44 Mo. 195 | Mo. | 1869
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action, originally brought before a justice of the peace, on a promissory note made by defendants to plaintiff’s intestate. The note was dated on the 21st day of February, 1847, and on the 10th day of November, 1855, a small credit was indorsed on it in the handwriting of English, the payee and intestate. The suit was commenced on the 23d clay of October, 1865, and the defense set up was the statute of limitations. The defendants had judgment in the magistrate’s court, and, on appeal to the Circuit Court, the note was read in evidence, and the indorsement thereon, íyithout objection. No other evidence was offered or introduced, and the court affirmed the decision of the justice of the peace. The single question presented for decision is whether the indorsement in the handwriting of the payee was sufficient evidence of payment to take the case out of the operation of the statute of limitations. The indorsement was read without objection, and it is therefore evidence before the court.
If the date is at a period after the demand became stale, or affected by the statute of limitations, the interest of the creditor to fabricate it would be so strong as to countervail the presumption of payment, and require the aid of some other proof; and the case would be the same if the indorsement bore a date within that period, the instrument itself being otherwise subject to the bar arising from lapse of time. (1 Greenl. Ev. § 122, n. 2.)
The time when the indorsement was made is a fact to be settled by the jury, and to this end the writing must be laid before them. If there is no evidence to the contrary, the presumption is that the indorsement was made at the time it purports to bear date, and the burden of proving the date to be false lies on the other party. But if the indorsement does not purport to be made cotemporaneously with the receipt of the money, it is inadmissible as a part of the res gestee. The inquiry which is usually
There is another view of this case which is entitled to consideration, if the jury find that the indorsement was made at the time it bears date. It has been often held that entries made by persons deceased, against their interest, are admissible in evidence. (Warren v. Greenville, 2 Strange, 1129 ; Higham v. Ridgeway, 10 East, 109.) In Doe v. Robson, Lord Ellenborough says: “ The ground upon which this evidence has been received is that there is a total absence of interest in the persons making the entries to pervert the fact, and at the same time a competency in them to know it."
In the present case, the indorsement appears to have been made nearly two years before the note expired; the intestate was, therefore, under no temptation to make it for the sake of evidence, for the statute would not be pleadable in law during that length of time. The indorsement, then, was clearly against his interest, furnishing proof that he had received part payment on the note. I think the indorsement was at least prima facie evidence, and should have been so considered.
The judgment must therefore be reversed and the cause remanded.