177 Mass. 389 | Mass. | 1901
This is an action by an indorsee against the maker of a promissory note. The jury were instructed as
It is true that the answer filed in the Municipal Court, put in issue all questions raised by the averments of the declaration, and the burden was on the plaintiff to prove the indorsement of the note by the payee. On this point the plaintiff testified in detail to numerous conversations with the defendant after the maturity of the note, in which the defendant promised to pay him the note. He said that on the first of these occasions the defendant had another note which he endeavored to have the plaintiff take in renewal of this, and that the plaintiff then showed him this note, and told him he would not accept the other in renewal, because this had been protested, and held the indorser as well as the defendant. He also testified that he paid $100 for the note, and that he saw Russell, the indorser, sign his name upon it in indorsement of it. This testimony was uncontradicted, and the defendant introduced no evidence. It is true that the judge could not rule as matter of law that this part of the plaintiff’s case was made out, for the question raised by the answer was one of fact for the jury. Devine v. Murphy, 168 Mass. 249. The charge was therefore inaccurate in failing to present to the jury one of the questions of fact .raised by the pleadings, even if the fact was proved by testimony, in such detail and with such a manner that there could be no reasonable doubt of the truth of it.
The real question before us is whether the defendant presented this question of law to the court, and saved it in such a way as to entitle him to a new trial on the exception. The course of the trial was such that the judge manifestly took the indorsement of the note not only as a proved and undisputed,
The exception to that part of the charge which authorized the allowance of the costs of protest is said to be founded on the failure to allege in the declaration that there was a protest. But the declaration contains a claim for costs of protest, and no question in regard to the form or sufficiency of the declaration was raised at the trial.
The note and the notarial certificate were rightly admitted in evidence. Pub. Sts. c. 77, § 22.
jExceptions overruled.