Nielson v. Schuckman

11 N.W. 44, 53 Wis. 638, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 296
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 11 N.W. 44 (Nielson v. Schuckman) 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
Nielson v. Schuckman, 11 N.W. 44, 53 Wis. 638, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 296 (Wis. 1881).

Opinion

Orton, J.

To justify the taking complained of, the defendants had answered that they took the property by virtue of a chattel mortgage given by the plaintiffs to the defendant Schuehnan to secure the payment of a note for the sum of $5,500, also given to the said defendant by the plaintiffs; and the defendants had introduced them in evidence. The note bears date December 19,1877, and was payable two years after date; and the mortgage bears date December 22, 1877, and recites the note which it was made to secure. The plaintiffs had introduced in evidence a record in the case of the defendant SchuoJeman, as plaintiff, against the plaintiffs as defendants, of the foreclosure of a land contract, by which it appeared that the plaintiff had given to. the defendants a contract for the conveyance of certain lands to the defendants (which lands had been before conveyed by the defendants to plaintiff), upon the payment of the sum of $5,500 at the expiration of three years from the date of said contract, with interest at ten per cent., payable semi-annually on or before the 19th day of June and December. The land contract bore date the 19th day of December, 1877. The suit was commenced in March, 1879, and seems to have been predicated upon the ground of the nonpayment of interest — a cause of forfeiture in the contract. A decree of foreclosure was entered, and a sale of the lands had been made under it for less than the amount of the debt, and the time of redemption had not expired when the property in this suit was taken by the defendants.' It appeared, inferentially, from the evidence here, that the $5,500 mentioned in the note and mortgage, and the same sum mentioned in the land [640]*640contract, were the same debt; and in the former, it will be observed, it was. payable in two years, and in the latter in three years. Hans Nielson, one of the plaintiffs, as a witness, was asked: (1) “Was there ever any agreement between you and Schuclcman that you were to pay any sum of money except at the end of three years from the time you made the loan of him which was witnessed by the land contract? ” (2) “ Did you ever agree or intend to give him a note and chattel mortgage, or, to your knowledge or belief, did you ever give to Schuclcman a note or chattel mortgage, for $5,500, payable two years from the 19th day of December, 1877 ? ”

These questions were objected to, and the court asked, “ Do you propose to show that he never executed this note and mortgage? ” Mr. Sloan, attorney for the plaintiffs, replied, “Tes; and delivered it understandingly, knowingly and in-tendinglv.” The court asked, “At all?” Mr. Sloan replied, “ He may have signed this, but he was deceived by Schlim-genfthe agent of Schuclcman, making it two years instead of three.” The court then said, “That would be immaterial under the ruling I have already made. May be not, if it is a forgery. What is the objection to that?” (apparently addressing the last question to Col. Yilas, the attorney of the defendants). Col. Yilas replied: “The objection to it is, that there has been no foundation laid for this issue, previous to the trial, by complying with the statute. The statute provides that every written instrument purporting tg be signed or executed by any person shall be proof that it was so signed or executed, until the person by whom it purports to have been so signed o.r executed shall specifically deny the signature or execution of the same by his oath or affidavit, or by his pleading, duly verified,” etc. Mr. Sloan then said: “ I design to show that this chattel mortgage and note, payable two years instead of three — perhaps he signed it and perhaps he did not — but that it was a fraud upon him, and that it never became his paper or his obligation at all.” The court then said: [641]*641“ Ton must deny the execution of such a note as this ” (under the statute). The words “ under the statute ” appear to have been interpolated as the supposed full meaning of what was said by the court, and seem to have been warranted. The witness, having said, “I can read the English language,” was asked, Look upon the note and mortgage, which have been given in evidence, and state whether you can read them or not?” He was then asked: “When were that chattel mortgage and note payable, as he read them to you? ” and “ Did your wife or yourself know anything of the contents of the note and mortgage which you signed, except as they were read to you by Schlimgen?” and “Did yon understand, when you signed it, that it was a note and mortgage payable two years from date?” All of these questions were objected to, and the objection sustained, and exception taken; and there were many other questions, of the same or similar import, which met with the same fate. The signatures to the note and mortgage had not only not been denied under oath by affidavit or in any pleading, but were expressly admitted by the plaintiff as a witness. The facts clearly suggested and prefigured in these questions were,-that, the plaintiffs not being able to write or read writing, the note and mortgage were fraudulently misread to them as maturing three years after date, instead of two years, the time mentioned in them.

The time when a debt becomes payable is certainly as material and essential as any other part of the contract, and such a fraud would seem to as effectually destroy the validity of the note and mortgage as forgery by fraudulently writing over the signatures false or improper matter, or as any other fraud which would make them void ab initio.

In Low v. Merrill; 1 Pin., 340, it was held that the alteration of a note after signing, as to its date, vitiated it, and it was not admissible in evidence for any purpos'e except to defeat it, or to establish usury or to convict of crime; and to the same effect it is held in Schwalm v. McIntyre, 17 Wis., 232.

[642]*642In Walker v. Ebert, 29 Wis., 194, it is held that false and fraudulent representations of the character of the note, the maker being ignorant of its true character, and having no intention to sign such a paper, and being guilty of no negligence, make the note void even in the hands of the holder for value, before maturity and without notice. And in Rounsavell v. Pease, 45 Wis., 506, it is held that the insertion of material provisions in a contract which was signed when it contained a mere skeleton of a contract, with blanks unfilled, entirely different from the real contract between the parties, makes the written contract void; and it is said in the opinion in that case: “ Had the defendants signed the instrument in its present form, and had such signatures been procured by false representations of the plaintiff’s agent as to the contents of the paper (they being ignorant of its contents), under repeated decisions of this court the instrument would be void.” It would therefore seem that the facts that might have been established in responsive answer to the above questions — and, in determining the propriety and materiality of the questions themselves, it must be assumed that they were established — would have destroyed the validity of the note and mortgage as a defense to the action.

There was no objection to these questions on the ground that the facts suggested by them had not been stated in a replication to the answers; but it may be proper to say that such an objection would have been untenable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 N.W. 44, 53 Wis. 638, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nielson-v-schuckman-wis-1881.