Griffith v. Reford

1 Rawle 196, 1829 Pa. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 27, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1 Rawle 196 (Griffith v. Reford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffith v. Reford, 1 Rawle 196, 1829 Pa. LEXIS 65 (Pa. 1829).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Gibson, C. J.

The objection to the witness, on-the ground of interest, is hot sustained; but,'it seems to me, he was incompetent under the rule in Walton v. Shelley, to prove that the consideration was usurious. That rule is undoubtedly restricted to paper actually negotiated; and it consequently has no-place-between the original-parties. But-how did the case, stand when the witness was called? Apparently between an endorser and endorsee; and the question therefore is, not whether the witness was competent to prove the consideration usurious, in a case admitted to be between the original parties, but whether he could, by his own evidence, remove an apparently well founded objection to his own competency: and I take it he could riot. If he might make way for his testimony in chief by taking his case out of a rule which prima facie furnishes a valid objection to it, he might as well testify in chief in the first instance; for if he were competent for the one purpose, he would necessarily be so for the other. But a witness cannot open his lips for any purpose whatever, while an original objection,to his competency remains. It would seem, therefore, that the court .erred in admitting the vvitness exclusively on the credit of his own evidence,, [198]*198that the endorsee was in fact the lender, and that the security wao put into a negotiable form merely for the sake of convenience.

Huston, .T.

The' plaintiff in error, who was plaintiff below, sited Mrs. Reford, as endorser on four several promissory notes, all dated in 1819, but on different days, and payable at different times. These-notes were all drawn- by 'Thomas L. Plowman, payable to Mrs. Re ford, and by her endorsed. There was- also, by consent, a bill of exchange- included in the verdict, about which there was- no dispute. The pleas wére the general issue, and a special plea of usury, and issue. At the trial of tire cause, it vvas-offered to prove, that more than-twenty years ago- the dealings between Plowman and the plaintiff began in a loan of mone}1- by Griffith to Plowman at usurious interest, which money was secured by note3 drawn by Plowman and-endorsed by the defendant; that the defendant never had any interest in the notes or communication with the plaintiff, but endorsed at the request and for the accommodation of Plowman, her brother; The loan was originally about seven- hundred dollars, and by renewing the notes and including usurious interest, it amounted to about six thousand dollars; that is, to about four thousand dollars more-than the debt and legal interest. The-notes in question were a renewal of former notes, and the last were for principal and legal interest on those immediately preceding them. Plowman had, in 2818, given his sister, the defendant, a judgment and mortgage to secure her from all responsibility on account of her sard endorsements; and she had executed-a full release of all elaims-and demands-whatsoever, to that date; and particularly of all claim or demand on account of this suit, &c.

The plaintiff objected to him as a witness, and the court admitted him to prove the whole case. Though divided into three bills o£ exceptions in- the court below, I shall consider the whole together.

The ease of Walton v. Shelley, was, for the thousandth time, brought up and relied on. It is strange that a case standing alone, supported by no prior and no subsequent decision, should still, once each term, give us employment for a- day, more or less. Lord Mansfield brought the principle from the civil law, and engrafted it on the common law, but it never grew. While the judgcswho decided Walton v. Shelley continued on the bench, it had a kind- of sickly existence. With them the doctrine quod nemo aliegans suam íurpetudinem esi audiendus became extinct, and in the English and in our system, is, I think, in no single instance true. That a person who has made or endorsed a- note, and put it in circulation, until it has got into the hands of an innocent holder, shall not prove that it was void before he endorsed or negotiated it, depends, not on that maxim, but on a distinct principle. See 6 Serg. & Rawle, 115, to-be cited more fully hereafter.

Notes and bills, in modern times, enter so largely into the transactions of men, that it has been considered necessary to adopt par-. [199]*199•ticular rules as to them,—to give them a sanctity not attending, in ■all cases, the transfer of other personal property. Either the ideas of lawyers, and judges too, were vague and confused, or the reporters did not give us really what was said. The interest of commerce never required that counterfeit money should pass current, or that forgery should be protected or encouraged. It did require that he who had passed to an innocent person, for valuable consideration, counterfeit money, or a forged note instead of money, should be ■held liable for so much good money; and he who had passed such money or note, and was proved to have done so was liable; and his endorsing the note being full evidence that he passed it, he was said ■to be liable on his endorsement, which, in truth, was oniy the evidence of his liability, which liability depended on general principles of justice; the same which made him liable in the sale of any other article which was not his own, or which was not what he represented it to be. Hence, very soon it was discovered to be absolutely necessary to admit-as witnesses, men who had once owned a note,' and whose names were on it, to prove facts which rendered it worthless, but which had taken place after such witnesses had parted With it.

The laws forbid gaming, usury, &c.:—the interest of commerce never required the laws of the country to be set at naught, or that criminals should escape punishment; but if a gaming debt or a usurious contract becomes valid when put into the shape of a negotiable note, the law is repealed fey the court; and the judges, except in. Massachusetts, have not said, that a security declared void in every form, shall be good in one particular form, and that the shortest and most easily adopted.

All paper in the form of negotiable notes is not at all times considered negotiable; for example, a note after it is due; and in every country, I believe, the consideration of a note negotiated after it is due, may be inquired into, and those who endorsed before it was ■due, are witnesses in any suit on it, if disinterested. See Cromwell v. Arrott, 1 Serg. & Rawle, 180, and cases there cited.

Fairness and honesty are as essential to mercantile prosperity, and as important in dealings with mercantile paper, as in any other department of life; hence it was long ago, and still is most clearly held, that the person who claims to recover on mercantile paper, must, if there is any objection to it, show that he is a bona fide holder. If he was concerned in giving it a taint, if there is any thing unfair or illegal about it, and he was one of those who made it so, he ought not and will not derive any advantage from its being in a negotiable form.

There was a time when counsel in argument, and perhaps judges, talked about a drawer or endorser being a witness for one purpose, and not for every purpose. This seems to be over.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Rawle 196, 1829 Pa. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffith-v-reford-pa-1829.