This action was brought on a promissory note for $1,500 dated October 10, 1899, signed by the defendant
The delivery to the plaintiff is established by the testimony of the plaintiff that the note was delivered to her, that she has it and produces it at the trial, and that she is the payee named in the note. This is neither contradicted nor objected to.
The plaintiff was the second wife of Eden Drake, defendant’s son, and was married to him in 1886. They had a family of four children. Plaintiff’s husband, Eden Drake, died September 10, 1908, and defendant’s husband, his father, died Eebruary 21, 1908. Nine hundred dollars of the money loaned by the plaintiff to defendant was money of the plaintiff drawn by her out of the bank for that purpose, $200 otherwise furnished hy her, and $400 contributed from her husband, making the $1,500. Plaintiff received the note from her husband and read it and handed it back to him, and either the husband or the plaintiff then put it in a safe in the house in which both kept private papers and to which both had access. Her husband was intrusted with the-management of the plaintiff’s affairs. In the spring of 1905 the plaintiff’s husband was looking for the note, asked the-plaintiff if she had seen it, and plaintiff also looked for it then, hut could not find it. There was up to this time no
There is no competent evidence against the decision of the circuit court, and the judgment must be affirmed.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
