17 F. 130 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado | 1883
(orally).
Gentlemen of the jury: This is largely a case to be determined upon questions of fact. Such questions are exclusively for the consideration of the jury. The province of the Court is only to call your attention to the principles of law by which you are to be guided in the application of testimony.
The plaintiff, Mrs. Susan Foster, sues the defendant, The Ohio-Colorado Reduction and Mining Company, a corporation, and she alleges that company is indebted to her upon a promissory note for $10,500. The defense is two-fold:
First—That this is not the note of this defendant corporation; and
Second—That there was no valid, subsisting debt from the corporation to Mrs. Foster at the time the note was given and for which it was given.
These, then, gentlemen, are the two matters for you to consider.
Upon the first question as to whether this is the note of the defendant corporation, that is to be determined upon the ques
These are the two theories, gentlemen, and here is all this evidence, you must take it and determine.
It appears that it is a controversy of long standing; the parties live at great distance; it is, necessarily, very expensive litigation. Therefore, it is exceedingly desirable that you should go to your room in a spirit of mutual concession, to hear and receive each other’s judgments and views, to arrive at a conclusion, and put an end to this controversy.
If you find for the plaintiff, your verdict will be the amount of this note, with interest to this date. If you find for the defendant, you will simply say so.
Verdict: “We, the jury, find the issues in this case for the defendant.”