77 Me. 263 | Me. | 1885
This case having been submitted to auditors comes before this court upon their report with the documents and evidence attached, with the provision that if in the " opinion of the court the plaintiff has made out a prima facie case for any balance, the action is to stand for trial upon such items as the court shall find the plaintiff has made a legal prima facie case to sustain, otherwise, judgment for the defendant shall be rendered in accordance with the law of the case.”
Under this report the first question that arises is whether the plaintiff has made out a prima facie case for " any balance ” in its favor. The report of the auditors shows a balance for the plaintiff and so far perhaps a prima, facie case for that balance. But from the terms of the report as well as from the course pursued by the counsel in the argument we do not understand that the balance so found is sufficient, or that the parties so understood it, but rather that the decision shall rest upon the facts reported.
The auditors have not made a full report of the evidence upon which their conclusions are based, but have reported what certainly appears to be a full, fair and clear report of the facts upon which their statement of the account was made up. Belying upon those facts there are several items allowed by the auditors to which the defendant objects and some credit dis
There is one item claimed by the defendant as credit, the money received by the bank upon the testator’s note for two thousand dollars, upon which the auditors have reported the facts but which they have neither allowed nor rejected; leaving it to the decision of the court. Assuming the account as stated by the auditors to be correct as far as it goes, if this item should be allowed, it changes the balance, and upon this question depends the result of this case in its present stage.
Ought the proceeds of this note to be allowed the defendant as a credit ? From the facts as they appear in the report we think they should be. The note was in fact never delivered to the bank. It remained under the maker’s control so long as he lived, was payable by its terms only from an insurance upon his life except at his.option, and it does not appear that during his life he elected to pay it in an}' other way, nor was it in his lifetime accepted by the bank for its officers had no knowledge of its existence until after his death.
But independent of these considerations by an indorsement upon the back of the note which became a part of it, it was given to make up in part for a loss for which the maker was neither legally nor morally responsible. The note was therefore without consideration and not valid or binding upon the maker even as a gift as is universally conceded, certainly since the case of Parish v. Stone, 14 Pick. 198. It could not therefore have been collected by any legal process and the appropriation of the money received upon the insurance policy to its payment was without authority, or validity.
The note itself, as well as the indorsement upon the back, shows that it was secured upon a life insurance policy. The policy shows an absolute assignment to the bank, except so far as it was limited by a separate, but accompanying writing. This assignment, like the note, was not delivered or accepted, nor was it intended to operate during the assignor’s lifetime.
There is, therefore, from the facts reported, no prima facie balance in favor of the plaintiff, and under the provisions of the report, the court must render " such judgment for the defendant as shall be in accordance with the law of the ease. ”
That judgment can not be for any balance, for the reason already given, that no account has been -filed in set-off, nor can any specific balance be made, for at-most under this report, we can only decide whether any item is prima facie sustained by the facts, and can not decide its validity as upon a full hearing upon its merits. Therefore, no judgment should be entered which will preclude the plaintiff from a further healing upon these items in another action, so far as they may be available in defence of a suit to recover the money paid upon the note or otherwise. For these reasons the entry must be,
Plaintiff nonsuit.