88 Md. 368 | Md. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the Court.
There are. two questions brought up by the record in this case — the one as to the sufficiency of a replication to which the appellant demurred, and the other as to the admissibility of evidence. The replication raises the question as to a lunatic’s liability on his contract, and that particular question as now presented has not hitherto been distinctly considered and settled in Maryland.
The suit was brought in April, eighteen hundred and ninety-six by the appellee against the appellant to recover the price of two barrels of whiskey sold by the former to the latter in 1894. The appellant was adjudged a lunatic in May 1896. The declaration contains the ordinary money counts. In addition to the general issue plea, the defendant pleaded that at the time the purchase was made he was and ever since has been a lunatic. To this plea the plaintiff replied first, with a traverse, and secondly, by a replication alleging that the merchandise sued for had been sold and delivered for its fair value and had been sold and delivered when the plaintiff was unaware of the lunacy of the defendant; that the contract sued on was fair and reasonable, that the defendant had the benefit thereof and that the parties cannot now be placed in the same situation they occupied before the goods were sold and delivered. This replication was demurred to; the demurrer was overruled and issue was finally joined. The first error complained of is this ruling on the demurrer.
Speaking generally, the contracts óf a lunatic, who has not been found by an inquisition to be insane, do not belong to the class that are absolutely void, but fall within the group that is described as voidable. This is
If the contract be fair and bona fide, and there is no element of fraud or imposition in it, and if the other party does not know of the insanity and the parties can
Whatever may have been the reasons which induced the Courts to hold that a contract made under the conditions set forth in the replication to which the defendant demurred was binding, the effect has been to restore the original doctrine fixing a liability upon the lunatic when there has been, at the time the contract was made, no judicial ascertainment of his lunacy and when the contract is fair and bona fíde, unless the other party to the contract knew at the time it was entered into that the lunacy existed. The liability of the lunatic under these circumstances rests not only on authority but upon sound and satisfactory principles.
As the lunatic’s contract at best is only voidable it would be unjust and inequitable to allow him to repudiate it if it had been made fairly and in good faith when the other party was ignorant of the disability, unless both parties upon a recission of it can be restored to the situation they originally occupied. A successful repudiation of such a contract would inflict injury upon an innocent person who had been guilt)'- of no default, whilst the lunatic would reap the benefit accruing under the contract. If it be assumed that both parties to such a contract.are equally innocent — and that is the legal signification of the replication now under consideration—
Of course, if such a contract were absolutely and unconditionally void the ignorance of the other party as to the lunacy could not convert the disability into an ability — could not make that valid which was wholly invalid. But if the contract be only voidable it would
We hold then, for the reasons we have given that there was no error in the ruling on the demurrer.
The exception presenting the other question — the admissibility of certain evidence — sets forth that the plaintiff, a body corporate, produced as a witness Max Honig, who proved that he was a director and stockholder of the plaintiff company as well as a salesman therefor. Thereupon the defendant objected to the competency of the witness because the defendant — the other party to the contract was insane. The Court admitted the
There being no errors in the rulings excepted to, the judgment which was in favor of the plaintiff, will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed with costs above and below.