Jackson v. City National Bank

9 L.R.A. 657, 25 N.E. 430, 125 Ind. 347, 1890 Ind. LEXIS 446
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1890
DocketNo. 14,476
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 9 L.R.A. 657 (Jackson v. City National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. City National Bank, 9 L.R.A. 657, 25 N.E. 430, 125 Ind. 347, 1890 Ind. LEXIS 446 (Ind. 1890).

Opinion

Olds, J.

— The appellee sued the appellants upon a promissory note, dated May 6th, 1887, due on June 23d, 1887, for fifteen hundred dollars, with eight per cent, interest, and payable at the City National Bank of Goshen, Indiana.

The appellant Amos C. Jackson filed a separate answer in one paragraph, in substance, as follows: He admitted the execution of the note to'the City National Bank, as alleged in the complaint, but averred that on November 7th, 1887, he borrowed the money represented by said note of and from the said plaintiff, and executed his note therefor, with his co-defendant as surety, due in ninety days from said date. Hitherto, until the date of the execution of the note mentioned in the complaint, every ninety days, at the request of the plaintiff, he executed a new note, his co-defendant signing as surety with him for said debt in renewal of said original note, and took up the note next theretofore executed, and he avers that the indebtedness represented by the note mentioned in the complaint is the identical indebted[348]*348ness which he incurred to said plaintiff at the date first above mentioned, and no other, and the note mentioned in the complaint is a renewal of said original loan; that the consideration of said original note and the one mentioned in the complaint, was for money loaned by the plaintiff to the defendant, for the purpose, at the time of such loan, of being wagered by the defendant in purchasing options in wheat and other grain, pork and lard, and articles of produce, and in making contracts upon margins and gaming and wagering upon the future .price of wheat, grain and produce, and making good and paying any losses that might and did occur to defendant in certain wagering, gambling, immoral and illegal contracts entered into by the defendant personally and by and for his agents for the purchase of certain margins on wheat and other grain, pork, lard and produce, and options in the same, with the understanding, agreement and intention by the defendant, and the parties with whom such illegal, immoral, gambling and wagering contracts were made that the said wheat and other grain, pork, lard and produce so illegally and immorally contracted for and purchased, were not to be delivered to or received by the defendant, but'with the agreement and understanding between said defendant and said contracting parties that at a future day there was to be a settlement between them, when the defendant was to receive from said other contracting parties, or pay to said other contracting parties, the difference between the contract price and the market price of said wheat and other grain, pork and lard, in the city of Chicago, Illinois, on the day of the settlement; that the sole and only consideration of said original note was money loaned by the plaintiff to defendant at the time of the making of such wagering and illegal contracts by the defendant, and the sole and only consideration of the note sued upon and mentioned in the complaint is the renewal of said original note as aforesaid given as evidence of said money loaned, and that when said money was so loaned, the plaintiff loaned it to the [349]*349defendant for the purpose of being invested by defendant as aforesaid in gambling and wagering contracts so made by defendant as aforesaid, and which purpose, object and intention were then and there fully known by the plaintiff, and plaintiff was fully informed and told at the time said loan was so made by the defendant, that he wanted said money to invest in the city of Chicago in the .making of illegal wagering and gambling contracts.

It is further averred that all of the money so loaned was invested by the defendant in such illegal wagering and gambling contracts, and such use of it was agreed to by the plaintiff, and the plaintiff knew that said money was so used, and knew at the time it was so loaned that it was intended to be so used. And it is further averred that the money was all lost to the defendant, and he received nothing of value for the same, or any part thereof.

It is further averred that his co-defendant, Ira Jackson, is only surety on the note sued upon, and was only surety on the original note and notes given in renewal thereof, and received no part of the money or any consideration.

The appellant Ira Jackson filed a separate answer in one paragraph, alleging suretyship and that the note was executed without consideration.

The appellee filed- a separate demurrer to each of these paragraphs of answer, which was overruled and the appellee excepted and assigns such rulings as cross-errors.

The appellee then filed a reply in four paragraphs. The first paragraph is a general denial and addressed to the answer of each of the appellants. The second and third paragraphs are addressed to the separate answer of Amos G. Jackson, and the fourth paragraph is addressed to the separate answer of Ira Jackson.

The appellants severally demurred to the second, third and fourth paragraphs of the reply, which demurrer was overruled and exceptions reserved by the appellants.

It is proper to consider first the cross-errors assigned, [350]*350since if the answers are bad it is unnecessary to consider the ruling upon the demurrer to the reply. The force of the allegations in the separate answer of Amos C. Jackson is, that he borrowed the money of the appellee for the purpose of investing it in wagering and gambling contracts in the city of Chicago, Illinois, and that appellee was informed that he was borrowing the money for and intended to use it for that purpose, and that it loaned him the money to be used for the purpose of investing in such gambling contracts in the city of Chicago, Illinois. It is not alleged and does not appear that appellee had any interest in such wagering or gaming contracts, or that it took any part in the mab- , ing of such illegal contracts, or that it in any way took part in furthering the deals to be made by the appellant Amos C. Jackson, except to loan him the money with the knowledge that he intended to use it in making illegal contracts generally with persons at the city of Chicago, Illinois. It presents the question as to whether or not a bank can recover upon a note taken for money loaned to a person having knowledge at the time of loaning the money that the bori’ower intended at the time to use the money in the purchase of options on grain and produce in another State, or investing in other like gaming contracts.

In speaking of transactions of this character, this court, in the case of Sondheim v. Gilbert, 117 Ind. 71, says : “But in the absence of a statute in direct terms prohibiting transactions of the character of that in question, and declaring them unlawful, or expressly declaring promissory notes growing out of such a transaction invalid, while the courts will on general common law principles declare such notes invalid between the parties and those who were accessory to the illegal act, yet in order to invalidate a note or other security in the hands of one who advanced money, which the borrower intended to and did employ in carrying on an illegal enterprise, it has been held that it was not enough to defeat a recovery that the lender knew the borrower’s purpose. [351]*351He must have been in some way implicated as a confederate in the specific illegal design under contemplation.

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Bluebook (online)
9 L.R.A. 657, 25 N.E. 430, 125 Ind. 347, 1890 Ind. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-city-national-bank-ind-1890.