Hosmer v. Burke

26 Iowa 353 | Iowa | 1868

Beck, J.

— The errors assigned and the points discussed by appellant’s counsel, are based upon the instructions to the jury, given and refused by the court, and upon the exclusion of the evidence of defendant Burke, as to certain facts proposed to be proved by him in his own behalf. We will proceed to notice them in the order they are presented in the counsel’s printed argument. It will not be necessary to quote, in this opinion, the instructions given or refused; the points ruled will be understood, and time and space in the opinion will be spared by omitting so to do.

1. Parties: partnership jointmakers. I. The first point made by appellant’s counsel, is that the administrator of C. T. McCune is not the proper party plaintiff, and that if the action can be maintained at all against defendant, it should *356be prosecuted in the name of John McOune, surviving partner of the firm of J. & O. T. McOune.

The payment made by plaintiff was not out of the funds of the copartnership, but of the assets of the estate of O. T. McOune, deceased. Although the promissory note was executed by the firm, yet payment thereof could have been enforced to the full amount due, from either one of the partners, in an action against him alone. Rev. § 2764; Ryerson v. Hendrie, 22 Iowa, 481.

The payment was then made by‘plaintiff out of the assets of the estate, under a legal liability, which was enforced by judgment of a court having jurisdiction of the subject matter, and of the parties thereto. Of the sum so paid, defendant is legally bound to contribute his just proportion, as determined by the law. To whom must he contribute ? To that one who paid for him the money which he is legally bound to contribute. It was not the firm of J. & O. T. McOune that paid it, but the plaintiff, as the administrator of the estate of O. T. McOune, deceased; he is, therefore, the proper party plaintiff in this suit. It is true that John McOune, as surviving partner, is the proper party to prosecute all actions to recover debts due the firm. But defendant, in this transaction, was not indebted to the firm; his indebtedness was to plaintiff. The fact that it arose out of a transaction wherein the firm was a debtor of another party, does not make the obligation of defendant to contribute an obligation to the firm. The payment to Graham was enforced from plaintiff individually and separately, so far as the firm is concerned; the contribution due from defendant is due to him in the same capacity. He is the real and only party interested in the claim against defendant, and the action is therefore well brought in his name.

*3572. Evidence: where adverse party is administrator. *356II. The District Court excluded the testimony of *357defendant, Burke, upon all matters originating prior to death of C. T. McCune. This ruling is assigned for error. As we have seen, the 811^60|; matter of the action — the claim against defendant — was in no sense the property of the firm, but was the property of the estate of C. T. McCune, and the administrator is, therefore, the proper plaintiff. The defendant’s evidence as to facts transpiring before the death of C. T. McCune was properly excluded under lie vision, section 3982. The express language of this section, as well as its spirit, required the exclusion of the evidence. The plaintiff is the executor of a deceased person ; the party whose evidence was offered is the defendant in the suit, and the evidence was in relation to matters transpiring before the death of such deceased person — the very conditions mentioned in the section to destroy the competency of the witness.

3,_partnership. The fact that the matters sought to be proved by the witness are connected with transactions of the firm, and surviving member of the firm was a witness, cannot have the effect to annul the express statutory provision. The interest of the surviving partner may have been identical with plaintiff. He is, however, not a party to the suit. That interest, whatever it may have been, without his being a party to the action had no effect to make the defendant a competent witness. It will be observed that the section above cited disqualifies the defendant as a witness to prove all facts transpiring before the death of the deceased person. It does not render him competent to testify to transactions bearing upon the matter in issue with persons other than the deceased. He is equally disqualified to testify to acts and transactions of others as to those of the deceased person, if they occurred before the death of plaintiff’s decedent. Whatever may have been defendant’s transactions with *358the firm, or with John McCune before the death of Or T. McCune, he is not a competent witness in this action to prove them.

4. partnership: joint makers. III. The court directed the jury, in effect, that in determining the sums to be paid by the respective parties to the note, the firm of J. & C. T. McCune , . were to be considered as one person, one party, and was liable for one-half of the amount due in adjusting the matter with the defendant. The first part of the proposition seems to be substantially conceded by the respective counsel of the parties, but appellant’s counsel deny the second part, and insist that it is erroneous. It seems to us that the second must inevitably result from the first part of the proposition. If the firm is, in fact, one mater of the note, and defendant is the other, they were, as between themselves, nothing appearing to the contrary, bound to pay equal portions of the amount thereof. This seems too obvious to require discussion.

6._contribution. IY. The jury, in effect, were directed, in order to ascertain the sum which plaintiff is entitled to recover fr°m defendant, to deduct one-half the amount due Up0n the note at the date of the payment by plaintiff, from the sum of that payment added to the amounts which had been paid by John McCune, and the difference would be the measure of defendant’s liability. Though expressed in different terms, the rule given in the instruction to guide the jury in ascertaining the amount of their verdict arrives at the same result as here expressed. To these instructions defendant objects, and insists they are erroneous.

As we have seen, the liability of defendant and the firm of J. & C. T. McCune upon the note was equal, each being liable for one-half of the amount due thereon. Whatever sum the partners paid was of course for the benefit of the firm, whether it was paid out of their *359individual property ox’ oxxt of the assets of the firm. No payment by them can be presumed to have been intended for the benefit of defendant. The partners, as a firm, were to pay one-half of the debt. As to the amount of interest of each partner in the firm, the record discloses nothing, neither is that necessary to be known in order to arrive at a correct conclusion upon 'the question before us. As between the partners, the question of contribution and liability of each-to the other, is not involved in-this action, and by it defendant is in nowise affected. If one paid all of the debt, defendant is in no manner prejudiced thereby.

He is bound to pay one-half, and that portion for which he is liable will neither be increased nor diminished by the fact, that the partners pay individually, and unequal amoxmts. It can surely be a matter of no moment to defendant, to whom he pays the amount for which he is liable, provided such payment discharges that liability. As we have seen, his liability is to plaintiff, and it will be fully discharged upon payment thereof.

A statement of the case in texmxs somewhat simplified will give clearness to our views.

John MeCune and plaintiff, as partners, are bound upon the note with defendant; the partners jointly between themselves and defendant, are liable for one-half the note, and defendant for one-half. The amount due upon the note is $2,000. MeCune has paid upon it $100 and plaintiff $1,900. Now, if plaintiff recovers of defendant $1,000, which is the extent of his liability, plaintiff will still have paid $100 more than his part as between himself and MeCune and must recover that sum from MeCune. Defendant’s theory permits plaintiff to recover of defendant only the sum of $950, and requires MeCune to recover of defendant fifty dollars, and plaintiff of MeCune $150, — a roundabout way, it *360must be confessed, to arrive at the settlement of a very simple account between the parties. Among many apparent objections to the theory is the very serious one, that, in case of the insolvency of McCune, plaintiff would suffer gross injustice in the loss of the portion of the money recovered by NcCune from defendant. And this very state of facts is disclosed by the record, John MbCune appearing therein to be insolvent.

Y. The jury were instructed to exclude from their calculation, in estimating the amount of their verdict, the sum of $1,000, paid by defendant, and allow him no credit therefor. The evidence tends to show, that, by a mistake in estimating the amount due-upon the note, the judgment of the County Court was $1,000 less than the real amount due. In correction of this mistake, defendant made the payment. The ground upon which the court excluded this payment, seems to be the fact that the amount due was determined by the judgment of the County Court. This the court appears to have held conclusive upon all the parties, and to have considered that the amount could not therefore have been recovered from the parties to the note. The instruction, as well as the principles upon which an attempt is made to sustain it, are erroneous. The mistake could certainly have been corrected by proper legal proceedings, and the unpaid balance could have been collected from the maker of the note. The defendant was justified, therefore, in paying it. ■ The $1,000, having been paid upon a liability that could have been enforced, should have been allowed as a credit to defendant in estimating the amount of his liability; that is, it should have been considered as a payment by defendant upon the debt, and taken into consideration in ascertaining the amount which plaintiff is entitled to recover from him as contribution. The instruction excluding this payment, was therefore erroneous.

*361No other questions are presented in the argument of defendant’s counsel. The assignment of errors raises others, but they are not argued, and do not seem to be relied on by the counsel; we are not, therefore, required to examine them.

On account of the error above pointed out, the judgment of the District Court is reversed, and the cause remanded.

Reversed.