Thе controlling issue in this case is whether a failure or want of consideration on the part of the seller of equipment may be raised as a valid defense to a promissory note executed by the purchaser of such, equipment directly to a loan company, the proceeds of which were turned over by the loan company to the seller to pay for such equipment.
Throughout this litigation Tyarks has attempted to place Trombette and the loan сompany on the same footing. Under the evidence we think this can not be done. The loan company, an independent agency, fulfilled its obligation when it furnished the means whereby Tyarks was enabled to purchase the scrubbing and waxing maсhine. This constituted a good and sufficient consideration for the promissory note as far as the loan compаny was concerned. The fact that Tyarks entered into an unfortunate transaction with one who failed to meet promises made in certain respects may not be charged to the loan company, in the absence of а showing that it participated in or had knowledge of Trombette’s dereliction.
In reality, the situation is the same as if Tyarks hаd gone directly to the loan company, executed the promissory note there and had then paid the prоceeds received from such note to Trombette. In those circumstances a want or failure of
It was determined by the trial court as disclosed by its charge to the jury that the loan company was free from fraud or misrepresentation. The issue was confinеd by the court to the failure or want of consideration for the note as between the loan company and Tyarks. The court refused to give an instruction requested by counsel for the loan company to the effect that any failure of consideration between Klean-O-Matic • (represented by Trombette) and Tyarks after the note was reсeived by the loan company and the money thereon paid out would not constitute a defense to the loаn company’s action.
Stress is to be laid on the point that the loan company was purely a money lending institution аnd furnished its money to enable Tyarks to purchase the floor scrubbing and waxing machine, and here is where the lower courts beeame confused. They failed to appraise correctly the loan company’s position in the trаnsaction. Although it is perfectly true that failure or want of consideration may be raised against the promisee оf a note, such failure must be attributable to the promisee and not to some third person operating independently of the promisee,
“Every instrument is prima facie issued for a valuable consideration; and every person whose signature appears thereon becomes a party thereto for value.”
Section 1301.30, Revised Code, recites:
“Absence or failure of consideration is matter of defense as against any person not a holder in due course, and partial fаilure of consideration is a defense pro tanto, whether the failure is an ascertained and liquidated amount or otherwise.”
Under the generally accepted view in Ohio and elsewhere, a failure of consideration is an affirmative defеnse and the burden of proof is on the one who asserts it. In a number of jurisdictions want or lack of consideration is treаted in the same way. 8 American Jurisprudence 594, 597, Sections 1005, 1008.
Although in the case of Ginn, Admr., v. Dolan,
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed and the cause remanded to the Akron Muniсipal Court for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
The fact that the loan company still has in its possession
Judgment reversed.
