Murphy v. Estate of Skinner

152 N.W. 172, 160 Wis. 554, 1915 Wisc. LEXIS 138
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 152 N.W. 172 (Murphy v. Estate of Skinner) 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
Murphy v. Estate of Skinner, 152 N.W. 172, 160 Wis. 554, 1915 Wisc. LEXIS 138 (Wis. 1915).

Opinions

BaeNes, J.

1. The note in suit fell due May 24, 1906, and was protested for nonpayment on that day. Mr. TInghes, the notary who protested the note, testified that he had no recollection of Mr. Skinner’s calling on him in reference thereto. The plaintiff promptly placed the note in the hands of his attorney, Mr. Kaumheimer, for collection, and Kaum-heimer wrote Skinner demanding payment on May 28th. No written reply was received, but Kaumheimer was requested by telephone to call on Skinner in reference to the matter. He did so and was advised by Skinner that he would not pay the note. Kaumheimer did not pretend to remember the conversation, but testified that his impression was that Skinner said there was some question about the signature. No suit was brought on the note by Kaumheimer. In 1907 the note was placed in the hands of Attorney Donovan for collection and remained with him for over a year and no suit was brought by him. Later, one Pestalozzi presented the note to Skinner for payment, which was refused. In May, 1910, the note was placed in the hands of Attorney Trottman for collection, who demanded payment, which demand was refused. In 1911 appellant placed the note in the hands of Attorney Blatchley with instructions to sue, but no suit was brought and the note was returned to the plaintiff. Nothing further was done until after Mr. Skinner’s death, which occurred a few weeks before the statute of limitations would have run on the note. It was then filed as a claim against Skinner’s estate by Attorney Wegner.

. The appellant argues that it was the duty of Skinner to promptly advise the bank which held the note for collection [559]*559at maturity that his signature thereon was forged, and that it was also his duty to unequivocally so advise Kaumheimer and the other parties who presented the note for payment. Appellant also argues that the conduct of the deceased furnished evidence of ratification of the signature if it was forged, and of estoppel to deny the genuineness of the signature, and also of waiver of the defense of forgery, and that it was error not to submit appropriate questions to the jury covering those issues. The plaintiff requested the court to submit a question covering the matter of ratification.

It appears without dispute that Mr. Skinner promptly declined to pay the note when first requested so to do, and that he persistently and consistently declined to do so thereafter until the time of his death. It is difficult to see wherein the acts referred to constituted evidence of ratification of the signature, or wherein Skinner waived any right to set up the defense of forgery or how he estopped himself from so doing. A party who refuses to pay a note that is presented to him does not thereby waive or lose any legitimate defense he may have to an action brought on the instrument. It would be just as reasonable to claim here that the defense of payment or of no consideration was lost to Skinner as it'is to claim that the defense of fotfgery was lost. Skinner neither said nor did anything to lead the plaintiff to believe that he did not intend to rely on any legitimate defense he might have. The case is not one where the plaintiff was misled to his disadvantage into believing that some defense other than that finally interposed was relied on. It is apparent that the plaintiff was not in fact misled. Skinner was understood to be a man of means, amply responsible for the amount of the note. Plaintiff knew that the note had not been paid, and, if it represented a good-faith transaction, forgery was about the only defense left. Kaumheimer understood that the refusal to pay arose over the signature, and presumably so informed his client. That plaintiff understood where the trouble lay, is quite evident from the fact that when the note was given to [560]*560Trottman for collection there was turned over with it. photographic copies of the genuine signature of J. W. Skinner.

2. Pursuant to notice served on her, the executrix produced a note for $500 dated in October, 1905, and another for a like amount dated in February, 1906. Both of these notes were signed by Lloyd Skinner and indorsed by J. W. Skinner. Admittedly the signature “J. W. Skinner” on these notes was genuine. She also produced two small notes executed by Lloyd Skinner in 1902, aggregating $90, which bore the name “ J. W. Skinner” on the back. It is conceded that if the name of J. W. Skinner was a forgery on the note in suit it was also forged on these notes, and that the same party wrote all three signatures. J. W. Skinner waived protest on these two notes, and from the fact that they were found among his effects it is fair to presume that he paid them. Four other notes signed by Lloyd Skinner and containing the name of J. W. Skinner on the back were also produced, one dated March 5, 1902, for $700; one dated January 23, 1906, for $1,000; one dated March 14, 1906, for $1,000; and one dated April 25, 1906, for $1,528. It is conceded that the same party who wrote the name'1 “ J. W. Skinner” on the note in suit also wrote the name on these notes, and that if any of these signatures were forgeries all of them were. The indorsement on at least three of the four last mentioned notes was passed as genuine by the cashier of the First National Bank, where Mr. J. W. Skinner kept an individual account, and where the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, of which Mr. Skinner was secretary, also kept a large account; so that the bank officials had every reason to be familiar with his signature.

The court refused to receive these several notes in evidence, and it is insisted that this ruling was erroneous for the following reasons:

(a) The proof was competent to show that J. W. Skinner adopted as his own the signature in question and ratified its use.

[561]*561(b) By bis conduct in paying tbe forged notes’ if they were forged, he estopped himself from asserting that the signature was not his, and waived any right he might have to question its genuineness.

(c) In any event the proof was competent as tending to show that the signature was in fact genuine.

On the first two of the above propositions it is claimed that if adoption, ratification,, estoppel, or waiver was not established as a matter of law, the notes, in connection with the evidence offered in relation thereto, constituted proof from which the jury might find the fact in plaintiff’s favor on one or more of these issues.

These contentions raise rather novel questions. Lloyd Skinner and J. W. Skinner were half-brothers. J. W. Skinner held an important office in one of the large life insurance companies of the country. If his half-brother had forged his name, he was no doubt anxious to conceal that fact and to shield his relative from the penitentiary. Whether his conduct was reprehensible or not, it was not very unusual. If he violated the law, he followed the custom of human nature, generally speaking at least. If the plaintiff had been misled or deceived, or parted with his money on the strength of this conduct, a very different question would be before us. But he knew nothing of the existence of these notes until the trial of this case, more than six years after he parted with his money.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 N.W. 172, 160 Wis. 554, 1915 Wisc. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-estate-of-skinner-wis-1915.