36 Mich. 27 | Mich. | 1877
Goldsmith sued Bottomley on a promissory note dated March 17, 1875, payable sixty days after date to the order of O. B. Cook & Co., and endorsed to him. The defendant gave evidence which showed that the consideration of the note was a sale of liquors in violation of the prohibitory-liquor law. This, under the decision in Paton v. Coit, 5 Mich., 505, threw upon the plaintiff the burden of showing that he bought the note in good faith and before it fell due. Evidence to this effect was given by him. The plaintiff was also allowed to testify that he had received a letter from defendant, which he had searched for and could not find, in which defendant promised him to pay the note as soon as he could dispose of lumber. This evidence was objected to on the ground that the loss of the letter was not sufficiently shown.
Begarding the loss of the letter the plaintiff was not cross-examined, and we cannot say he did not make out a
The defendant gave evidence that O. B. Cook & Co.. had a liquor store in Detroit; that Goldsmith resided in that city and knew what their business was, and did not. know of their having any further business. On this evidence the judge was asked to charge the jury, that the-plaintiff was put upon inquiry regarding the consideration of the note, and failing to make inquiry, he must be held as having knowledge of such facts as by inquiry he might have learned. This instruction the judge refused. A question was also put to the jury as follows: “Did not Goldsmith, knowing the nature of Cook & Co.’s business, purposely avoid making any inquiries as to the consideration of the note?” This question was not answered.
We think the judge was justified in refusing the instruction prayed. Where parties put their negotiable paper in circulation it would be singular if they might rely upon the business of the payee as constituting a prima facie defense-to it in the hands of third persons. If the business of the payee could be held prima facie notice of something wrong in the paper, so might the character of the payee be, and one setting up the defense of fraud in the inception of the note might imputé bad faith to the indorsee, because, knowing that the payee was not a man of good reputation, he-did not go to the maker to ascertain that the paper was not. disputed. Such a doctrine would render the law of negotiable paper too unsafe for any reliance whatever. We cannot imply notice on such slender grounds. This view would dispose of the question raised on the neglect of the-jury to answer the question above stated. But the question itself was improper under our previous rulings.—Fowler v. Hoffman, 31 Mich., 215; Harbaugh v. Cicolt, 33 Mich., 241; Frankenberg v. National Bank, 33 Mich., 46.
It is objected that the questions to the jury were put
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.