8 N.H. 334 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1836
The first objection taken in this case is, that it is incumbent on the plaintiff to show that the notes filed under the general count for money had and received, were endorsed to the plaintiff prior to the commencement of the suit.
The objection seems to have been relied on principally on account of the general nature of the declaration, and for the reason that the notes were not declared on in the common form, with the allegation of their endorsement on the day of their date.
In 5 Mass. 324, Webster vs. Lee, it was holden by Chief Justice Parsons, that the burthen of proof as to the time of the endorsement of a note was upon the maker, and that if the maker of a note set up a payment to the promisee in his defence, he must prove the payment to have been made before the endorsement, otherwise his defence would fail.
In the case of Hendricks vs. Judah, 1 Johns. 319, the same doctrine is holden. In that case, in an action by an endorsee of a promissory note against the maker, the maker was not allowed to prove a set-off against the original payee, unless he previously shew that the note was endorsed after it became due, or that the endorsement, though made before, was made for the purpose of defrauding the maker of his set-off. And the case goes still further, and not only shews the burthen of proof, as to the time of the endorsement, to rest upon the maker of the note, but establishes the rule as to the ordinary presumption of the time of endorsement. The note there in suit was drawn in England, payable on demand, and suit was brought upon it here within a year after its date ; and the court held that “ it was to be intended, “ no evidence to the contrary being shown, that it was en- “ dorsed soon after its date, and a set-off by the maker “against the payee was rejected.”
The presumption, in such cases, is that the note was endorsed within a reasonable time after its date, unless the contrary is proved. Bayley on Bills 86.
Had the note in this case been declared on, these authorities would have been directly in point. But does it make any difference, in the rule of evidence, whether the note itself is declared on, or is merely offered as evidence under the general count ?
The second objection taken by the defendant relates to the admissibility of a deposition used on a former trial, to which deposition no objection was then made. It has uniformly been considered that in such case all objections as to matter of form are waived : and where a deposition contains secondary evidence, and no objection was taken on this account on the first trial, it is contended that there is a propriety in adopting the same rule. It is unnecessary to determine how this may be.
By the case it appears that the books which were referred to by the witness, and which it was insisted upon should be produced as the best testimony, were books of a corporation without the state, beyond the process of the court, and not subject to the control of the witness. The testimony, therefore, was the best of which the nature of the case admitted, and comes within the exception to the general rule.
Judgment on the verdict for the plaintiff.