Drury v. White

10 Mo. 354 | Mo. | 1847

Napton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court'.

This was an action on the case brought by Benjamin White against Charles J. Drury, Post Master, and Joseph P. Wiseman, his deputy, to recover two hundred dollars, alleged to have been sent by mail to the-plaintiff, and to have been lost through the carelessness and negligence of defendants. The third count of the declaration was in trover. The plea was not guilty, A trial was had in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, aud the verdict was for'the plaintiff; a motion to set the verdict aside was overruled, and an appeal was taken to this Court.

It appeared from the testimony given on the plaintiff’s behalf, that Joseph C. White, of Maryland, wrote a letter to the plaintiff enclosing therein four fifty dollar hills on the Bank of Baltimore, and directing it to Danville, Montgomery County, Missouri, deposited it in the hands of Edmund Fallen, the sub-deputy Post Master at Poolsville, Montgomery County, Maryland. This was on Saturday, the 20th day of January, 1844, and was done in presence of a witness, who saw the said deputy Post Master envelope the letter and direct it to Danville, &c., observing that it would go sooner when directed in that way than when sent through a distributing office. It appears, also, from the mail books of the office at Poolsville, that a letter was mailed at that office on the 20th January, 1844, directed to Danville, Montgomery County, Mo., and also another on the 23d January, 1844, directed to the same office in Missouri. These letters were each charged with single postage, and marked 25 cents on the outside. A way hill was produced on the trial, supposed to be the one accompanying the letter of the 20th January, 1844, which it seems from the testimony of Saunders, a traveling post office sub-agent, was procured from Brown his principal, and by Brown procured from the defendant at Washington. The clerk who attended to this branch of business in the post office department, stated that he found a post bill purporting to be from Poolsville to Danville, dated 20th January, 1844, *357for the letter sentcn the 23rd of same month and year. The Auditor of the Treasury for the post office department stated that his books showed ’fhe returns from Poolsville from January to March, 1844, and among 'them two unpaid letters directed to Danville, one sent on the 20th January, and the other on the 23rd, but the returns from Danville showed the receipt of only one letter on the 8th February from Poolsville, dated 20th January, 1844, and marked unpaid, (25 cents.)

It appears that the post office agent called upon Drury and Wiseman in the summer of 1844,, and examined the transcript of mails received at Danville during the months of January and February. He found an entry made February 9th, of a letter received from the office of Poolsville, 'dated 20th January. This entry was, as Drury informed the agent, in the hand-writing of Wiseman. No entry was found of any receipt of the letter of the 23rd January. By enquiries it appeared that the letter written on the 23rd, and which was addressed to Mrs. Gott, had -arrived, and was obtained from the person to whom it was directed.

A letter was read upon the trial from Drury t© Joseph C. White, dated July 23rd, 1844, enquiring of said White as to the numbers, dates, &c., •of the bank notes he had transmitted to the plaintiff. In this letter the writer acknowledged the‘great probability that the letter had reached his office, and desired the numbers of the.notes that he might trace them up if practicable.

Evidence was given to show that the office at Danville was carelessly ■conducted, and was kept in such a situation in the store room of said •defendants that letters might be abstracted from the case or box in which they were kept without detection. Evidence was also given to show by the acknowledgements of one of the defendants, that neither the plaintiff, •nor any of his children or servants had gotten the letter directed to him from Poolsville and containing the notes aforesaid.

The defendants asked the following instructions : —

1st. The jury are notbound to credit the testimony of witnesses whose character for truth has -not been assailed by other witnesses, but must give to every witness the credit to which in their judgment he is entitled under the circumstances.

2nd. The jury have the right to give just such credit to the testimony of a witness as they may think proper.

3rd. Although a witness is not incompetent to testify, yet his relation to the parties or to the subject matter of the suit may be considered by •■the jury as affecting his credibility, and they may give him just such ■credit as they may think proper.

*3584th. That it is prima fmie. eviden-ce that a letter is single which has-been charged single postage by the Post Master mailing it, and must be-so received until it is proved to- the contrary by sufficient credible testimony.

5th. A witness can only prove his own hand-writing, if it has been out of his possession in the same manner that others acquainted with it can* do, to the best of his knowledge and belief.

The Court refused to give these instructions, and the defendants excepted.

Only two questions seem to arise upon the record in this cause; the ■ first being whether this Court will set aside the verdict upon the ground that it is not sustained by the evidence, and- the second growing out of the instructions. '

The last point can scarcely adroit of argument. The instructions, however correct they may be in the abstract, appear to have no bearing upon any controverted or con-trovertible point in the case, and could therefore only have mislead the jury had they been given.- The questions at law, which were really involved i-n the case, remained without any exposition on the part oí the Court.

Under the circumstances, this Court would not be authorized to set-aside the verdict. The case was submitted to a jury without instructions. None were asked which could throw any light upon any legal-question which the testimony raised. The evidence seemed to establish beyond controversy that a letter was written by Joseph C. White to his brother in Missouri, enclosing $200 in Bank of Baltimore notes, and that this letter reached the post office at Danville-; there was proof to show that the plaintiff did not receive'this letter. The question of negligence was then left to the jury without any instructions on this point being asked by either party. It is too late now to say that the jury were not properly instructed in the law. It will not answer for a party to lie by and await the chances of a favorable verdict, and when the chance has proved against him, to turn round and complain of the failure of the-Court to give a correct exposition of the law to the jury. When such a course is taken, we must infer that the party preferred leaving the law and fact to the decision of the jury. There are plain cases, it is true, in which this Court has interfered, but we do not regard this as one of them,.

The other Judges concurring, the judgment is affirmed.