86 N.J.L. 281 | N.J. | 1914
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought in this state to recover the amount due upon four promissory notes executed, delivered and made payable in the State of Minnesota. The notes were discounted by the payee at the Rock County Bank in Minnesota, and for the purposes of this case, it may be assumed that the bank took the notes without knowledge of any infirmity in their making, delivery or consideration. After their maturity, and with knowledge that the defendant disputed their validity, the plaintiff purchased them from the bank and brought this suit.
At the trial the defendant testified to facts from which an inference may be drawn that the notes were fraudulently obtained from him under such circumstances that as between the maker and the payee no recovery could be had. ' The trial resulted in a judgment in favor of the defendant from which the plaintiff appeals for alleged errors in the conduct of the trial, the first of which is that the judge improperly admitted in evidence a statute of the State of Minnesota which provides that no person whose signature is obtained to a promissory note shall be held liable thereon, if it be made to appear that the signature was obtained by fraudulent representation, trick or artifice as to the nature and terms of the contract so signed; that at the time of signing he did not believe it to be a promissory note, and that he was not guilty of negligence in signing such paper without knowledge of its terms, the question of negligence to be in all cases one of fact for the jury and the person sought to be charged shall be entitled to have that question submitted to the jury. The effect of this statute is to exonerate the maker of a promissory note, even if held by an innocent purchaser for value if the maker’s signature was obtained by fraudulent representation, trick
The introduction as evidence of this statute was objected to but its competency as evidence is not seriously argued, the principal question pressed being the applicability of the statute and the evidence supposed to be material thereunder, the appellant admitting that it is a settled principle of law that in regard to the merits and rights involved in actions, the law of the place -where they originate is to govern, claiming, however, that the application of the statute and the evidence introduced to bring these notes within the statute is a form of remedy, and order of judicial proceedings, which are to be administered according to the law of the forum, As these notes are in every particular a contract made and completed in the State of Minnesota, the law of which state enters into and forms a part of the contract, there is no legal objection to the introduction in evidence of 1ho statute of that state, for all contracts made in a foreign jurisdiction are presumed to be made with reference to the law of the place where made, unless it otherwise appears in the contract. While in some cases it may be difficult to determine whether the question raised relates to the contract or the remedy, no such difficulty arises in this case, for in order to give the defendant the benefit of the statute of Minnesota, it was necessary that he show that his signature to the notes was obtained by a fraudulent representation, trick or artifice, and that he was not guilty of any negligence in signing the note, and to deprive him-of the benefit of the statute, and of the testimony required to place him within it, would allow the enforcement of a contract against him here, which would not be allowed under the law of the state where it was made.
This question was dealt with by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in Baxter National Bank v. Talbot, 154 Mass. 213; 28 N. E. Rep. 163. In that case the notes sued on were made in Vermont where the defendant’s obligation depended, as between the holder of the note and the defendant, upon
If these notes had contained the conditions prescribed by the Minnesota ]aw, and they are presumed to be a part of the contract, the defendant could not have been prevented from showing the existence of the conditions which relieved him from his obligation according to the law of the place where made. We have no doubt that the statute of Minnesota was properly admitted, and that the evidence which the trial court admitted tending to show the conditions and circumstances under which the notes were executed, and which, if true, exonerated the defendant from payment under the law of the state where the contract was made, was competent.
Where the lex loci contractus deals with the substantive liability of a party to a contract, executed and to be per
The appellant also urges that the trial court committed an error in denying his motion to overrule the defence upon the ground that the facts as proven did not, even under the Minnesota statute, disclose such a defence as entitled the defendant to go to the jury.
There was evidence showing that the defendant signed a contract as a result of negotiations had with the payee; that another paper had been placed under the contract, and after the defendant had signed the contract, the payee lifted a corner of the paper on which the contract was written exposing another beneath it, saying to the defendant, “The other one is the same and goes to the company,” and thereupon the defendant signed what he supposed to be a duplicate contract, whereas in fact it was a note, and this method was pursued as .to four contracts, and the four notes upon which this suit is based. The defendant testified that he did not suppose he was signing a note in each instance, but a duplicate of the contract laid before him, and the trial judge left it to the jury to say whether his signatures to the notes were procured by fraudulent representation, trick or artifice, and without negligence on his part. We think that the trial judge properly ruled and that there was no error upon this branch of the case.
We have examined the other assignments of error and are of opinion that none of them disclose any rulings which are harmful to the plaintiff. If the Minnesota statute was properly admitted, and we have no doubt that it was, then the plaintiff cannot recover on these notes, oven if held by an innocent purchaser for value, if in their inception they were obtained by false representations, trick or artifice, unless the
The judgment will be affirmed.
For affirmance — The Chancellor, , Chief Justice, Trenchard, Parker, Bergen, Minturn, Kaliscii, Bogbrt, Vrbdenburgh, White, Hbppbnhbimer, JJ. 11.
For reversal — None.