30 Mo. App. 198 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1888
This was a suit - begun before a justice of the peace on three promissory notes, purporting to have been executed by the defendants, and payable to plaintiff. The defence, was non est factum. The case was taken by appeal to the circuit court from a judgment by -the justice of the peace in fávor of the defendants. The defendants introduced evidence tending to show that the notes in suit were forgeries. The bill of exceptions then recites: “Defendants then produced the transcripts of three other suits now pending in the DeKalb circuit court on appeal from W. M. Stigall, the same justice of the peace before whom this suit was instituted and tried, all of which suits were instituted on the same-day on which this suit was instituted before said justice, in each of which said suits this plaintiff was the plaintiff and these defendants were defendants. In one of said suits plaintiff sued on a note dated June 25, 1885, for one hundred and forty dollars, payable six months after date, purporting to be signed by one ü. W. Christian, together with these defendants, which said note was attached to said transcript. In another of said suits plaintiff sued on one note dated August 19, 1885, for twenty dollars, due on or before February 19,1886, purporting to be signed by these defendants ; also one note dated July 28, 1885, due seven months
“The defendants thereupon offered to prove, by legal’ and competent evidence then and there produced and. offered by them, that neither of the notes above described, excepting said note for one hundred and forty dollars, was signed or executed by them, or either of them, or by any other person for them, or either of them; that said note for one hundred and forty dollars-had, since its execution and delivery by defendants, been falsely and fraudulently raised from forty dollars-to one hundred and forty dollars ; and that said notes, and each of them, were false and forged, to which evidence so offered the plaintiff objected, upon the ground that such evidence was incompetent, and did not tend to prove the issue tendered by defendants herein; which said objection was by the court sustained and said evidence-excluded, to which action of the court in so sustaining plaintiff’s said objection, and refusing to permit defendants to prove said facts, the defendants at the time-excepted.”
The question is, was the evidence offered by the defendants and rejected by the court admissible %
The rule stated by Mr. Gf-reenleaf, in his work on Evidence, as the “first rule, governing in the production of evidence,” is, “that the evidence offered must correspond with the allegations and be confined to the point in issue.” 1 Greenl. Evid., sec. 51. “It is not
Evidence of collateral facts has always been admitted in cases, in which the knowledge or intent of the party was a material fact, on which the evidence, apparently collateral, and foreign to the main subject, had a direct bearing. 1 Greenl. on Evid., sec. 53; 1 Phillips on Evid., 732, 774, and notes, and cases cited therein; State v. Meyers, 83 Mo. 558. Cases of this kind are said to fall strictly within the rule, instead of being exceptions to it. 1 Greenl. on Evid., supra; Wood v. United States, 16 Pet. 360. “Thus, in a prosecution for uttering a bank-note, bill, or promissory note, with knowledge of its being forged, proof that the prisoner had uttered other forged notes or bills, whether of the same kind or of a different kind, or that he had other forged notes or bills in his possession, is clearly admissible, as showing that he knew the note or bill in question to be forged.” 1 Phillips on Evid. 769; State v. Mix, 15 Mo. 160. But " where a party defends an
The case of Tyler v. Todd, 36 Conn. 218, was a suit against the defendant as endorser of a promissory note. The defence was, that the endorsement was a forgery. The defendant claimed that his name had been forged to a large number of notes, amounting in the aggregate-to a large sum, and that the note in suit was one of them. Francis Warner, a witness introduced by - the-plaintiff, testified that he received the note in suit from Richard Platt, the maker, that he sold it, to Eneas Warner, from whom it was found that the plaintiff had received it, and .that it was signed by R. Platt. The-evidence, which was held to have been properly
The conclusion to be reached from a careful review •of the authorities is well stated by Mr. Wharton, in his work on Evidence, in these words: “To sustain the introduction of such collateral facts, they must be in some way capable * * * of being brought into a common system with that under trial.” 1 Whart. on Evid., sec. 29. To illustrate he states the case of Griffiths v. Payne, supra, bringing out clearly the season on which the decision of that case was based, i. e., that there was no distinct proof that the bill in question had ever formed part of the collection of the forged bills.
In the present case such reason for the exclusion of the evidence does not exist. Here the plaintiff had a collection of nine notes, all purporting to have been executed by the defendants, and all payable to the plaintiff. The plaintiff brought suit on them all on the same day before the same justice of the peace. In the present suit on three of the notes, the defendants
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.