Kain v. Bare

31 N.E. 205, 4 Ind. App. 440, 1892 Ind. App. LEXIS 137
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 28, 1892
DocketNo. 499
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 31 N.E. 205 (Kain v. Bare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kain v. Bare, 31 N.E. 205, 4 Ind. App. 440, 1892 Ind. App. LEXIS 137 (Ind. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Reinhard, J.

Action by the appellant against the appellees on the following promissory note :

“February 5,1887. On or before Oct. 1,1887, after date, we promise to-pay to the order of John W. Kain, at Citizens’ Bank of Huntington, Indiana, two hundred and four and -jS-gSg- dollars, value received, without any relief from valuation or appraisement laws, with interest at eight per cent. [441]*441per annum until paid, and attorney’s fees. The drawers and endorsees severally waive presentment for payment, protest, and notice of protest and non-payment of this note. “$204.10. Henry Bare,
“Lydia Bare.”

It was averred in the complaint that the payee of the note endorsed the same to the plaintiff before maturity and for a valuable consideration.

To the complaint the appellees filed an answer in one paragraph. The answer pleads the illegality of the consideration for which the note was given. It avers that the only consideration for said note was that the payee of the original note, of which the one in suit is a renewal, was to deliver, and that the defendants were to receive of the said payee, twenty bushels of oats, estimated by said payee at $10 per bushel, but in truth and in fact only of the value of twenty cents per bushel, which fact said payee well knew; that said payee also gave the defendants a bond agreeing to buy twenty bushels of oats raised from the oats sold the defendants, for which said payee was to pay the price of $10 per bushel, and was to redeem said bond by paying the amount therein in good solvent notes, but that he never bought any oats of these defendants or either of them; that said transaction was in fact a gaming transaction and an unlawful speculation in the value of grain, putting thereon false and fictitious values; that the plaintiff, well knowing the character of said note and all the fraudulent and illegal transactions out of which it grew and upon which it rested, took the same with full notice of its illegal consideration.

A demurrer was overruled to this answer, and for this ruling we are asked to reverse the judgment. We think the answer is sufficient under the authority of Schmueckle v. Waters, 125 Ind. 265. In that case the evidence showed that the note was given in a transaction between the maker and a certain incorporated company in the State of Ohio, the agents of which pretended to sell the appellees ten bushels of [442]*442Bohemian oats at $10 per bushel, the company executing its bond in return, by which it obligated itself to sell twenty bushels of the oats for the makers of .the note at $10 a bushel, less a certain commission, the oats to be sold before the maturity of the note. The bond provided that the transaction covered by the same was of a speculative character, and was not based upon the real value of the grain. It was held by the court, Mitchell, J., delivering the opinion, that the contract, as between the parties to it, was void as against public policy. In the course of the opinion the learned judge says:

“ Taking the transaction in its full measure and scope, it was simply this : Ten bushels of oats, of the actual value of thirty or forty cents a bushel, were delivered by one party to the other, upon an agreement that the party receiving the oats should execute his note for $100, the party furnishing the oats agreeing, in turn, to sell twenty bushels of oats, to be delivered by the maker of the note, at the price of $10 per bushel, both parties, presumably, having full knowledge of the actual value of the oats. One who voluntarily, with his eyes open, and without being overreached or defrauded, engages in a transaction such as that, simply becomes a party to a gambling contract, which the law will not enforce between the parties, or those having notice of the nature of the contract.”

The fact that the answer concedes the oats to have been of some value is used as an argument by appellant’s counsel in favor of the position that the consideration not being wholly illegal, the answer is but a partial response to the complaint when it attempts to meet all, and is therefore bad. If the answer sought to avoid the contract on account of fraud, the appellant’s position would be sound, as this court has decided. Regensburg v. Notestine, 2 Ind. App. 97. But where the entire contract is illegal and void, from public policy, the courts will not lend themselves to the enforcement of any part of it. Schmueckle v. Waters, supra.

[443]*443The appellant further insists that the answer fails to show knowledge on the part of the payee of the note, the present appellant and plaintiff below. We think the answer abundantly discloses such knowledge, although the burden of alleging and proving a want thereof, and that the note was purchased by him in good faith, rests upon the appellant. Tescher v. Merea, 118 Ind. 586 : Giberson v. Jolley, 120 Ind. 301; Citizens’ Bank v. Leonhart, 126 Ind. 206 ; Schmueckle v. Waters, supra.

This rule obtains, as the foregoing cases show, notwithstanding the note is governed by the law merchant.

We think the demurrer to the answer was properly overruled.

Error is claimed, also, in the overruling by the court of the appellant’s motion for a judgment on the special verdict in his favor, and in rendering judgment thereon in favor of the appellees.

This motion and the ruling thereon involve an examination of the special verdict.

The substance of the special verdict is that on the 5th day of February, 1887, the defendants executed to one John W. Kain the note set out in the complaint, agreeing to pay said Kain $204.10 on October 1st, 1887, with interest at eight per cent, and attorney’s fees, said note being made in renewal of a note of prior date for $200, drawn by said parties, payable to one William P. Miller, and which note had been assigned to said John W. Kain, the payee of the note in suit; that the original note of $200 was made by the defendants upon the agreement with one Alexander Kain acting for and in behalf of said Miller to deliver to the defendant Henry Bare twenty bushels of oats at the speculative price of $10 per bushel and the execution and delivery to him of a bond by which the obligors of such bond promised and agreed to take from said Henry Bare twenty bushels of oats to be produced by him from the oats delivered to him at the like speculative price of $10 per bushel, which price [444]*444it was fully understood and agreed was greatly in excess of the real value of such oats, which was known by both parties to be not over thirty cents per bushel; that the payee of said note failed and neglected to buy the oats raised by said Bare or to fulfil the condition of said bond, and that after-wards said Miller assigned said first note to said John W. Kain who at the time and always had full knowledge of the transaction by which the note was obtained, and that the defendant Bare had received no consideration therefor, except the twenty bushels of oats aforesaid of the value of $6, and that said Kain procured the defendants on February 5, 1887, to execute to him the note in suit and who paid at the time $6 on the original note, and no consideration was received by them for the execution of the new note whatever that afterwards, in August, 1887, said John W.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.E. 205, 4 Ind. App. 440, 1892 Ind. App. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kain-v-bare-indctapp-1892.