59 S.E. 162 | N.C. | 1907
The court submitted to the jury certain issues which, with the answers thereto, are as follows:
"1. Did the defendant execute the note described in the complaint?" Answer: "Yes."
"2. At the time of the execution of said note, did the plaintiff execute the agreement set out in the answer?" Answer: "Yes." *9
"3. Did the defendant, within one month from the execution of the note and agreement, notify the plaintiff that he would not accept the policy of insurance, and offer to return the same and demand a return of the note?" Answer: "Yes."
"4. What amount, if any, is due from the defendant to the plaintiff?" Answer: "Nothing."
The plaintiff excepted to the submission of the first three issues, and insisted that the fourth issue was sufficient to cover the matters in controversy.
Upon the verdict the court rendered a judgment for the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed.
After stating the case: There is nothing in this case, unless we greatly misunderstand it, but an issue of fact. The jury have found that the note was given subject to the written condition that the defendant might reject the policy within thirty days, upon due notice, (12) which was given. The position taken by the plaintiff, that the evidence tended to contradict a written instrument, and, besides, a negotiable instrument, is clearly without any support in law. In the first place, the written agreement was made at the very time the note was given, as a part of the same transaction, and the plaintiff is the original payee. This does not bring the case within the rule of evidence by which it is forbidden to vary or contradict a written instrument, nor within that other rule protecting an innocent purchaser for value of a negotiable instrument. It is not a correct proposition in law, as stated in the plaintiff's prayer for instructions, that a negotiable instrument is of such high dignity as a medium of exchange that the parties cannot annex any lawful condition to its payment at the time it is given, when the action to recover it is between the original parties to it. The question is fully discussed in Evansv. Freeman,
This suit is nothing more nor less than an attempt by the plaintiff to recover from the defendant a sum of money contrary to his express written agreement, which was executed cotemporaneously with the note, that the defendant should not be liable therefor if he rejected the policy, which he did. That is, if the verdict is true; and there was strong evidence to support it.
The plaintiff moved in this Court for a new trial, upon the ground that, since the trial of the cause, he had discovered other material evidence. We have examined this evidence, and find it to be merely cumulative to that introduced at the trial, and, besides, it does not impress us *10 as having sufficient weight so as to render it probable or likely that the result would be changed by it if a new trial is awarded. The nature of the evidence would indicate, too, that the plaintiff had been guilty of laches in not discovering it before he did. As he wrote the letter to the defendant, dated 15 May, 1905, and countersigned the receipt, he should certainly have known of their existence and called for their (13) production at the trial by a specific notice or demand upon the defendant.
In Turner v. Davis,
The objection to the issues is untenable. Those submitted fully presented all the material matters in controversy, and when this is the case the issues are sufficient for the purpose of the trial. Deaver v.Deaver,
No error.
Cited: Hughes v. Crooker,
(14)