111 Ky. 135 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901
Affirming.
B. EL Wisdom died on October 28, 1896, and appellees qualified as his executors. He left a large estate. In November, 1896, the appellant, the First National Bank of Paducah, presented to the executors a note dated August 22, 1896, due on demand, for $5,000, and purporting to be executed to it by the testator. Appellee, on February 9, 1897, paid appellant on the note $3,140; but after this refused to pay the balance, and instituted this action to recover of appellant th'e amount 'they had paid, alleging that the note was a forgery, and without consideration. The bank, by its answer, denied that the note was a forgery, and alleged that it was executed to it by the testator, who signed it with his own hand, and delivered it to the bank for the 'Sum of $5,000 loaned' at the time to him by it. A reply was filed denying these allegations, and on trial before a jury a verdict was returned in favor of the executors for the amount they had paid. Judgment was entered upon t-hiis verdict, and the bank appeals.
It is insisted for appellant that the court erred in allowing the executors to plead non est factum and want of consideration, on the ground that the two pleas cam not be joined. In Smith v. Doherty 109 Ky., 616 (22 R., 1238), (60 S. W., 380), this court held that the two pleas are not inconsistent, and they may both be made in the same pleading. The weight of authority and the reason of' the rule sustain this conclusion, especially in the case of a personal representative who has no knowledge of the facts.
At the date of the note M. GL Oope was’ president of the bank; T. A. Baker was cashier. Baker knew nothing ef the execution of the mote. The teller knew nothing about it. The only officer of the bank who professed to
Tt is earnestly insisted for appellant that there were ©rave errors in the admission of evidence on behalf of appellees. The court permitted T. E. Boswell to testify, in effect, as follows: “In the latter part of August, before Mr. Wisdom’s death, while Cope was president of the First National Bank, he stated he had a note for $10,000.00 signed by Mr. Wisdom. I did not see the note. I did not see the figures, nor the signature, but he showed me a paper, and said it was a note. amounting to ten thousand dollars of Mr. Wisdom. He stated to me that he had a note of Mr. Wisdom for ten thousand dollars. R. F. Allen and myself were on a note we had given for $5,000.00, and we wanted him to fix it up, and he had a note in his pocket, and he said he thought in a few weeks he could fix it up; that he had Mr. Wisdom’s note for ten thousand dollars.” On cross-examination, the witness stated: “He said he was going to buy some corn, and Wisdom was going into the deal with him. This occurred on the street, as he was coming from home.
It remains, therefore, to inquire whether the facts shown by the above evidence were relevant, and, as all the evidence seems governed by the same principles, it will be discussed together. The. general rule is that, where the question is whether a certain person forged a particular instrument, proof is inadmissible that on another occasion he forged another paper, wholly disconnected with the one in controversy. Dodge v. Haskell, 69 Me., 429; Dow v. Spenny, 29 Mo., 387; Viney v. Barss, 1 Esp., 293; Balcetti v. Serani, Peake, 192. The reason given in one case was that the plaintiff would not be prepared to show the genuineness of other writings, and in subsequent cases that such proof introduced a foreign and irrelevant matter, destroying the unity of the issue. On the other hand, where there is a connection between the transactions, they may be given in evidence. Thus in Knight v. Heath, 23 N. H., 410, the genuineness of a marriage certificate was in contest, and it was held competent to prove that a certificate purporting to be signed by a justice of the peace to the same effect, and written on the same piece of paper, was a forgery. The court said: "Where the object is to show the fraudulent character of a transaction or instrument, it is always competent to offer evidence of other transactions connected in point of time or other circumstances which may throw' light upon the principal case, even though that connection is more
Under these principles, how stands the case before us? Neither the note exhibited by Cope to Boswell, nor that exhibited to Ohowning, appears .since to have been, heard of, and it may be fairly assumed from the circumstances that both were forgeries. While the ‘evidence is not definite, we think it may also be fairly concluded from the proof that Cope was a defaulter to the bank before the discount of the note in contest on August 24th; that he concealed his delinquency at first by cash items, then by this paper; that later h'e prepared the notes shown to Boswell and Ohowning for the same purpose, and still later, as it became necessary, the notes of Hays and
It is also insisted for appellant that the court erred in allowing Wisdom’s pass book and check book to be shown to the jury, on the idea that books are never competent to prove a negative. The pass book was kept by ap
Appellees had the signature in contest and two other signatures of the testator, one at the foot of a check, and one on the back of a note, both clearly genuine, enlarged and reproduced by photography. These photographs were exhibited to the jury after proof by the photographers of their accuracy. Appellant complains of the admissions of the photographs.-^ But they were only a more enduring form of exhibiting the signatures to the jury as under a magnifying glass. ’ Such evidence has often, been held competent. Luco v. U. S., 28 How., 541, (16 L. Ed., 545); Marcy v. Barnes, 16 Gray, 161 (77 Am. Dec., 405); Elborn v. Zimpleman, 47 Tex., 503 (26 Am., Rep., 315); U. S. v. Ortiz, 176 U. S., 430 (20 Sup. Ct., 466, 44 L. Ed., 529).
The court instructed the jury that they should find for the bank if the testator signed and delivered to it the note. He also instructed them that, although the testator signed and delivered the note to the bank, yet if he did not re