46 S.E. 519 | N.C. | 1904
This action is brought to establish and enforce a parol trust. The plaintiff alleges that John Humphrey and his wife, being the owners of a tract of land in Craven County containing about ninety acres, contracted to sell the same to him at the price of $500, and that he, not then being able to pay the stipulated price, informed the defendant Stewart of his contract with the Humphreys, and requested the defendant to buy the land for him and allow him three years to pay him the purchase money; that the (288) defendant agreed to this proposal, with the proviso that the plaintiff should pay him $100 for the "accommodation," and the plaintiff assented to this proviso, and thereupon promised and agreed to pay the defendant the $100 and the purchase money within three years, at six per cent interest; that afterwards, on 28 October, 1901, Humphrey and his wife conveyed the land to the defendant, and on 10 December of the same year the defendant, in violation of his agreement with the plaintiff, and of the trust assumed by him, conveyed the land to one W. J. Arnold, who has taken possession of the premises under his deed; that Arnold agreed to pay for the land much more than the defendant paid the Humphreys for the same, and more than the plaintiff was required to pay the defendant under their contract; and that Arnold has made certain payments upon the purchase money which he agreed to pay to the defendant, the amount of which payments is not set forth. The plaintiff prayed judgment that the defendant be required to account for the profit which he has realized from the sale to Arnold.
The material allegations of the complaint were denied in the answer of the defendant. The court submitted to the jury two issues, as follows: 1. Did John Humphrey and wife contract with the plaintiff to sell him the land, as alleged in the complaint? 2. Did the defendant, prior to the conveyance of the land to him by Humphrey and wife, contract with the plaintiff to buy the land described in the complaint for him?
There was evidence tending to sustain the plaintiff's *211 allegations, and there was also evidence tending to show that the defendant bought the land from Humphrey without any understanding or agreement that the purchase was made for the plaintiff, though the allegation of the complaint, which is supported by proof that the defendant bought the land from Humphrey with the knowledge of the latter's prior contract with the (289) plaintiff, is not distinctly and positively denied by the defendant in his testimony.
The jury, under the instructions of the court, returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, answering both issues "Yes," and upon the verdict, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, to which the defendant excepted and appealed.
At the close of the testimony the defendant moved to nonsuit the plaintiff, and, the motion being denied, he excepted. He also excepted to the refusal of the court to submit certain issues which were tendered by him, and to certain instructions given by the court to the jury, but these exceptions we do not deem it necessary to consider.
In order to prove that he made a contract with Humphrey to buy the land before the latter conveyed it to the defendant the plaintiff proposed to show by his own testimony the contents of a letter or postal card which he had received from Humphrey, and which he alleged had been lost. This letter or postal card contained evidence of the fact that the plaintiff had an agreement with Humphrey to buy the land. The defendant objected to this testimony upon the ground, among others, that it had not been shown and did not appear that the plaintiff had made any search for the letter. In regard to the loss of the letter the plaintiff testified: "I received a letter from Humphrey which is lost; I cannot find it." This was all the testimony relating to the loss of the letter or postal card. The defendant's objection was overruled, and he excepted.
This ruling was erroneous. There must be at least some evidence of a search for the paper alleged to be lost before parol evidence of its contents can become competent. The rule of the law is: "If the instrument is lost the party is required to give some evidence that such a paper once existed, though slight evidence is sufficient for this purpose, and that a bona fide (290) and diligent search has been unsuccessfully made for it in the place where it was most likely to be found, if the nature of the case admits such proof. What degree of diligence in the search is necessary it is not easy to define, as each case depends much on its peculiar circumstances; and the question whether the loss of the instrument is sufficiently proved to admit secondary evidence of its contents is to be determined. *212 by the court and not by the jury. But it seems that in general the party is expected to show that he has in good faith exhausted, in a reasonable degree, all the sources of information and means of discovery which the nature of the case would naturally suggest and which were accessible to him." 1 Greenleaf Ev., sec. 558 (16 Ed., sec. 563b).
In Bradner on Evidence, p. 130, sec. 18, the rule is thus stated: "The burden of showing the loss of a written instrument is upon the party seeking to introduce secondary evidence. He must establish its loss by proof that he has made diligent but unavailing search for the paper in places where it would be most likely to be found, and the degree of diligence necessary to be shown must depend upon the value and importance of the lost document. But it is sufficient if he has in good faith exhausted, in a reasonable degree, all the sources of information and means of discovery which the nature of the case would naturally suggest. If the instrument was executed in duplicate due diligence must be shown to ascertain whether any counterpart exists, and if so, to obtain it to be used upon the trial. Where it may be in either of two or more places all the places should be searched; and if it be in the custody of either of two or more persons inquiry should be made of all of them. The search should have been made as recent as possible."
Wharton says: "The production of proof, satisfactory to the court, that it is out of the power of the party to produce the document alleged to be lost, and of its prior existence (291) and genuineness, is a prerequisite condition of the admission of secondary evidence of its contents. The question of such admissibility is for the court. Loss, like all evidential facts, can be only inferentially proved. In one sense no instrument can be spoken of as lost that is not destroyed or irrevocably out of the power of the party desiring to produce it. A check or promissory note may be carefully put away in a book and the place of deposit forgotten. Every effort may be honestly made to find it; it is all the time in the seeker's library, in the very place where he put it; yet after all it may be hopelessly lost. It is not necessary, therefore, to prove exhaustively that the paper exists nowhere. It is sufficient if the party offering parol proof shows such diligence as is usual with good business men under the circumstances." Wharton on Evidence, secs. 141, 142.
The principle upon which secondary evidence is admitted to prove the contents of a lost document, though stated by the text-writers with some difference in phraseology, is not substantially changed thereby, and it has frequently been recognized, approved *213
and applied by this Court. In one of the earliest cases relating to the question this Court said: "It is a rule of evidence that the best which the nature of the case will admit of must be produced. When that cannot be produced nonproduction of it is accounted for, the next best evidence in the party's power is required. It is that rule of evidence which required the production of the bond upon the trial. In order to dispense with the production of it it was incumbent on the plaintiff to give all the evidence reasonably in his power to prove the loss of it." Dumas v. Powell,
The difficulty is not so much in determining or stating what the rule is as in deciding how it should be applied. It is undeniably true that questions as to the existence of facts rendering secondary evidence of the contents of written instruments admissible are to be decided in the first instance by the court, unless in deciding such a question the judge would in effect decide the very matter in issue. Stephens's Dig. Ev. (May Ed.), 118; Hendon v. R. R.,
It is the duty of the judge to state the facts found by him from the evidence, if requested to do so by the party excepting to his ruling (Holden v. Purefoy,
While the Court in Gillis v. R. R., supra, says, "Where the facts upon which the nisi prius judge acted are found, it is competent for this Court to review his ruling and determine whether the testimony was sufficient in law to justify his conclusion," the general trend of the decision in that case is that the matter lies solely within the discretion of the presiding judge, and it was so understood and construed by one, at least, of the dissenting justices, whose view is sustained by the reference of the Court to the case ofBonds v. Smith,
In our case the witness testified that the paper was lost and he could not find it. This was all the evidence, and we must pass upon its sufficiency as matter of law to show that a proper search was made for the original, and we have concluded, after a careful review of the authorities, that it was not sufficient for that purpose. The witness does not testify distinctly or positively that he ever made any search. If there was a search the fact is not stated but left merely to inference, and it does not, therefore, appear what kind of search was made. As to this important matter we can do nothing but conjecture.
There is another objection to the proof of loss. The fact to be found by the court is that the paper is lost and cannot be found or produced, and the witness, instead of testifying as to what kind of search he had made, so that the court could find the ultimate fact of loss, testified directly to the fact itself, and thereby substitutes his opinion or judgment upon the question for that of the court. This certainly is not a compliance with the rule. In order to show the loss of the paper it was necessary that a diligent search should have been made for it where it was most likely to be found (Simpson v. Dall, supra), and this must be shown by evidence and not by the mere opinion of the witness, nor (297) by his deduction from the facts as they may have appeared to him, but which were not disclosed to the court.
In Parker v. Dunkel, 3 Watts Serg.,
In Justice v. Luther,
In Lyon v. Washburn, 3 Col., 204, the Court says: "To show in general terms that a writing is lost, without showing search or inquiry for it, has never been regarded as sufficient to admit secondary evidence of its contents." In McFarland v. Patterson,
As the case must go back for a new trial we would suggest that the second issue be amended so as to read substantially as follows: "Did the defendant, knowing that Humphrey and wife had contracted to sell the land to the plaintiff, and before contracting with Humphrey for the purchase of the land, and before receiving a deed therefor, agree with the plaintiff to buy the land for him, as alleged in the complaint?" This issue, it seems to us, more clearly conforms to the particular allegations of the complaint than the one submitted at the last trial, and there was evidence to support an affirmative finding upon it.
It may be well to call attention to the fact that the allegations of the third section of the complaint are not sufficiently denied in the answer. The plaintiff alleges in the third section (299) of his complaint that he informed the defendant of his agreement with Humphrey to buy the land from him, and then contracted with the defendant that the latter should buy the land from Humphrey for the plaintiff, and allow him, the plaintiff, three years to pay for it, and also to pay the additional sum of one hundred dollars, which the defendant was to receive as the consideration for his undertaking. In the answer the defendant merely states that "he is informed and believes that the allegations of the third article are not true, and therefore denies the same." Whether he had been informed by the plaintiff of the Humphrey contract was a matter which was necessarily within his personal knowledge, and the allegation in regard to it should have been met by a direct denial, or at least the statement of a "want of recollection" of it, if he intended to raise an issue in regard to it. GasCo. v. Mfg. Co.,
There was error in the ruling of the court below upon the evidence, for which there must be another trial.
New trial.
Cited: S. c.,
(300)