Matteson v. Ellsworth

33 Wis. 488
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 33 Wis. 488 (Matteson v. Ellsworth) 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.

Bluebook
Matteson v. Ellsworth, 33 Wis. 488 (Wis. 1873).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed at the June term, 1872.

Oole, J.

The counsel for the defendant insists that the circuit court erred in allowing three new and distinct causes of action to be inserted in the complaint as an amendment of- the same, on the trial. But this amendment amounted to nothing more than stating the original consideration of the note sued on. It was what would have been termed, under the former system of pleading, adding the common counts to the special count. It was doubtless competent for the court to allow the amendment, and it could not possibly have prejudiced the defendant in any way.

Nor do we think there was any error in refusing the defendant’s motion to compel the plaintiff to elect whether she would proceed upon the claim for money loaned and interest, or upon the note. This was a matter resting in the discretion of the court. Both claims were for the same money, and there was no inconsistency in the plaintiff seeking to recover on the original indebtedness, if she should fail to prove that] the note was altered with defendant’s consent.

A number of instructions were asked on the part of the defendant, which, we think, were properly refused. A few general remarks will express all that we deem it necessary to say in reference to these instructions, and exceptions taken to certain portions of the charge of the court.

In the first place, it will be borne in mind that the note was offered in evidence on. the trial, and of course was cancelled by the judgment. Again, it is to be observed that the court in effect charged the jury that if they found that the note was [494]*494altered by the plaintiff after it was made, without the consent of the defendant, then there could be no recovery upon the note. The instructions of the defendant assumed that there could be no recovery in the case unless upon the note. Why not ? The giving of that note did not extinguish the debt due the plaintiff from the defendant. This proposition is too obviously correct to need illustration or comment. And therefore, assuming that there could be no recovery upon the note on account, of its unauthorized alteration by the plaintiff, still what rule of law prevents a recovery on the other causes of action stated in the complaint? These were the counts for money loaned and interest. We are unable to perceive any objection to a recovery upon those causes of action, providing they were sustained by the evidence. The defendant himself testified on the trial that he had received two hundred dollars, which was loaned him by the plaintiff. He does not pretend that this money has ever been paid. And the instructions assume that there could be no recovery for this amount admitted to be due the plaintiff. It is said, if the note was altered from $200 to $300, without the consent or ratification by the defendant, that then there could be no recovery on, the original consideration. It seems to us that this is an erroneous view of the matter. If the note was altered without the consent of the defendant, it is conceded that there could be no recovery upon it. But the original indebtedness still remains. That has not been satisfied and discharged. The position of the defendant is simply this: he admits that he had $200 of the plaintiff’s money,, which he has never paid ; and that he gave a promissory note for the amount; but he alleges that this has been altered without his consent, and that therefore there can be no recovery for the money conceded to be due the plaintiff. This would be a strange condition of the law, if such a defense were good and sanctioned by it. And this is the manifest error in the instructions asked on the part of the defendant — that there could be no recovery on the other causes of action [495]*495stated in the complaint, if the note had been altered so that there could be no recovery upon it. Since the plaintiff produced the note, and in effect cancelled it on the trial, we know of no principle which would prevent her from recovering upon the original consideration for which the note was given. So, whether the jury found that the note was altered with the assent of the defendant, and based their verdict upon it, or based such verdict upon the other causes of action, seems to us quite an immaterial inquiry. There was probably some compromise about the verdict; but there is evidence to sustain it.

By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

A rehearing was allowed upon appellant’s motion, and the cause was reargued.

Moses Hooper, for appellant, contended that all the authorities cited on the other side were either eases where the note was originally void, and so to be treated as though there never had been any note, or cases where there was a subsisting right of action antecedent to the transaction out of which the note grew; that in this case there never was any contract, as to the $200, except the note, the evidence on both sides showing clearly that the transaction was a loan of money upon the note ; that in such cases there is no room for an implied promise (2 Parsons on Con., 392 ; Eastman v. Porter, 14 Wis., 39 ; Meshke v. Van Doren, 16 id., 319, 330); and that an alteration of the note in such a case, without the knowledge or consent of the maker, so as to avoid it, will prevent a recovery altogether. Martendale v. Follett, 1 N. H., 95; Wheelock v. Freeman, 13 Pick., 167-8 ; Byles on Bills, *257, note 1; Smith v. Mace, 44 N. H., 558; Bigelow v. Stilphen, 35 Vt., 521; White v. Hass, 32 Ala., 430; Newell v. Mayberry, 3 Leigh, 250; Mills v. Starr, 2 Bailey, 359 ; Wood v. Steele, 6 Wal., 82; Whitmer v. Frye, 10 Mo., 348, 350. He also contended that Alderson v. Langdale, 3 Barn. & Adolph., 660, Blade v. Noland, 12 Wend., 173, and [496]*496Waring v. Smyth, 2 Barb. Ch., 119, cited for the respondent on the former argument, are really authorities against him; and that the other authorities cited by respondent’s counsel do not reach the point. (2) As to the amendments allowed at the trial, he contended that the second and third counts (and especially the third, for $30 loaned) stated entirely new causes of action ; that defendant’s testimony denied the existence of any such causes of action, but he could not produce any other proofs, because he had no notice that he would be called upon to try such issues. (3) To the point that plaintiff should have been required to elect whether she would proceed upon the common counts or upon the note, after it clearly appeared from her own testimony that they were based upon the same consideration, he cited Muzzy v. Ledlie, 23 Wis., 446.

Gillet & Taylor, contra, contended that the alteration of the note, even if made fraudulently, did not destroy the respondent’s right of action for the money actually loaned. Where the terms of a contract are reduced to writing, and that fact is made to appear upon the trial of an action to recover upon or by reason of the contract, there the writing must be produced in evidence, and no other evidence of the contract can be received, unless it be made to appear that the writing is lost or destroyed without fault of the party offering the other evidence, or that it is iu the possession of the opposite party, who, upon proper notice, refuses to produce it.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Wis. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matteson-v-ellsworth-wis-1873.