58 N.W. 460 | N.D. | 1894
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff having recovered judgment against the defendant upon a promissory noté, the defendant appeals. The judgment is based upon a verdict which the court directed the jury to find in favor of the plaintiff. One of the defenses to the note relied upon in the trial court was want of consideration. It is the only defense which merits our attention. The facts of this controversy are few and simple. Plaintiff and a man named Densmore were co-partners in the business of selling farm machinery. Some time in the month of August, 1890, a Mr. Thompson purchased a separator of the plaintiff McGlynn and Densmore. According to his testimony, he was to pay $550, and no more, for
This point brings us to a consideration of the foundation of the validity of a promise which is the culmination of the settlement of a controversy. On what ground can such a promise be sustained? Surely not on the ground that a right has been surrendered, for the rule is well settled that where there is a bona fide controversy, and the claim settled is colorable, the consideration for the promise cannot be destroyed by showing that there was in fact no validity to the claim which was made. It would be illogical to assert that such a promise rests for its consideration upon a surrendered right, and at the same time preclude all inquiry into the question whether, as a matter of fact, a valuable right has been surrendered. The true consideration is the settlement. All litigation is injurious to society. A portion of human energy is absorbed by the friction of legal strife, and so much power is thus exhausted which might otherwise be diverted into other channels. Struggles for victory in the courts engender more or less enmity. Time is consumed, and money is expanded, which would, in the absence of such litigation, be employed for other purposes and in other ways. It is elementary that the courts look with the highest favor upon every honest adjustment of private differences. “With the courts of this country, the prevention of litigation is not only a sufficient, but a highly favored, consideration.” 1 Pars. Cont. p. 438. To encourage the settlements by private agreement of controversies, and to discourage, as far as possible, a resort to the regular tribunals, the courts have resorted to this fiction; that the settlement of an honest dispute
A final analysis of the question brings one to the conclusion that the only consideration for the promise in such cases is the settlement, and that this is not a consideration between the parties themselves, within the ordinary rules regulating the sufficiency of consideration to support promises, but is a fiction resorted to by the law to sustain such compromises because public policy demands their encouragement. Of course, cases may arise where other consideration to sustain the compromise may be shown; but most compromises have been upheld on no other ground than the single one of the settlement of an honest dispute, against the attempt which has been made, time and again, to show that the claim of the promisee was not valid. Said the court in De Mars v. Manufacturing Co., (Minn.) 35 N. W. 1: “The real conderation which each party receives under a compromise is not the sacrifice of the right, but the settlement of the dispute.” In Kercheval v. Doty, 31 Wis. 476, 484, Chief Justice Dixon places the binding force of compromise upon the same ground. Speaking for the court, he says: “It is not the policy of the law to stir up the embers, or to rekindle, or allow to be rekindled, the fires of past strifes and controversies, the flames of which have once been
This brings us to the evidence. When the plaintiff introduced the note in evidence, he had made out a prima facie case. It is a familiar rule that a promissory note imports consideration, and our statute has extended this rule to all written instruments. Comp. Laws, § 3538, Subd. 2. Defendant then proved that there was no consideration for the note other than this alleged compromise. Now, assuming that there was, in terms, a compromise, yet defendant could show that McGlynn had no claim, and knew it. He could show that there was in fact no bona fide controvei'sy. In ordinary cases, it may well be that there is a strong presumption as to the good faith of the promisee in making the claim. The very fact that the other party has x'ecognized it sufficiently to settle it is a circumstance of gi'eat force, tending to show that he himself regarded it as having some foundation, and the belief of the promisor himself might well be veiy satisfactoiy evidence, prima facie, that the pi'omisee deemed the claim valid. But in this case the defendant did not have to meet and ovei'throw so strong a pi'esumption as to the good faith of McGlynn. Having no personal knowledge of the contx'act between the parties, he was not in a position to .know, of his own pei'sonal knowledge, of the utter gi'oundlessness of the claim, or the assumption
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result, without adopting all the reasoning of the opinion.