252 Mass. 113 | Mass. | 1925
This is an action to recover the balance due upon a promissory note, made by the defendants and payable to the order of the plaintiff. The note is dated November 11, 1912, for the sum of $2,900. The defendants are husband and wife. On or about the date of the note they-purchased from the plaintiff a parcel of real estate, the purchase price being $7,500. The terms of sale provided that the defendants should assume a mortgage for $2,600, pay $500 in cash, and be credited with $1,500 representing five years’ rent of a small building on the premises sold, which was to be occupied by the plaintiff’s husband and by a club; the balance was to be paid by giving a note for $2,900 secured by a mortgage on the real estate so sold. Although on the margin of the note it is recited that it is secured by a mortgage of real estate, no mortgage in fact was given.
The defendants contended at the trial and offered evidence to show that the full amount of the note had been paid to the plaintiff’s husband. The plaintiff testified that nothing had been paid on the principal except the first instalment of $200, and that no interest was paid after November 11,1915. She further testified that she never authorized her husband to
The only exception is to the refusal of the trial judge to give'the defendants’ fourth request, namely, “The possession of a note by the maker of it is some evidence of its payment and if the jury find that the plaintiff has by fraud or other improper means obtained the mortgage note in question from the defendant after the defendant had paid it, then the jury may find that that note would be the property of the defendant.”
When a promissory note comes into the possession of the maker such possession unexplained is prima facie evidence of payment by him. M’Gee v. Prouty, 9 Met. 547. Heald v. Davis, 11 Cush. 318. That evidence, however, may be controlled by other material evidence. Parks v. Smith, 155 Mass. 26, 31. Chandler v. Prince, 217 Mass. 451, 456.
If, as the plaintiff testified and the jury could have found, she by her husband and agent delivered the note to the defendants’ counsel at his request for inspection, and he thereafter, without authority, delivered it to the defendants, possession obtained by such unauthorized act would not be evidence that the note had been paid. There was nothing to warrant a finding that the plaintiff regained possession of
The case was submitted to the jury upon appropriate instructions by which they were to determine whether the note had been paid to the plaintiff or to any person authorized to accept payment for her. It results that the entry must be
Exceptions overruled.