53 Wash. 132 | Wash. | 1909
This action was commenced by J. S. Brown & Bros. Mercantile Company, a corporation, against W. H. Sherrod and Mildred Sherrod, to recover on a promissory note. From a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, the defendants have appealed.
There is no material dispute on any questions of law, although some are discussed in the briefs. The controlling
Appellants insisted that they were only indorsers for The W. H. Sherrod Mercantile Company; that they indorsed the note on the day of its execution but after its delivery; that it was not executed and delivered for their accommodation; that under the laws of Colorado they were entitled to notice of dishonor, and that they had been discharged from liability for the want of such notice. Their principal argument is that the trial court should have accepted and credited the evidence of W. H. Sherrod, which they claim was undisputed and in which he testified to his version of the actual transaction between the parties. He was a party directly interested in the result of this action. Courts and juries are not compelled to accept the undisputed testimony of an interested
In Gosline v. Dryfoos, 45 Wash. 396, 399, 88 Pac. 634, we said:
“It is a well-established principle of law that neither courts nor jurors are bound by the uncontradicted testimony of an interested party when such testimony, upon being carefully weighed, does not commend itself as worthy of belief. If by reason of improbable and inconsistent statements, the testimony of an interested party appears to be lacking in the element of truthfulness, courts and jurors may, in their discretion, reject the same. This is undoubtedly what the trial court did in weighing the appellant’s sworn statement, and its right to so proceed has been recognized bj this court.”
The evidence mentioned does not impress us as reasonable or credible. It is not consistent or in harmony with established and admitted facts and circumstances pertaining to the execution of the note and surrounding the parties. The trial court saw the appellant, heard him testify, was in a position to pass upon his credibility, and evidently rejected his statements as unworthy of belief.
We find nothing in the record to justify us in disturbing the findings. The judgment is affirmed.
Mount, Parker, Dunbar, and Chadwick, JJ., concur.