141 Wis. 286 | Wis. | 1910
The execution and delivery of the note being •admitted, the burden was- upon the defendant to prove her defense and establish the counterclaim. The note bears date January 16,1900, and it appears that it was given for services to be performed after its execution. The evidence tends to •show that prior to the execution of the note the plaintiff was ■engaged in business in the city of Milwaukee as a dermatologist and receiving for her services $4 per hour; that defendant applied to her to be instructed in the art, and was informed by plaintiff that a course of instructions would cost $.500. The defendant, thinking the price high, made some investigation upon the subject and conferred with a reputable physician ■of Milwaukee and returned to plaintiff and closed the contract by giving the note in question and paying $300 in cash. The defendant received instructions from plaintiff at various times covering a period of four or five months, and in June, 1900, began work as a dermatologist in the city of Chicago and remained there about a year, during which time only two patients called upon her for treatment. She then gave up the business and shortly thereafter had a talk with plaintiff, in which she said she could not pay the note, but made no ■claim that she had been defrauded. The alleged false representations complained of are that plaintiff represented that no ■one else could teach defendant and that she could not get instructions elsewhere for less than $500; that plaintiff told defendant that she had instructed, other women who were as proficient as plaintiff, and that there was no other school than
It is insisted by appellant that the representations relied, upon by respondent as fraudulent to avoid the contract,, namely, that the plaintiff was the only person who could-teach dermatology, were not actionable, because not relating-to facts susceptible of personal knowledge, but merely matter of opinion under the rule laid down in Montreal R. L. Co. v. Mihills, 80 Wis. 540, 50 N. W. 507, and Sheldon v. Davidson, 85 Wis. 138, 55 N. W. 161. But we find it unnecessary to decide this point, because we fail to find sufficient evidence to support a finding that the representations made were false. They were made in January, -1900. The evidence upon-which defendant bases the falsity of the representations is in effect that after defendant gave up her office, which was more Ilian a year after the representations are claimed to have been made, she learned through magazine articles or advertisements and by calling upon people in Chicago and New York that there were other schools. Now this evidence falls far short of establishing that the representations, even if actionable, were false when made. The fact that other schools were advertised more than a year after the representations were made- and offering to furnish instructions for $7 5 did not establish that schools existed a year earlier where defendant could have been taught the art. There is no presumption that, because schools existed at a particular date, they existed a year ante
Holding as we do that'the defendant failed to prove that the representations were false, no other questions need be considered.
Judgment should have been directed for the plaintiff for the amount due upon the note sued upon.
By the Court. — The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment for plaintiff in accordance with the demand of the complaint.