153 N.W. 939 | S.D. | 1915
This action is brought to recover on a promissory note. The note was originally payable to the ¡South Dakota Mausoleum. Company, but from the indorsements thereon, appears to have passed through the hands of various parties until it reached plaintiff, who is alleged to have been the owner and holder thereof at the time the action was commenced.
It is alleged in the answer, and it appears from the testimony, that, at the time of the -execution of the said note, the International Mausoleum -Company was the owner of a certain United States patent. The South Dakota Mausoleum Company was organized for the purpose of purchasing the exclusive right, with the exception of a certain specified locality, to use said
At the close of all the testimony, defendant moved the court to direct a verdict for defendant upon all the issues, except as to whether plaintiff was an innocent purchaser or not, while plaintiff moved for a verdict upon all the issues. The -court denied defendant’s motion- and directed a verdict for plaintiff. Defendant assigned error and appeals.
Numerous assignments are argued by appellant, but, as we view the case, it is necessary to -determine but two questions: First, was plaintiff an innocent purchaser? 'And, second, does the failure to write or stamp up'on the face of the note the
In New v. Walker, supra, it is said:
“It is inconceivable that the vendor of personal property— whether, i-t be intangible property, like a patent right, or. not— can acquire any rights from acts performed in direct violation of law, since enforceable legal rights only spring from transac*156 tions which violate no principle of law or equity. A legal right cannot arise out of a wrong, so as to benefit the wrongdoer. In our opinion, a promissory note executed in direct violation of a mandatory statute -is inoperative as between the parties and those who buy with notice. Where a statute, in imperative terms, forbids the performance of an act, no rights can be acquired by persons who violate the statute, nor by those who know that the act on which -they ground their claim was done in violation of law. A promissory note executed in a transaction forbidden by statute is, at least, illegal as between the parties and those who have knowledge that the law was violated.”
And in Sandage et al. v. Studabaker Bros., supra, we find the doctrine stated as follows:
“That there can be no recovery on a contract made in violation of a statute, as between the parties thereto, the violation o£ which is prohibited by a penalty, is a principle well recognized by the courts. This is true, although the statute does not, -in terms, pronounce the contract void nor expressly prohibit the same”' — ■ citing Woods v. Armstrong, 54 Ala. 150, 25 Am. Rep. 671.
And the proposition is thoroughly supported by the cases cited in the note appended to this case in 25 Am. Rep. 674, and nothing would be added by a further discussion of the subject. The doctrine announced in these cases has been sanctioned in this state, and in Johnson et al. v. Berry et al., 20 S. D. 133, 104 N. W. 1114, 1 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1159, it is said that full knowledge on the part of the one who is resisting payment, “together with the acceptance of the benefits of the contract, would not be sufficient to justify its enforcement, even though the statute does not declare the same void, but merely inflicts a penalty for the violation of its terms.” See, also, Sullivan v. Hergan, 17 R. I. 109, 20 Atl. 232, 9 L. R. A. 110; Cole v. Brown-Hurley Hdw. Co., 139 Iowa, 487, 117 N. W. 746, 18 L. R. A. (N. S.) 846, 16 Ann. Cas. 846; Haddock v. City of Salt Lake, 23 Utah, 527, 65 Pac. 491; Edwards Co. v. Jennings et al., 89 Tex. 618, 35 S. W. 1053; Elliott on Contracts, § 666; Page on Contracts, § 332.
Tested by the foregoing rule, the note involved in this case was void, not only in the hands of the original payee, but in the hands of the plaintiff, who, as we have already seen, had knowl
The judgment appealed from is reversed