74 Fla. 63 | Fla. | 1917
This is a suit to enforce a mortgage lien upon certain mules and carts and an irrigating plant and all fixtures.
The appellant, who was the complainant below, alleged in the bill of complaint that B. H. Gracy was indebted to the First National Bank of Alachua on October 4, 1910, in the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars and executed the mortgage upon the property described to secure the
The bill did not allege that the debt referred to was evidenced by a promissory note, but the chattel mortgage mentioned in the bill and attached to it as an exhibit and part of the bill, recites that the debt was “expressed in one promissory note” dated October 4th, 1910, and payable April 4th, 1910.
On January 18th, 1918, the defendant Jim Guinn answered the bill denying all its material allegations and averring that the irrigating plant was not the property of B. H. Gracy at the time the mortgage was alleged to have been given, nor was he in possession of the property at that time, nor did he have any interest in it; but on the contrary the irrigating plant and all fixtures was the property of Jim Guinn at the time the mortgage was alleged to have been given, and that he was at present the owner of it.
In March, 1913, the complainant amended his bill in some of its formal features, and alleged that the mortgage in reciting that the debt became due in April, 1910, was erroneous and should be made to recite that the debt
The defendant Jim Guinn adapted his answer to the original bill as an answer to the amended bill, and averred that the indebtedness if ever created was- due at the time stated in the mortgage.
Replication was filed by the complainant, and a decree pro confesso taken against B. H. Gracy, who failed to plead, answer or demur to the bill.
A special master was appointed to take testimony and report the same to the court. This order was made on April 25th, 1913.
In October, 1913, five months and a half after the order above mentioned, complainant filed interrogatories to be propounded to B. H. Gracy, and a notice of an application for a commissioner to take his depositions: Service of this notice and receipt of a copy of the interrogatories was acknowledged by the solicitor for Jim Guinn on the same day. The notice was filed October 9th, and stated that application for the commission would be made on October 13th to the clerk. On October 11th, the defendant filed cross-interrogatories. On October 13th, the -complainant filed objections to the cross-interrogatories, and on the same day the commission was issued naming two commissioners to which commission instructions to the commissioners was attached. On October 20th, 1913, the depositions were returned and filed. According to the record only the answers of B. H. Gracy to the direct and cross-interrogatories were filed, but the record states that the envelope in which the depositions were returned bore certain endorsements, viz: Address, title of cause, contents, date of receipt and filing, and opening by counsel,
In January, 1914, the complainant filed a notice of his application to re-establish lost files consisting of the affidavits of the commissioners, Hall and Morrison. The notice stated that the application would be made to the chancellor on February 4, 1913, eleven days thereafter. Service of the notice was accepted by counsel for Jim Guinn, and on February 24, 1913, the court made an order that the “lost pleadings be and the same are hereby re-established as per copies of same attached to the petition in said application marked Exhibit ‘A’ and ‘B,’ respectively,” and that the lost copies should have the force and effect of the originals.
In January, 1914, the special master made his report of the testimony, documentary evidence, exhibits, etc. The complainant offered in evidence the mortgage and the assignment to him by the bank. Christopher Matheson, solicitor for complainant, testified that when complainant employed him, the former delivered to the latter a.note “dated April 4, 1910, signed by B. H. Gracy, for the sum of twenty-five hundred ($2,500.00) dollars, payable six months after date, and payable to the First National
It appears from the evidence that B. H. Gracy and Jim Guinn entered into a copartnership in 1907 to grow and produce vegetables. They “raised three Spring Crops”
The complainant, on November 6, 1913, offered in evidence the depositions of B. H. Gracy, to which the defendant Guinn objected upon several grounds: First, because the “defendants were not given the proper notice required by law for the taking out of a deposition. 2nd. Because the commission was not issued in the manner provided by law. 3rd. Because the interrogatories and the answers thereto were not propounded and taken in the manner provided by statute. 4th. Because the commissioners did not comply with the statute in taking and in executing the commission. 5th. Because the commissioners did not comply with the statute in propounding the interrogatories to the witness. 6th. Bechuse the deposition does not show anywhere that the commissioners were duly qualified tó execute the commission. 7th. Because the commission was not returned by the commissioners in the manner provided by law;” and moved to suppress the “depbsition, commission, the interrogatories and answers” because “the commissioners did not comply with the law in taking the testimony of the witness B. H. Gracy; they did not qualify themselves before taking the testimony mission ini the manner providéd by law; because they did of B. H. Gracy; because they did hot execute the com-not return the -commission as the law requires it shoúíd bé returned.”
“To the reintroduction into evidence of the Deposition of B. G. Gracy, the Defendant Jim Guinn objects, upon the following grounds:
“1st. The Deposition has already been offered and filed in evidence.
“2nd. There is nothing to show that the Deposition has been withdrawn from the evidence. .. .
“3rd. It cannot be re-offered in evidence, because there is nothing to show that it has been withdrawn, and as the record stands the deposition is already in evidence, subject to the objections .made to it when it was offered.
“4th. Because there is nothing to show that the Commissioners who took the Deposition were qualified to do that service.
“6th. The statute in such cases made and provided has not been complied with. ,
“The defendant Jim Guinn further objects to the introduction in evidence of the said Deposition, because:
“1st. There is nothing to show that the law making effective the re-established oath of the Commissioners has been complied with.
“2nd. The re-established oath of the Commissioners is not effective.
“3rd. The complainant has not produced proof to show that the re-established oath of the Commissioner is effective.
“4th. There is nothing to show in the record in this case that- the law providing when a re-established file or paper shall become effective, has been complied with.
“5th. The Commissioners were not sworn as required by law.
“The defendant Jim Guinn moves, tó suppress the Deposition of B. EL Gracy, which is offered to be re-introduced in evidence, upon the following grounds:
“1st. The witness did not answer the cross-interrogatories.
“2nd. The witness gave evasive answers to the cross-interrogatories.
“3rd- The cross-interrogatories were not fully and fairly answered.
“4th. Many of the cross-interrogatories were answered evasively.
“Defendant Jim Guinn further moves to suppress the Deposition of B. H. Gracy for the following reasons:
“2nd. Because notice for the requisite length of time before applying for the commission was not given to the defendant, Jim Guinn, or his attorneys, and the defendant, Jim Guinn, objects to the re-introduction into evidence for the same reasons just last above stated in his motion to suppress the said Deposition. Written on margin: Sustained.”
No order appears in the record upon this objection, and no reference made to it in the final' decree from which this appeal is taken. The word “Sustained” with which the second motion to suppress the deposition, consisting of two grounds and embraced in the “objection” as filed, closes, is the only intimation that this court has that the court made any order upon it whatever. Counsel for both complainant and defendant however in their briefs treat the subject as if the “objection” had been sustained instead of the second motion to suppress, which includes all the grounds enumerated in the first motion to suppress, but none of the grounds enumerated in the first objection to the introduction in evidence of the deposition.
The depositions of B. H. Gracy were material to the issues in the case, and were sufficient upon which to base a decree granting the full relief prayed for in the bill.
The decree however adjudged that, as to “Jim, Guinn the complainant take nothing by his suit and the bill of complaint herein as to the said Jim Guinn is hereby dismissed,” etc., and that as to B. H. Gracy the mortgage was declared to be a lien upon the “seven head of mules and two carts.” The effect of the decree was to adjudi
Appellees’ counsel insist that as there is nothing in the record to show that the deposition after its introduction by the complainant in evidence on November 6, 1913, was ever withdrawn, it could not be re-introduced in evidence on May 2nd, 1914. In another part of their brief counsel for appellees say that the “deposition was in fact withdrawn by appellant, although the transcript does not show that it was.” This being true, counsel’s argument bn this point, fails. But if it was not withdrawn, it was before the court for consideration subject to the objection interposed on the sixth of November, 1913, and the objection to its re-introduction interposed May 16, 1914, was out of place and addressed to nothing. The objection interposed to the deposition when it was first introduced appears not to have been disposed; of by the court so far as the record shows. As this court must be controlled in its conclusions by the record before it, as appellees’ counsel insist, we must hold that the deposition was before the court and the objection to its introduction interposed on November 6, 1913, undisposed of. This being true, the court considered only the two motions to suppress the deposition embraced in the objection to its re-introduction interposed May 16, 1914, as the record seems to indicate. If these motions were sustained we would hold the ruling to be erroneous, because the answers to the cross-interrogatories were not in our judgment amenable to the criticism made of them, and as for the notice of intention to apply for a commission, the defendant had four days and filed his cross-interrogátories within three days, and interposed no objection at the time to the short notice, but named a person to act
If the deposition was considered by the court, the decree should not have adjudged the equities as between the complainant and the defendant Guinn to be with the latter; nor do we think that the answer of the defendant' was supported by the evidence, even if the deposition of B. H. Gracy was not considered. We reach this conclusion because the evidence is insufficient to support either contention of the defendant Guinn that the irrigating plant became.a part of the real estate when it was placed thereon, or that it was transferred to defendant by Gracy in settlement of their partnership affairs.
The decree of the Chancellor is reversed, with the privilege to complainant of obtaining copies of the re-established papers certified by the clerk of the court and placed on file in the clerk’s office.