Complaint by the American Brewing Company, hereafter designated appellee, upon three promissory notes and to foreclose a mortgage. The cause was tried by the court. The facts were found specially, and in so far as are necessary to this appeal are in substance as follows:
On October 22, 1914, appellant was indebted to appellee on an open account, and as evidence of such indebtedness executed -two notes, one for $486.65 and the
The note for $970 which appellant gave to appellee was given as an evidence of the contingent liability of appellee on account of it having guaranteed the repayment of the loan of $970 made by the bank to appellant. Appellant gave appellee a mortgage upon certain real estate to secure the payment pf said three notes payable to appellee. This action was commenced May 3, 1917, at which time the notes for $484.65 and $292.67 were due and unpaid. The last renewal note given by appellant to the bank was dated March 10, 1917, and was due May 9,1917. May 18,1917, and after the commencement of this action, appellee discharged its guarantee to the bank in accordance with its promise by paying the bank $971.48 and thereupon the bank assigned the last renewal note appellant had given the bank, without recourse to appellee. No part of the payment by appellee to the bank has been repaid by appellant. Each of said notes provided for a reasonable attorney’s fee, and the court found that reasonable attorney’s fee on account of suing on the said note and foreclosing said mortgage was $200, $100 of which was the value of the fee on account of the $970 note. Upon these facts the court concluded as a matter of law that there was due appellee on account of the first note the
Appellant excepted to the several conclusions of law and after judgment, appealed and by proper assignment challenges the correctness of the conclusion of law, wherein the court concluded that appellee was entitled to recover $1,264 on account of said note for $970.
1. The transaction between appellant and appellee wherein appellee undertook to loan appellant its credit by guaranteeing the payment of a loan from the bank to appellant of the necessary money with which to pay for his liquor license was against public policy, and the note for. $970 which appellant gave appellee as evidence of appellant’s contingent liability to appellee was void. It was a plain attempt to contravene the policy of the 1911 act “concerning intoxicating liquors” (Acts 1911 p. 244, §8323w et seq. Burns 1914).
2. Appellee contends that appellant cannot take advantage of the illegality of the consideration, since no answer of illegality was filed. This court, in the recent case of Marks v. Conrad Seipp Brewing Co. (1920), 74 Ind. App. 50, 128 N. E. 620, held that such a defence need not be pleaded when it appears in the process of the action that the contract sued upon is one which the law forbids. The court there quoted from Overshiner v. Wisehart (1877), 59 Ind. 135, where the court in speaking on this subject said:
“The court should have dismissed the case, even though the defendant did not claim any relief from the fraud; not because he is more favored than the plaintiif, but because both are equally culpable.”
Judgment reversed, with direction to the court to restate its conclusions of law in accordance with this opinion and to render judgment accordingly.