Suske v. Straka

39 N.W.2d 745, 229 Minn. 408, 1949 Minn. LEXIS 624
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 18, 1949
DocketNo. 34,966.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 39 N.W.2d 745 (Suske v. Straka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Suske v. Straka, 39 N.W.2d 745, 229 Minn. 408, 1949 Minn. LEXIS 624 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

*409 Peterson, Justice.

This is an action to recover upon a promissory note in which the trial court directed a verdict for defendant upon the case made by plaintiff.

The appeal presents for decision the following questions:

(1) Whether the statutory presumption that a promissory note was issued for a valuable consideration persists after it has been shown by undisputed and uncontradicted evidence that the note was a “present” from the maker to the payee;

(2) Whether, where the evidence adduced by plaintiff conclusively shows that the defendant, maker of a promissory note, gave it to the plaintiff-payee as a gift, the court may decide the case upon such evidence without regard to the statutory presumption of consideration for the note;

(3) Whether something which otherwise might be a valuable consideration for a promissory note, but which the parties have not agreed should be such, is a consideration for the note; and

(4) Whether the maker’s declarations at the time he gave the note to the payee and the latter accepted it that the note was a “present” may be rejected upon the ground that the maker was impeached as to moral character and veracity.

Defendant was the maker and plaintiff the payee of the note, which was for $5,000, dated August 18, 1937, recited “value received,” and payable five years after date with interest at six percent. The answer alleged among other defenses those of want of consideration, nondelivery, and fraud by plaintiff in the procurement thereof from defendant. At the trial, defendant testified under cross-examination under the statute that he signed the note and that he had shown it to plaintiff, but had not delivered it to her. Plaintiff’s counsel interrogated defendant as to whether he “gave” the note to her and whether he did “give” it to her. In answer to a question whether he had not testified upon another trial that he “gave” the note to her, defendant answered that he did not remember. His testimony at the former trial was not introduced in- *410 evidence, and consequently the record does not show what it was. Plaintiff and her sister testified that defendant gave the note to plaintiff as a “present.” Their testimony was to the effect that on August 18, 1937, they and defendant were together on a street in St. Cloud; that he went to an office; and that, when he returned, he gave the note to plaintiff as a “present.” Plaintiff testified that defendant said that it was a “gift” — that his words were that “it is a present for you [plaintiff].”

Plaintiff’s testimony covered in detail the relations existing between her and defendant for several years. She was a widow. Defendant proposed marriage to her, but she declined because he then had a wife in Germany. After he obtained a divorce and before the note-in question was given, the parties became engaged to marry, but did not do so. Plaintiff lived in Minneapolis and defendant in St. Cloud. He rented a room from her in her house for about five or six years at an agreed monthly rental of $15, which he did not pay. He kept some clothes and other personal property therein and occupied it during his Easter and Christmas vacations, some week ends, and on other occasions. In addition, defendant several times borrowed money from plaintiff which he did not repay. While he neither paid the room rent nor the loans, he gave her numerous gifts, consisting of a diamond engagement ring, a fur coat, a bicycle for her daughter, groceries, meats, and a stove.. An optician whom they consulted assumed, with their acquiescence, that they were husband and wife. In 1933, defendant gave plaintiff a promissory note for $7,500 without consideration, for the purpose, as they intended, of protecting her in case he died before they got married. Later, plaintiff was unsuccessful in an action to recover on this note.

A few weeks after defendant gave plaintiff the $5,000 note dated August 18, 1937, she sewed the note on the inside of one of defendant’s vest pockets for the purpose of enabling him, in case she died, to repossess the note by merely taking his vest. A short time after she sewed the note in defendant’s vest pocket she removed the note therefrom and put it in her safe-deposit box in a St. Cloud bank. *411 During the existence of their relationship defendant requested plaintiff to have sexual relations with him, which she refused. He refused to marry her, although several times she requested him to keep his promise to do so. Finally, the relationship between the parties ceased, and plaintiff brought this action on the note.

Plaintiff in her testimony specifically disclaimed that the money loaned by her to defendant was a consideration for the note, but there was no inquiry, and hence no testimony, as to whether the preexisting promise of marriage, defendant’s liability to plaintiff for room rent, or the inconvenience he had caused her were a consideration for it.

At the conclusion of the testimony on behalf of plaintiff both parties rested, and defendant then made a motion for a directed verdict upon the ground that it appeared as a matter of law that the note was given without consideration. The motion was granted upon the ground that the note was a “present” to plaintiff from defendant and, as such, was without consideration and unenforceable.

On the appeal, plaintiff contends that the trial court erred for the reasons: (1) That, as the case then stood, the statutory presumption of consideration for the note would have prevailed and thus have compelled decision in her favor, if the jury had rejected the only evidence to overcome the presumption — defendant’s declarations that the note was a “present” — which plaintiff urges that the jury had a right to do, for the reasons that defendant, the declarant, had been impeached both as to moral character and veracity by the evidence that he wanted to have illicit sexual intercourse with plaintiff and that he was either untruthful or evasive as to his testimony upon the trial of the prior action; and (2) that, aside from any presumption, an actual consideration for the note was shown by the testimony to the effect that there was (a) a preexisting promise of marriage, (b) an indebtedness to plaintiff for room rent and money loaned to him by her, and (c) inconvenience which he had caused her. Defendant contends that the evidence conclusively shows a gift, and that, because that is true, the note was as a matter of law without consideration, not only in *412 the respect plaintiff expressly disclaimed one, hut in all respects.

The submission here has proceeded upon the assumptions, which correspondingly limit the scope of our decision, that as between the parties to a promissory note want of consideration is a defense (M. S. A. 335.134 [N. I. L. § 28 2 ]; Cemstone Products Co. v. Gersbach, 187 Minn. 416, 245 N. W. 624); that a promissory note “is deemed prima facie to have been issued” for a valuable consideration and the maker to have become a party thereto for value (§ 335.13 [N. I. L. § 24]; Long v. Conn, 147 Minn. 77, 179 N. W. 644); that an antecedent or preexisting “debt” constitutes a valuable consideration for a promissory note (§ 335.131 [N. I. L. § 25]; DeWolf v. Johnson, 177 Minn. 612, 225 N. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.W.2d 745, 229 Minn. 408, 1949 Minn. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suske-v-straka-minn-1949.