233 N.W. 28 | Iowa | 1930
On November 26, 1927, the claimant, S.S. Buser, filed in the clerk's office of Washington County his claim against the estate of J.A. Work, deceased, which claim is founded upon a promissory note in the principal sum of $10,000, bearing date of February 7, 1926, due in six months, payable to the claimant, and purporting to have been signed by the decedent, J.A. Work, and others. A copy of the note is attached to and constitutes a part of the claim. Edmund D. Morrison, administrator of said estate, filed his answer thereto, alleging therein, in addition to the statutory denial, a general denial of every allegation of the claim, and also alleging certain affirmative defenses. At the close of the evidence, the court sustained claimant's motion for a directed verdict in his favor, and entered judgment establishing the claim against the said estate for the full amount due upon the note, according to its terms. From this judgment, the defendant administrator has appealed.
It appears that, on August 22, 1928, the plaintiff filed a petition in equity in the clerk's office of Washington County, in which the widow and heirs of deceased, and others, are parties defendant. It is alleged in said petition that 1. WITNESSES: the decedent, J.A. Work, was indebted to the credibility plaintiff at the time of his death, upon a and $10,000 promissory note, and that, prior to his impeachment: death, said decedent had made fraudulent evidence transfers and conveyances of his property to the revealing no defendants therein named; and in the petition he inconsis- asked for the usual equitable relief as against tency. fraudulent transfers and conveyances. The defendant offered this petition in evidence, *33 which, upon objection by the claimant, was excluded. It is the contention of the appellant that said petition should have been admitted for impeachment purposes. A careful reading of said petition reveals that there is nothing therein inconsistent with the plaintiff's claim, and the ruling of the court in excluding the same from the evidence was clearly right.
A.C. Dewey was a witness for the claimant. He also signed the note in suit, and admits his liability thereon, but testified that the Varner Finance Corporation, of which he is an officer and stockholder, is the principal liable upon the note, and that the liability of the others signing the note is only that of sureties. It appears that, on November 26, 1927, the same date on which the claim in suit was filed, Dewey filed his claim against said estate, asking that any amount which he may be compelled to pay thereon be established pro rata as a contingent claim against said estate. The appellant offered the Dewey claim in evidence, which, upon objection of the claimant, was excluded. It is also the contention of the appellant that said claim should have been admitted for impeachment purposes. It will be observed that there is nothing in the claim inconsistent with the testimony of Dewey as a witness, and the ruling of the court in excluding the same was clearly right.
The defendant also offered in evidence the claim of M.C. Barton, which was filed on the same day of the filing of the Buser claim. The Barton claim is identical with that of the Dewey claim. Barton's name purports to have been signed to the note in suit. There is nothing in said claim inconsistent with any of claimant's evidence, neither does it tend to establish any of the defendant's affirmative defenses; and the court properly excluded the same from the evidence.
Under the heading "Errors Relied on for Reversal," the appellant alleges:
"The court erred in overruling defendant's objections to testimony as follows:
"Witness McKee. (A) Abs. p. 6, l. 34 to p. 7, l. 9. (B) Abs. p. 7, ll. 27-34. (C) Abs. p. 8, ll. 9 to 16 and motion to strike ll. 17 to 23. (D) Abs. p. 8, l. 30 to p. 9, l. 6 and motion ll. 7 to 11. (E) Abs. p. 9, ll. 11 to 27.
"Witness Willits. (F) Abs. p. 12, l. 7 to l. 15.
"Witness Dewey. (G) Abs. p. 16, ll. 4-15. (H) Abs. *34 p. 16, ll. 16-23. (I) Abs. p. 16, ll. 24-28. (J) Abs. p. 16, l. 33 to p. 17, l. 7. (K) Abs. p. 17, ll. 8 to 15. (L) Abs. p. 17, ll. 16-23."
The aforesaid statements of error as to the rulings of the court on the introduction of testimony, referring only to the lines and pages of the abstract, do not comply with Rule 30 of this court, so as to present anything for review 2. APPEAL AND on appeal. See In re Estate of Mott, 200 Iowa ERROR: 948; Morrow v. Downing,
The only witnesses called to testify in behalf of the appellant were the plaintiff and the witness Dewey, who had testified in behalf of the claimant. At the dose of the evidence, on motion of the claimant, the court excluded the testimony 3. APPEAL AND of said witnesses which had been offered in ERROR: behalf of the appellant, and also sustained review: claimant's motion for a directed verdict. If, by harmless considering the testimony of said witnesses error: which was thus excluded, claimant's motion for correct a directed verdict was properly sustained, then decision the error, if any, in excluding said testimony notwithstan- is nonprejudicial; and in the consideration of ding the motion for a directed verdict, we will excluded consider the evidence of the said two witnesses evidence. which was stricken by the court, together with the evidence which remained in the record. The evidence, so considered, fails to establish any of the affirmative defenses averred by the appellant. The claimant testified that he is the owner of the note, which was in his possession and introduced in evidence. This is not contradicted. The note is negotiable. It is a well recognized rule that the introduction of a negotiable instrument in evidence by the plaintiff, with proof of the genuineness of the signature, makes a prima-facie case for recovery. In re Estate of Rule,
"And where the instrument is no longer in the possession *35 of a party whose signature appears thereon, a valid and intentional delivery by him is presumed until the contrary is proved."
The question involved in the case is as to the genuineness of the signature. The genuineness of the signature of the decedent is put in issue by the statutory denial under Section 11961 of the Code of 1927, without any pleading to that effect, and the burden is placed upon the claimant to prove the genuineness of the signature. See In re Estate of Johnson,
The question is: Did the court properly direct a verdict for the claimant? The signature to a promissory note may be proven by a person who saw it placed there, or by those who know the handwriting and signature of the maker, or by 4. TRIAL: experts, by comparison, or by comparison by the direction of jury with writings of the same person which are verdict: proved to be genuine. It will be observed that directed Willits testified that he saw the note signed, verdict on and saw Mr. Work sign it. He is in no way unimpeached interested in this controversy. As to his and testimony on this proposition, he is in no way uncontradic- impeached; his general moral character and ted general reputation for truth and veracity are testimony. not attacked; there is nothing in the record which nullifies or impugns his credibility as a witness as to this matter. There is no testimony that Willits was not present at the time in question. All of the affirmative testimony is that he was present. Willits is corroborated by Dewey, who has shown himself familiar with the signature of Work, and who testified that the signature is that of Work. Dewey's only interest, as testified to by him, is that he is a cosurety on the note with Work. Neither is Dewey's general moral character or his general reputation for truth and veracity questioned. There is no testimony in the record tending to show that the signature is not genuine, no dispute in the evidence as to this material point, no fact or circumstance from which a contrary inference might be reasonably drawn. Only one reasonable conclusion can be drawn from the evidence, and that is that the signature in question is the genuine signature of J.A. Work.
The appellant relies upon Oleson v. Hendrickson,
"It is true, all the evidence for the defense had been ruled out as inadmissible, under the state of the pleadings; still, before the plaintiff could recover, he was bound to prove the substance of his complaint against the defendant. Whether he had done so or not it was the province alone of the jury to determine; and it was not competent for the court to take this matter out of the hands of the jury, and order them to find the defendant guilty." *37
If it may be said that said case holds that the party having the burden of proof is at all events entitled to the verdict of a jury, this doctrine has been renounced by the later decisions of this court. See First Nat. Bank of Fairfield v. Dutton,
"The direction of a verdict, in its last analysis, is always a question of the sufficiency of the evidence."
We likewise declared in First Nat. Bank of Montour v. Brown,
"To sustain the proposition advanced by the appellant in the instant case, we would be compelled to say that the defendant has an inherent right to have a jury pass upon his claim, or that the credibility of an uncontradicted and unimpeached witness in all cases presents a jury question. We cannot make such a pronouncement."
The appellant relies upon In re Estate of Chismore,
The action of the trial court in directing a verdict in the case at bar was clearly right, and the judgment is hereby affirmed. — Affirmed.
MORLING, C.J., and STEVENS, De GRAFF, and ALBERT, JJ., concur.