Payson v. Cohen

183 A.2d 510, 158 Me. 297, 1962 Me. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 9, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 183 A.2d 510 (Payson v. Cohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Payson v. Cohen, 183 A.2d 510, 158 Me. 297, 1962 Me. LEXIS 35 (Me. 1962).

Opinion

Williamson, C. J.

On appeal. In this jury-waived action the plaintiff-payee recovered against the defendant- *298 maker the principal amount with interest of the following promissory note:

“$5500.00 May 1, 1955

On Demand I promise to pay to the order of L. Norton Payson Fifty Five Hundred and no/100 Dollars at 4 y% percent Interest per Annum

Value received

No__Due On Demand

s/ Herman Cohen_

Herman Cohen Kennebunk, Maine”

The court found that the note was executed and delivered on Sunday, May 1, 1955, and that the consideration therefor consisted of antecedent debts evidenced by four checks totalling $5000 and a contemplated advance of $500.

The defendant contended that he signed the note, in blank, on July 25, 1955, at the request of the plaintiff for use in negotiating a loan for a corporation in which the parties were interested and that there was no personal obligation on his part to the plaintiff. He also sought to establish that his only indebtedness to the plaintiff consisted of a note for $3500, and that any other advances from the plaintiff were for corporate purposes for which the plaintiff was reimbursed by the issuance of stock.

In this run-of-the-mill situation of conflicting evidence the defendant properly does not attempt to overturn the decision on the ground that the findings were “clearly erroneous.” Maine Rules Civil Procedure, Rule 52 (a) ; Harriman v. Spaulding, 156 Me. 440, 165 A. (2nd) 47; Landau Stores, Inc. v. Daigle, et al., 157 Me. 253, 170 A. (2nd) 673; Field & McKusick, Maine Civil Practice, § 52.7.

The first three points of appeal deal with the issues raised by a Sunday note. The following statutes are pertinent:

“Defendant must restore consideration; actions for injury received on Lord’s Day. — No person *299 who receives a valuable consideration for a contract, express or implied, made on the Lord’s Day shall defend any action upon such contract on the ground that it was so made until he restores such consideration; nor shall the provisions of chapter 134 relating to the observance of the Lord’s Day affect in any way the rights or remedy of either party in any action for a tort or injury suffered on that day.” R. S., c. 113, § 154.
“Consideration, what constitutes. — Value is any consideration sufficient to support a simple contract. An antecedent or pre-existing debt constitutes value; and is deemed such whether the instrument is payable on demand or at a future time.” R. S., c. 188, § 25. (Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law.)

See Jordan v. Goodside, 123 Me. 330,122 A. 859; First Nat’l Bank v. Morong, et al., 146 Me. 430, 82 A. (2nd) 98.

The note is not void, as urged by the defendant in his first point, on the ground that it was executed and delivered on Sunday. The consideration for the note consisted of the antecedent debts of $5000 and the contemplated advance of $500. Such a debt is “value” although the note is received on implied terms of conditional satisfaction. Ahern v. Towle, 310 Mass. 695, 39 N. E. (2nd) 561.

The antecedent debts cannot be restored by the simple expedient of the maker asserting the illegality of the note. There was no stoppage of payment on the note as in DiAusilio v. Stavroplus, et al., 252 Mass. 69, 147 N. E. 346, cited by defendant. There the Massachusetts Court held that the plaintiff could properly sue on the contract when the defendant had caused payment to be stopped on a check given to settle charges for automobile repairs made on a weekday. The case is not analogous with the situation before us.

*300 The contemplated advance of $500 was in fact made by check on May 10, 1955. There is no suggestion that the defendant has returned this portion of the consideration.

The governing rule was plainly stated in Wheelden v. Lyford, 84 Me. 114, 116, 24 A. 793, under a statute unchanged to this date, except for actions for torts and injuries.

“The defendant cannot now defend this action of assumpsit on the ground of the contract having been made on Sunday until he restore that consideration. That he cannot restore it — that in the nature of things it is not restorable, does not relieve him. He need not have made the contract. Having made the contract and received the consideration he must either restore the consideration or abide the contract. If he cannot do the former he must do the latter. The statute is explicit and imperative.”

See also Bank v. Kingsley, 84 Me. 111, 24 A. 794; Wentivorth v. Woodside, 79 Me. 156, 8 A. 763; Berry v. Clary, 77 Me. 482, 1 A. 360; Bridges v. Bridges, 93 Me. 557, 45 A. 827.

If the Sunday note issue had been properly raised by the defendant and had been considered by the court, the result would not have been changed. The consideration was not returned and hence the defense would have failed.

In his second and third points the defendant contends the court erred in failing to consider the issue of the Sunday note and in finding that neither the pleadings nor the pretrial order raised the issue. In his answer the defendant stated, as an alternative ground of defense, “that even if he had executed the note in manner and form as the plaintiff has declared, that there was no consideration paid by the plaintiff to the defendant therefor and the note being dated on a Sunday is therefor void.”

*301 The pre-trial order does not specifically mention a Sunday note issue. The court, in his findings, says, “In the trial of the cause, comment was made upon the note being dated on a Sunday and the significance of that fact was urged in discussing the case. It must be pointed out that neither the pleading raises nor the pre-trial order determines that this fact is being raised as a defense.”

On request for special findings, the court later found:

“That counsel for defendant in his opening statement urged as one element of his defense that the reference note was executed and delivered on Sunday without consideration then and there paid and that for that reason
x) it was void and no recovery could be had by plaintiff and
y) that defendant had no consideration to restore as a condition precedent to raising the illegality of the note in defense.
and “That plaintiff’s counsel interposed no objection to Defendant’s statement in opening or to the admission of evidence bearing thereon, except as appears in the record of the case.”

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Bluebook (online)
183 A.2d 510, 158 Me. 297, 1962 Me. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payson-v-cohen-me-1962.