162 Mass. 492 | Mass. | 1895
1. The exception taken by the defendant to the refusal of the presiding justice to rule, at the close of the evidence for the plaintiff, that upon the evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, need be no further considered than to say that the refusal was not a matter of exception, for the reason that the defendant did not rest his case upon that evidence. Hurley v. O’Sullivan, 137 Mass. 86, and cases cited.
2. At the close of all the evidence, the defendant requested three rulings: (1) that upon the uncontradicted facts, as shown
The action was in contract, and when the rulings now in question were refused, and the case submitted to the jury, the plaintiff’s case stood upon a single count, upon which he sought to recover from the defendant the sum of $3,200 for money lent by the plaintiff to the defendant on May 31,1893. The answer was a general denial, and there was no declaration in set-off. The action was in the name of the plaintiff, but had been brought by and was prosecuted for the .benefit of another person to whom the plaintiff had assigned the demand.
The circumstances which the evidence tended to prove were very unusual, and were such as might well lead the jury to doubt whether the oral testimony of either the plaintiff or the defendant was worthy of credit. The jury may well have found that both had colluded to obtain by means of false testimony the payment to the plaintiff by his trustees of a large sum of money which they could allow the plaintiff to have or could withhold from him in their discretion, and it would not be an unreasonable inference from the evidence that the plaintiff was by his testimony endeavoring to prejudice the rights of the plaintiff in interest, to whom he had assigned the demand in suit.
There was in evidence a bank check for the sum of $3,200, given by the plaintiff to the defendant on May 31, 1893, and it was admitted that the money was drawn upon the check by the defendant. The defendant testified that, substantially, the whole amount of the check was owed to him by the plaintiff, and testified to advances made by him to the plaintiff, the date
If the plaintiff gave to the defendant a check for $3,200 when he owed the defendant nothing, to enable the defendant to pay for a lot of land which he had bought, the jury might, in view of all the evidence, find that the transaction was a loan from the plaintiff to the defendant; and it was within their power to disbelieve the evidence which tended to show that the plaintiff gave the check either in payment of his indebtedness to the defendant, or with the purpose of becoming a part owner of the land.
In our opinion, the case was for the jury, upon all the evidence, and, in accordance with the terms of the report, there must be judgment for the plaintiff upon the verdict.
So ordered.