52 N.C. 28 | N.C. | 1859
The defendant pleaded "General issue, no assignment, and illegal consideration."
The note in question bore date 29 January, 1857, and was for the payment of $370 on 1 March, ensuing. It was endorsed by Jesse Inman, the payee, to the plaintiffs, on 18 March, 1857, for the purpose of enabling them to collect it, as agents.
The defendant offered to prove that Jesse Inman was pecuniarily embarrassed; that executions were in the hands of officers; that it *23 was agreed between the maker of the note and the payee that the former should set up a fraudulent claim to all the personal property of the payee, and for the purpose of giving color to the transaction the note in question was made; that it was never intended to be paid, but was to be given up by the said Jesse, who was to remain in possession of the said personal property. The plaintiff's counsel objected to the reception of this testimony, and it was ruled out by the court. Defendant's counsel excepted.
Verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs. Appeal by the defendant. The endorsement by the payee of the note sued on after it was due, for the purpose of enabling the plaintiffs to collect it as his agents, did not confer upon them any greater right, as against the maker, than the payee himself had. If, as against the payee, the note was liable to the objection of having been given upon an illegal consideration, he certainly could not be allowed to obviate the (29) difficulty by assigning it to an agent to collect for him. The law denouncing a contract founded in fraud would be untrue to itself if it allowed itself to be defeated by so simple and obvious a contrivance.
We must, therefore, treat the present suit as if it were brought in the name of the payee, Jesse Inman, instead of his endorsees and agents, the plaintiffs. So treating it, we are clearly of opinion that the testimony which was offered for the purpose of showing that the note was executed with the fraudulent intent to cheat the creditors of the payee, by giving to the maker a plausible pretext for claiming all his property, ought to have been received, because, if true, it furnished a complete defense against the action.
No principle is better established than that a contract the consideration of which is the doing of an act, either malum in se or malumprohibitum, is void, and no action at law can be sustained upon it. Sharpv. Farmer,
PER CURIAM. Error.
Cited: Melvin v. Easley, post., 372; Powell v. Inman,
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