delivered the opinion of the court.
This' was an action at law brought by Milton Courtright against James N. Burnes, the plaintiff in error, upon the note of the latter made at Chicago, and dated October 10, 1872, whereby he promised to pay, thirty days after date, to the .order of F. H. Winston, $7333, at the Cook County National Bank, in Chicago. Courtright by indorsement and transfer became the owner and holder of the note.
The defendant pleaded four pleas. The first of • these was a' general denial of the averments of the petition.
The second plea ivas in substance as follows: That when the note was made, the plaintiff Courtright, the defendant Burnes, the said Winston, and one Campbell had been, and were, partners in a contract for building a certain railroad therein named; that prior to the date of the note Winston had received and was in possession, as part of the assets of the partnership, of forty bonds for $1000 each, of the city of Atchison, subject to the payment of the partnership debts, and-, after such payment, for distribution among the partners; that a short time before, the-date of the note the partners had appointed the defendant a trustee to settle the partnership affairs; that when the note, was given the partnership affairs had not been settled, and were not settled at the time of filing the plea; that at the time of the making of the note, Winston turned over to defendant the bonds above mentioned, and estimated that there would be due him, as a partner in the firm, from its assets, the sum men *584 tioned in said note, and thereupon requested thé defendant, as trustee of the'partners, to make the note “ with the understand-' ing that the same was no.t to be sued on, but was to be deetned a mere memorandum of .the amount that should be estimated' as the share of said "Winston, on. account of said bonds, in a settlement amóng said partners; ” that the defendant executed thé note accordingly, as trustee of. the partnership and not, as his individual note,-and the plaintiff acquired title to,the.note ■with knowledge of .these facts.
By the third piéa it was averred as follows: iThat the note sued on “was and is wholly without consideration, and is null and void, at^d that said note is based upon and grew out of transactions relating to the business of said partners ¿hat said, ■partners are interested in the same, and are necessary parties to a suit relating to said note, and the amount due on said note, if any, cannot be ascertained until a. final settlement of said partnership can be had.”
The last plea was" that the suit was prosecuted under an agreement between the plaintiff and George W, DeCamp, his attorney, whereby the latter undertook to prosecute the suit, and to pay all the expenses incident to its prosecution, in consideration that he should receive four tenths'of the amount recovered.
•The parties waived a' trial by jury and submitted the .issues of fact as well as, of law to the court, which made a general finding for the plaintiff and entered 'judgment thereon in his favor against the defendant Biirnes for $11,401.60, who thereupon sued out this writ of error. After -the record was' filed in this court Courtright died, and, the executors of his last will were made defendants in error in his stead.
The bill of exceptions shows that upon the trial of the case the defendant, to sustain the issue on his part,.offered evidence tending to show that “ Winston, the payee and assignor of the note sued on,” Courtright, “the plaintiff,” Burnes, “.the defendant,' and one Campbell, were the contractors for the construction of the Chicago and Southwestern Railroad, as partners, and. that Winston was entitled to an interest of two fifteenths in such contract; that Winston had charge of the execution of *585 the contract and possession and control.of the assets arising ■ from the contract; that after the eompletion'of the road, in' October, 1872, Winston delivered to defendant forty bonds of the city of Atchison for one thousand dollars each, which had. been received and, were then held by him as part of the assets under' such contract; that the bonds were delivered by Winston to and received by defendant as the trustee for the parties in interest in the contract, and that at the time the bonds were so delivered defendant .gave to Winston the note sued on.”
The defendant also offered evidence to show “ that the note, sued on when given was riot intended by him, the maker, nor by Winston, the payee, as a promissory note, but was, only in- . tended, and so given by him and received by Winston, as a memorandum of the then estimate of the value of the estimated interest of Winston in the Atchisori' bonds then delivered as part of the profits. of the aforesaid contract for 'the construction of the Atchison Branch, to be accounted for on a settlement between the partners to such' contract;” ■“ that the only consideration of the note sued on was the transfer by. Winston to defendant of the interest'of Winston in the Atchison bonds',-' as part of the profits of the contract for the construction of the. Atchison Branch;” .and “that upon a settlement of the part-1 nership accounts, between said Winston and his partners in the contract for the construction of said Atchison Branch, the said • Winston woukl/have had. no interest in the profits of said contract, having received more than his share thereof prior to thé giving of. said note.”
To all of which evidence so offered plaintiff'objected as incompetent and irrelevant, and the objections were sustained by the court, and- the evidence excluded. The exclusion of. the testimony so offered is now assigned for error by the defendant. ' '
So far as the evidence excluded was offered in support of the second plea, it is plain that it was inadmissible. Its purpose , was to vary and contradict by an alleged-contemporaneous verbal agreement the contract which the parties had reduced to writing. It was offered to show that a promissory note -in the usual form was not intended by the parties to be a promissory ' note, but was a mere memorandum by which the maker prpm- *586 ised nothing; which gave no rights to the payee, and was to ■ áll intents and purposes vain, futile, and of no force- or effect whatever. It is not necessary to cite authority to show that the evidence was inadmissible for such a purpose.
The counsel for defendant not strenuously insisting -that the evidence was admissible to support the .second plea, insist that -it was-competent to prove the third. They argue that as want of consideration may be shown in defence of an action on a promissory note, the evidence should have been received.
As a general rule want of consideration is a defence to a promissory note, but it is not always a defence which can be 'made at law. It frequently requires the aid of a court of equity to give it effect. The plea, to support which the defendant contends the evidence of want of consideration was admissible, clearly sets up an equitable defence. It alleges that the note sued on is based.on the- “ transactions-relating to the business.of said partners.” Referring, therefore, to the preceding plea, which states the business of the partners, as we are authorized to do, we learn that the partnership business had not át. the time of filing, the pleas' been settled, or the interest of Winston therein or he bonds been ascertained. The plea under considération further avers that the members of the partnership Avere interested the said business and.were necessary parties to a suit relating to the note, and that the amount due thereon, if anything, could not be ascertained until the-final settlement of the partnership. It is plain, therefore, that the defence set up by the plea is not. the legal defence of want of consideration, for the 'plea admits, by implication, that there may be. ■something due on the note, but the equitable - defence that the amount due on the note, if anything, is dependent, on the amount coming to Winston from the assets of the partnership, which cannot b.e ascertained without a settlement of the partnership .affairs in'a suit to which all the partners are necessary -parties. And-yet having., so pleaded; the defendant insists, in argument, that in- a trial upon the promissory nóte in a court of law, and without the presence of two of the four partners, ■evidence is admissible to settle the partnership, and to prove, without, making Winston,a.party to the suit, that there is noth *587 ing due him out of the partnership assets. The pleading and the' contention of the defendant appear, therefore, to be contradictory and inconsistent.
Plainly- the relief, if any, to which the facts set up in this plea entitles the defendant is an injunction to stay the suit at law upon the -note until a settlement of the partnership and an ascertainment Of the amount,- if anything, coming to Winston out of the - assets of the partnership. This is a remedy which á court of equity only can grant. But- the defendant insists on a verdict and judgment in his. favor, without settlement of thé partnership on. which, as he asserts, the validity of the note depends.
Tinder the jurisprudence of the courts of the United States'a court of law can no more take cognizance of an equitable der fence than a court of equity can entertain a suit upon a purely legal title. “ The Constitution of the United States,” says Mr. Chief Justice Taney, in delivering judgment in the case of
Bennett
v. Butterworth,
So in
Thompson
v.
Railroad Companies,
So in the case of
Jones
v.
McMasters,
So in
Foster
v.
Mora,
If ^the defence set. up in the -plea under consideration could be made effectual, in an action at law, it would render obsolete in the equity courts of the United States that-great head oequity jurisdiction under which injunctions are granted to stay proceedings at law. “ The occasion,” says Mr. Justice Story, “on which an injunction may be.used to stay proceedings at law are almost infinite in their nature and circumstances.” “ Thus, an injunction is sometimes granted to stay trial,' sometimes after verdict to stay judgment, sometimes after judgment to stay execution', and sometimes after execution to stay the money in the hands of the sheriff,” &c. Story Eq. Jur. §§ 885, 886, and see §§" 881, 882; Eden on Injunctions, ch. 2, p. 3; Waterlow v. Bacon, L. R., 2 Eq. 514; Hibbard v. Eastman, 47 N. H. 507; Hopkins v. Fletcher, 47 Missouri, 331; Tommey v. Ellis, 41 Geo. 260.
' ’ It is clear, therefore, that the matters set up in the third plea were proper for the consideration of a court of equity, and that .they could not be set up'as a defence in a court of law. All the evidence offered to prove'them was, therefore, properly excluded. ' ■
It further appears from the bill of exceptions that in support of the plea that the plaintiff had made a champertous agreement with his counsel for the prosecution, of this suit, the de- ' fendant offered evid&nce which tended to prove a contract made by the plaintiff with his counsel, George W. DeCamp, by which the latter agreed' to prosecute the suit and defray all the' ex *589 penses thereof, in consideration' of which he was tó réceive á certain proportion of the stun recovered. The court, however, did ,not give effect to this .plea, and overruled a motion made by the defendant to dismiss the action on the. ground that the plaintiff had made such champertous contract. This action of the court the defendant assigns for error.
At common law and by statute, both in England and itv many of the United States, champerty was a criminal offence. But at the present time,'in. most of the States, to aid the'lawful suit of another with money or services in consideration of a share fn the recovery, is not considered or punished as a crime'. But' in many of the States champertous contracts, aré considered void. This is the case in ¡Missouri where the present case was tried, the Supreme Court so holding, on the ground that the common law had been adopted by statute in that State. See Duke v. Harper, 66 Missouri, 51, The defendant .now. asks Us to go a long step beyond this ruling.. T
The question raised by tlie present assignment of error is not: whether a champertous contract between counsel and client is void, but whether the making of such a contract can be set up ' in bar of a recovery on the cause- of action to which the chams pertOus .contract relates.
"We must ■ answer ■ this question'in the negative. It was wisely said by the Supreme Court of New York, in the case of Thalhimer v. Brinherhoff\ 3 Cowen, 623, that “the right of litigation may be abused,' and proper remedies, for groundless and vexatious litigation must exist; but the remedies for the abuse of this right should be such ás not to impair the free, use of the right itself. As the justice or injustice of the claim cannot be known before the termination of the cause, the checks upon unjust litigation must in general consist, not in excluding the suit or the suitor from the courts, but in redress following' the decision of justice upon the merits of the case.”
. This is in accord with the views of this court. The precise question under consideration was decided'ib the case of
Boone
v.
Chiles,
So in Hilton v. Woods, L. R. 4 Eq. 432, it was strenuously urged that the bargain between the plaintiff and Mr. Wright, under which the suit was instituted, amounted to champerty and maintenance, and consequently disqualified the plaintiff to sue, and that the court was bound to dismiss the bill. But the Yice Chancellor said: “ I have carefully examined all the authorities which were referred to in support of this argument, and they clearly establish that whenever the right of the plaintiff in respect of which he sues is derived under a title founded on champerty or maintenance,'his suit will on that account necessarily fail.. But no authority was cited, nor have I met any, which goes the length' of deciding that where a plaintiff has an original and good title to property he becomes disqualified to sue for it by having ventured into an improper bargain Avith his solicitor as to the mode of remunerating him for his professional services in the suit or otherwise.” There Avas, therefore, a decree for the plaintiff, though Avithout costs.
In Elborough v. Ayres, L. R. 10 Eq. 367, it Avas conceded that the fact that the plaintiff, in an action for malicious prosecution, had been maintained, Avould be no bar to the action, and the Yice-Ohancellor held .that such 'maintenance Avould be no *591 ground for the interference of a court of equity to prevent the action from going on, citing Yice-Chancelior Wigram in Evans v. Prothero [not reported on that point].
The only cases to which we have been referred in which the rule insisted on by the defendant has been maintained were two cases decided in the Supreme Court of "Wisconsin. Barker v. Barker, 14 Wisc. 131, and Allard v. Lamirande, 29 Wisc. 502.
We think, therefore, that, both upon reason and weight of authority, the court did not err in refusing to give effect to the fourth plea of the defendant, or in refusing to dismiss the suit because it was prosecuted under a champertous agreement between the plaintiff and his counsel.
Judgment affirmed.
