted only as his agent; and that the note actually belonged to the plaintiff, without any indorsement by the witness. The counsel further insisted, that the case was not within the rule laid down in Walton v. Shelley, 1 T. R. 296, because the witness was not offered to impeach the note, as void in its creation, but only to impair the plaintiff’s title to it. That if in point of fact, he acted only as the agent of the plaintiff, in [195]*195making the negotiation for the note, all the prior parties had an interest in his testimony, of which he could not deprive them by unnecessarily indorsing his name upon the instrument. That to carry the doctrine of Walton v. Shelley, so far as to exclude this evidence, would overturn all the cases which distinguish between ad.mitting a party to negotiable paper, to prove the instrument void in its creation; and admitting such party to prove some matter going only to impair the plaintiff’s right to recover upon it, though a lawful and valid instrument as between other parties. ISTot only so, but that it would afford an impenetrable shield and protection to usurers and fraud doers, by getting upon the instrument, the name of the only witness who could disclose the true history of the transaction. That such consequences would follow, is certainly true: and it is equally true, that both in England prior to the case of Jourdaine v. Lashbrooke, 7 T. R. 601, and in several of the courts in this country, in which the doctrine of Walton v. Shelley has prevailed ; a distinction has been made between admitting an indorser to prove the instrument, originally corrupt and void; and admitting him, simply, to prove, some matter, not inconsistent with the validity of the note, but going only to impair the plaintiff’s right to recover on it.

Those decisions however, so far at least, as they admit an indorser to prove any matter, not consistent with the fairness and honesty of his own indorsement; or which goes to lessen the value of the instrument as negotiable paper, prior to, or at the time he indorsed it, are not consistent with the doctrine of Walton v. Shelley: they are at war with that ease, and have grown out of a disposition to quarrel with it. Any attempt to reconcile them with the doctrine of Walton v. Shelley, must fail. If commercial security, or public policy, forbids that a man who has indorsed, and thereby given credit to a negotiable instrument, should be admitted to impeach it, in the hands of a subsequent holder, as originally void, it must equally prohibit him from being a witness to prove, any matter tending to impair the value of the instrument, at the time he indorsed it. So in this case ; if the indorser may first swear himself clear of his indorsement, that he was only a nominal indorser and a mere agent for the plaintiff, he would then be competent to prove any thing ; as competent to prove that the note was void in its creation, as that it [196]*196has become so since. So, if an indorser is a competent witness to prove, that the note had been paid before he indorsed it; or that it was then over-due, and liable to set-offs, I see not, why, upon principles of commercial policy, he is not equally competent to prove, it never was worth any thing.

We must come back then, to the great question, whether an indorser or other party to a note is a competent witness to prove any matter, going to show, that at the time he indorsed the note, or became a party to it, it was of less force and value, than it purported to be, on its face ? . That he is so, both upon principle and authority, I have no doubt. I had my attention called to this subject, when I was of counsel in the case of Gardner adsm. Roosevelt, [Penn. Rep. 791.) The result of my examinations then satisfied me, that neither the rules of evidence, the interest of commerce, the safety of the public, nor the cause of truth and j ustice, required an adherence, to the doctrine of Walton v. Shelley. I have always considered the decision of this court in Roosevelt v. Gardner, as settling the law in this state; because, that decision was in direct opposition to the principles upon which Walton v. Shelley, was decided. It is true, Mr. Justice Pennington with whom Justice Eossell fully concurred, did not in terms, declare the case of Walton v. Shelley, not to be law; but he expressed a decided disapprobation of that case; and was in favor of admitting the testimony of Alley the indorser; thereby in effect overturning the doctrine of Walton v. Shelley.

Alley was offered to prove two matters; 1, That the transaction between him and Eoosevelt, was usurious: 2, That nothing was due on the note, and that he so informed Eoosevelt at the time. Now both of these matters went to destroy the value of the note in the hands of Eoosevelt, and were inconsistent with the fairness and honesty of the indorser: they both tended to defeat and invalidate the instrument which the witness had given credit to, by his indorsement—yet a majority of the court admitted the witness, to prove that there was nothing due upon the note when he indorsed it and that he so informed Eoosevelt at the time. Now I would seriously ask, if public policy forbids an indorser to destroy the note he has put in circulation, by proving it usurious, why does it not equally forbid, him to destroy it, by [197]*197proving that it was a satisfied note, and that he told his indorsee at the time of making the indorsement, that it was so. In either case his testimony goes to discredit a note, he himself has indorsed, and to contradict the contracts between him and his indorsee : for by indorsing the note, he impliedly covenants, that it is an available note, and the money honestly due upon it. For my part, I can see no difference.

It is true, Chief Justice Kirkpatrick dissented from the majority of the court, in Roosevelt v. Gardner: and no man is more ready to defer to his opinions, than I am, when they have been the result of his deliberate consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.J.L. 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-brittin-nj-1839.