153 Ind. 508 | Ind. | 1899
Complaint in two paragraphs, (1) to foreclose a laborer’s lien, and (2) to set aside conveyances made by appellee James Groenendyke to certain co-appellees to defraud appellant. Answer of denial and payment. Special findings of facts and conclusions of law. Exceptions to conclusions by appellant. Motions for a venire de novo and for a new trial overruled.
As appellant recovered part of his debt and established his lien upon the factory and land, the material controversy involves only the question of payment. Concerning this, the special finding shows that appellee James Groenendyke (hereafter called appellee) owned and operated a factory from 1889 to 1896; that during that time appellant worked continuously as a laborer in appellee’s factory under employment by appellee; that on January 1, 1893, an accounting showed that appellee owed appellant for labor $996.22; th'at on that day appellee executed notes for that amount payable to the order of appellant’s wife at a bank in this State and delivered them to appellant; that there was no expressed intention or agreement between the parties as to the effect-the.delivery of the notes should have; that the notes were never delivered by appellant to his wife, but were retained by appellant until after appellee conveyed his property in 1896; that appellee did not know that the notes were not delivered by appellant to his wife until after the conveyances were made; that when the conveyances were made appellant had earned as wages since January 1, 1893, $1,195.37, and appellee had paid appellant $1,029.31. In his complaint, appellant sought to recover on his account for wages from 1889 to 1896 and brought the notes into court for cancelation. The question is, Roes the finding support the conclusion and judgment that all of appellant’s claim had been paid except $166.06?
The first case, Maxwell v. Day, supra, follows a number of Massachusetts decisions. In Curtis v. Hubbard, 9 Met. 322, that court, by Shaw, C. J., said that the rule “is founded on the consideration that, when a note is given for goods, even if it is not negotiated, it is equally convenient to the creditor (and generally more so) to sue on the note, as on the original consideration, and so there is no reason for considering the original simple contract as still subsisting and in force; and therefore a presumption arises that it was intended by the parties that the note should be deemed a satisfaction. But this is a presumption of fact, which may be rebutted by evidence showing that it was not so intended; and the fact that such presumption would deprive the party who takes the note of a substantial benefit, has a strong tendency
The same doctrine, namely, that whether or not the giving of a note is payment is a question of the intention with which it was given and accepted, that the giving of a negotiable note is only prima facie evidence of the parties’ intention that it should he treated as payment, and that this prima facie evidence may he met not only by direct testimony, hut also by circumstances from which a contrary intent may he inferred, is enunciated in Jouchert v. Johnson, 108 Ind. 436. In that case, it appeared in appellant’s cross-complaint that he made a loan to a married woman and took the husband’s negotiable note secured by the mortgage of the wife and her husband upon the wife’s land. A demurrer had been sustained to the cross-complaint. In reversing that ruling, this court, by Mitchell, J.,
The finding in the present case states evidence, namely, the circumstance of the execution and acceptance of the notes, from which the trier might have found as an ultimate fact that appellee gave and appellant accepted the notes with the intention that they should b'e deemed a satisfaction of appellant’s claim; and also evidence, namely, the circumstance that appellant’s account for wages was protected by an inchoate laborer’s lien, from which the trier might have found as an ultimate fact that the appellant did not accept the notes as payment and thereby waive his lien; 'but the finding is silent concerning the intention of the parties in giving and receiving the notes.
The finding can not be aided by the conclusions of law; nor may this court supply the facts by intendment where the finding sets forth merely evidence. Keating v. Vansickle, 74 Ind. 529, 39 Am. Rep. 101; Braden v. Lemmon. 127 Ind. 9; Craig v. Bennett, 146 Ind. 574.
The conclusions of law are not warranted by the finding of facts. But, as there was a defective attempt to cover the •issue of payment, the order should be to grant a venire denovo.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to sustain the motion for a venire de novo.