77 Ind. 419 | Ind. | 1881
Complaint under oath to set aside a default and judgment. Demurrer to the complaint, for want of facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, sustained, and judgment for the appellees.
The only question presented for decision is, whether the complaint showed a case wherein, under section 99 of the practice act, the defendant was entitled ta relief against the
The contracts of persons of unsound mind, but whose unsoundness has not been judicially declared, while not void, are voidable, and, in a proper case, may be disaffirmed upon the removal of the disability. Freed v. Brown, 55 Ind. 310.
The duly appointed guardian may, of course, exercise the right of disaffirmance. There was nothing received in consideration of the contract under consideration, of which it can be said that restitution should be made before a disaffirmance should be permitted ; and it is no objection that the note had passed, before maturity, into the hands of an endorsee. Commercial paper is not an exception to the rule which permits a disaffirmance by any one who was of unsound mind at the time of becoming a party thereto. The purchaser of such paper takes with constructive notice of all legal disabilities of the parties, such as infancy, coverture, and unsoundness of mind. 1 Barsons on Notes and Bills, pp. 149 and 150; Edwards on Bills, pp. 63-69.
It must be equally clear that unsoundness of mind and incapacity for doing business were a. sufficient excuse for the failure to appear-and make defence in the original case.
The judgment is reversed, with costs. ^