241 N.W. 160 | Mich. | 1932
Plaintiff, a resident of Arkansas, procured from defendant, Merchants Miners National Bank of Ironwood, several drafts payable to himself. In a gambling house at Hurley, Wisconsin, he indorsed and transferred them actually or in effect to the proprietor of the house, defendant Santini, and received therefor from Santini or his employee, defendant Masterson, cash and chips which he there lost in playing the game of craps against the house.
The drafts were negotiated further, and, the trial judge found correctly, are now held severally by defendants Johnson, Ironwood Auto Service Company, and Great Northern Acceptance Corporation, as holders in due course. Plaintiff stopped payment *93 on the drafts, and filed this bill to cancel and to enjoin transfer, payment, and collection of the same. The bank filed answer and a cross-bill of interpleader. Plaintiff answered the cross-bill and did interplead as did the other defendants who claim the drafts. The decree is in favor of the present holders of the drafts, that they hold in due course. Plaintiff has appealed.
It is urged plaintiff, as regards remedy, must abide the law of the forum, that comity does not require a nonresident shall be allowed a remedy which the law of Michigan denies to its own citizens (5 R. C. L. p. 1042), and that he may have no relief in equity as he does not come with clean hands, citingCommon Council of Cedar Springs v. Schlich,
This might be if plaintiff were seeking relief as upon his original bill. But there is here an interpleader. In effect, plaintiff and the other defendants who claim the drafts have interpleaded at the suit of the bank. The said maxim of equity ought not to be applied against one brought in by interpleader. 21 C. J. p. 186; Hunter v. Suderwski,
There is more here than just turning plaintiff out of court. The court must adjudicate upon the respective rights of the parties who have interpleaded at the suit of the bank. It would not be equitable to decree the drafts to defendants who hold them and *94 to deny plaintiff's rights in them and by adjudication to bar his right of action at law on the theory that plaintiff, so brought in by interpleader, does not come with clean hands.
The decisive question is whether, under the law of Wisconsin, where the transfer was made, the transfer must be held void as against the holders in due course.
Section 348.16, chap. 348, R.S. Wisconsin, 1929, condemning gambling, is to the effect that contracts, transfers, etc., growing out of gambling are absolutely void.
In Stoddard v. Burt,
In Stevens v. Freund,
"Conceding, for the purposes of the discussion, that because the giving of a note for lightning rods without red-ink declaration of its consideration upon its face is in defiance of chap. 438, Laws of 1903, it is thereby rendered invalid, as we have decided *95
is a note executed on Sunday (Howe v. Ballard,
And in that case, too, the court again quoted and relied upon the stated provision of negotiable instruments law. The decisions of the supreme court of Wisconsin, as we read them, are to the effect that plaintiff here may not assert invalidity of the transfer of the drafts as against the holders in due course. This is the rule in most jurisdictions.
The decree is affirmed, with costs to appellees.
McDONALD, POTTER, SHARPE, NORTH, FEAD, WIEST, and BUTZEL, JJ., concurred.