29 Mo. 386 | Mo. | 1860
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit on a promissory note, and it is alleged that the defendant Cope and Weedon Spenny, the testator of the defendant, by their promissory note promised to pay the plaintiff the sum stated in the note. Stephens denies that his testator executed the note sued upon, and that it is or was his act. Cope denied that the note was his or that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment against him. A witness, who had seen Spenny and Cope write, was of the opinion that their signatures to the note wHi genuine. There was other testimony to the same effect. The note sued on was signed first by W. W. Norris, and after his name follow the names of others and of Cope and Spenny. Norris was a son-in-law of Spenny, and absconded some twelve months after the date of the note, which was payable twelve months after date, which was the 25th of October, 1856. The note was presented to Spenny by an agent of the plaintiff to know if his signature was genuine. Spenny remarked, after having examined it, that several notes had been presented to him which had his name signed to them, but that his name to such notes had been forged by W. W. Norris; that he did not like to speak of the forgeries committed by Norris, as it was a delicate subject, Norris being his son-in-law, having at different times married t^wo of his daughters. He requested the agent not to be uneasy, or give himself any trouble about the note ; that it is and was all right, and would be paid, and promised to pay his proportion of it. A witness, Dow, having-expressed the opinion that the signature of Cope to the note was genuine, the plaintiff, in confirmation of his evidence, offered a paper in the possession of the witness, known to be signed by Cope, in order that the jury might compare the
All of the instructions will not be noticed, as they are numerous, and, from the state of the pleadings, could not legally affect the determination of the controversy. The only matter in issue was the execution of the note sued on by I Cope and Spenny. TJjjere was no foundation in the pleadings for any other instruction than one relating to the execution of the instrument on which the suit was founded. There is no ground for an estoppel. If Spenny had assured a third person that his signature was genuine, and that person had paid value for the note in consideration of such * | assurance, there might be some room for the doctrine of p estoppel.
Standing as the case did before the jury, the first instruction given by the court for the defendant was clearly erroneous. The instruction was to the effect that it devolved on the plaintiff to prove that the signatures of Cope and Spen-ny to the note were genuine. Now what idea did the court attach to the word “ genuine ?” Was it intended to signify that the names must have been written by the parties themselves and with their own hands, and that they could not by adoption make a signature of their name made by another their own act ? If such was the design of the instruction, it was not the law. If such was not its purpose, then it is erroneous as tending to mislead the jury. It is competent to a person"to make a note his own either by signing it with his own hand or by adopting the signing made by another in
We find the law, so far as we have been enabled to examine, against the admission of the evidence relative to the skill of Norris in imitating the handwriting of others and his capability of committing forgery. In the case of Balcetti v. Serane, Peake’s N. P. 192, it was held that in an action against the acceptor of a bill of exchange, who defends himself on the ground of his acceptance being forged by another, evidence that that person forged the acceptor’s name to an other bill and absconded on that account is not admissible. The case of Rowt’s adm’r v. Kile’s adm’r, Gilmer, 202, would seem to intimate a contrary doctrine; but the subsequent case of Viney v. Barss, 1 Esp. N. P. 292, meets the point of distinction made in the case in Virginia, and holds that when a party defends a bill of exchange on the ground that his acceptance has been forged, it is not admissible evidence that the party who negotiated such bill had been guilty of other forgeries.
The evidence in relation to the comparison of handwriting was properly excluded, as the fact did not bring the case within the rule as stated by Greenleaf. (1 Greenl. Ev. 581.)
The other judges concurring, judgment reversed and remanded.