77 F. 862 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota | 1896
This cause being at issue and ready for hearing at the general term of this court begun and holdén in the city of Duluth, Minn., on the 13th day of October, 1896, was by stipulation of the parties set down for hearing and final- argument before the judge of said court at chambers, either at St. Paul or Minneapolis, and, pursuant to said stipulation, was thereafter, on the 11th day of December, 1896. brought on for hearing at chambers in thé city of Minneapolis in said district. The complainant appeared by Stringer & .Seymour, her attorneys; and the defendants Mary A. Lambert, Alfred H. Lambert, and Ezra F. Lambert, by their attorney, William Gr. White, present and file briefs and arguments in said cause.
These defendants, by their said counsel, urge several objections made by them before the referee to the taking of the evidence in the cause. It appears, from the record filed by the. referee, that the counsel for complainant, at the commencement of the taking of the testimony, requested that the witnesses Ezra F. Lambert and A. H. Lambert be examined separately, and not in the presence of each other, and that A. H. Lambert be excluded from the room while the witness Ezra F. Lambert was testifying in the suit, and that the referee directed that this be done and that all the witnesses be examined separately from each other. Counsel for these defendants in his brief urges that this was error on the part of the referee, as the witnesses Ezra F. Lambert and A. H. Lambert were each parties to the cause, and had a right, to be present during the taking of the testimony of all the witnesses, and that the rule of practice permitting witnesses to be examined separately from each other would not apply .to parties to the. cause. It is probable that this was a valid
Another objection, urged in the brief of counsel for these defendants, relates to the admission of the books of J. G. Norton, the agent of complainant, as to the transactions in dispute. There is nothing in the point that these books were not proven in accordance with the statutes of Minnesota relating to account books, as the books were not introduced for the purpose of proving any items of account. They were simply introduced as entries claimed to have been made at the times when the transactions actually occurred, and only for the purpose of corroborating the testimony of J. O. Norton as to the dates of those transactions, and were competent as entries purporting to have been made on those very dates. The rulings upon the other objections as to the admission of testimony before the referee have been noted by me upon the record of the testimony on file, and need no further mention.
From the admissions in the pleadings, and the evidence on file presented at the hearing, the following facts are found: (1) That the residence and citizenship of the parties to the cause were and an-as stated in complainant’s bill of complaint in this suit. (2) That on the tilth day of February, 1892, defendants Mary A. Lambert, Alfred H. Lambert, and Ezra F. Lambert applied to the complainant to loan to them the sum of $3,500, for the term of three years, and then and there offered to secure the payment thereof by mortgage upon certain lands situate in Pine county, Minn., owned by the defendant Mary A. Lambert; that the said application was accepted, and the complainant then agreed to make such loan, but, as the defendants desired to obtain that amount of money at once, and some time was necessary to an examination of said land and the curing of some imperfections in said title, it was agreed that complainant should then make said loan, and pass over said amount of money to such defendants, and as a temporary security therefor take the note of the defendant Ezra F. Lambert, secured by collateral; that thereupon the defendant Ezra F. Lambert made, executed, and delivered to the complainant his promissory note, a true copy of which is set forth in the answer of the defendants Lambert in this suit, and turned over and delivered to the said complainant the certificates of stock referred to and described in the same note; that thereupon, on the same day, the said complainant paid over to the said defendant Ezra F. Lambert, for himself and Mary A. Lambert and Alfred H. Lambert, the sum of $3,500, and thereafter the title to said land was examined, perfected, and accepted by the complainant,
As- a conclusion from 'he foregoing facts it follows that the complainant, is entitled to the relief prayed for in her bill of. complaint, and a .decree may be prepared accordingly.