70 Vt. 144 | Vt. | 1897
The plaintiff claims to recover one-half the 'amount of a promissory note, executed by himself and the intestate, canceled by the stamp of a bank, and produced by him on the trial without other evidence as to the fact or manner of payment. It is said in II. Greenleaf on Evidence, § 527, that the possession of a security by the debtor, after the day of payment, is prima facie evidence that he has paid it. It is said in a note, however, upon the authority of Heald v. Davis, 11 Cush. 319, that this rule does not apply to a possession by one of two joint promissors in an action brought by him to recover of his co-promissor one-half of the amount of such security. In Chandler v. Davis, 47 N. H. 463, the reasoning of the Massachusetts decision was rejected as unsatisfactory, and a contrary conclusion was reached, which is probably sustained by the weight of authority. But the rule of the Massachusetts decision was announced in this State in the earlier case of Mills v. Hyde, 19 Vt. 59; and while there were facts in that case which might serve to distinguish it from the one at bar, we are inclined to adhere to the reasoning then adopted by our court. The suit referred to was between co-promissors, and the court said: “If the notes were not destroyed at the time they were taken up, they must necessarily have passed into the hands of some one, and it is not seen why the possession of them by the plaintiff is not as consistent with the supposition that the payment was made jointly by the plaintiff and defendant, as with the idea that it was made solely by the plaintiff.’’ Wehold that the mere production of this note by the plaintiff is not sufficient to entitle him to contribution.
Judgment affirmed.