48 Ind. App. 3 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1911
Appellee sued appellant on a note, which was in the following words and figures:
“I promise to pay to my wife (Mrs. H. A. Krouse), known as Maryland S. B. Sheppard, $150, she has loaned me from time to time, at the end of three months, or before, if I am earning any money.
H. A. Krouse.”
April 29, 1906.
Not negotiable.
Mrs. T. O. Olsen.
The action was originally brought before a justice of the peace, and the transcript was filed in the circuit court on appeal. The only pleading filed was the complaint. The cause was tried without a jury. The court found against
Appellant relies for reversal of the judgment on two points: (1) The note sued on is void because made by husband to wife, and as it was executed in California, in the absence of proof to the contrary, the presumption is that the common law prevails in a foreign state; (2) the note was executed under duress.
The first question then is, in the absence of proof, What is presumed to be the law of California?
There would be some merit in this contention, had California been one of the original colonies of England, or been formed out of territory composing such colonies, for there
Such is also the rule as to the states carved out of tei'ritory acquired since the time of the Revolution, which had not, at the time of acquisition, any organized form of society, or any established laws for the government of the people then living in such new possessions, where in fact the people of the state at the time of the establishment of government therein were emigrants from the original states. It is presumed that the common law was conveyed and became established there in the same manner that we are authorized to presume that it was brought by the American colonists from the mother country.
But such presumption does not apply to states in which a government and an established system of laws already existed at the time of their addition to the United States. Their original laws remained in force until, by proper authority, they were abrogated and other laws enacted. In states whose system of law was independent of the English law in its origin — such as Florida, Texas, Louisiana and California — there can be indulged no presumption of the existence of the English common law. In countries conquered and ceded to England, the common law does not take effect -without positive enactment. Norris v. Harris (1860), 15 Cal. 226; Buchanan v. Hubbard (1889), 119 Ind. 187; 1 Blackstone’s Comm. *107; Rorer, Interstate Law (2d ed.) 45.
In the case of Fowler v. Smith (1852), 2 Cal. 568, the supreme court of that state said: “When the territory now comprised in the State of California was under Mexican dominion, its judicial system was that of the Roman law, modified by Spanish and Mexican legislation. Upon the formation of the present state government, that system was ordained by a constitutional provision to be continued, until it should be changed by the legislature. ’ ’
From the evidence in the case, it appears that appellant, who was an attorney, and appellee were husband and wife, living in San Francisco at the time of the earthquake and fire; that their marriage was not generally known, and that she, though living with him in his apartments, kept up sep
Appellant’s counsel set up a remarkable argument, the consideration of which somewhat relieves the monotony of the ordinary course of judicial decisions. They claim that appellant, a lawyer in San Francisco, a few days after the earthquake, relying only upon the practice of his profession for a livelihood, would have little opportunity for getting business, or of holding what he had, if he went about his professional duties elothed in a laboring man’s garb; that the controlling necessity in the case required.-that he get suitable wearing apparel, or lose the chance of making a living; that this was one of the times when good clothes were of vital importance to a man; that appellant signed the note, protecting himself from his wife as best he could by writing in the note the words “Not negotiable,” in order to get his clothes, which he needed, so that he could properly look after the interests of his clients, and, therefore, the note was signed under duress.
This defense is interesting and ingenuous, and one worthy of a humorist. We know of nothing which requires a man to wear good clothes in order to practice law, and if ever a