160 S.W. 126 | Tex. App. | 1913
The appellee, the First National Bank of Gainesville, Tex., sued appellant, H.R. Jones, in the county court of Cooke county, upon a promissory note, executed by appellant, payable to the order of the bank of Myra, a partnership, for the sum of $639.65; said note dated July 15, 1910, and maturing July 1, 1911, claiming to be the assignee and owner of same, by indorsement from the Myra bank. The appellant answered under oath, alleging payment of the note to the bank of Myra, and further that the First National Bank of Gainesville acquired said note after maturity, and the county judge peremptorily instructed the jury in favor of the appellee bank, for the full amount of the note.
As to the propriety of the peremptory instruction, the appellant contends that there was sufficient evidence tending to prove the ownership of this note in another, at a time totally inconsistent with the claim of ownership of the appellee, and that such testimony in opposition tends to prove that the Gainesville bank did not acquire the note before maturity, but its acquisition was necessarily after maturity, letting in the plea of payment interposed by appellant to cancel the paper. The appellee exhibits a blank indorsement upon the note and testimony by the president, vice president, and assistant cashier, to the effect that the note was acquired before maturity with a blank indorsement upon the paper, dated July 16, 1910, one day after the execution of the note, with other testimony tending to prove its ownership during the period claimed. The principal evidence of the appellant is that one Harris, during September, 1911 (the note maturing July 1, 1911), was in possession of said note, claiming to own it, and exercising acts of ownership over the same and was attempting to trade and sell the paper as the owner, which, if true, appellee could not have acquired the note at the time claimed.
The Supreme Court of this state has said, in the case of Washington v. M., K. T. Ry. Co.,
The appellee earnestly contends that the preponderance of the testimony, and the great weight of the same, is so strong in his favor as to require the trial court to set a verdict aside if found against him. Believing that there is some testimony more advanced than the scintilla stage, which ordinary minds might differ upon, as to the ownership of the note in September, 1911, we would rather for the trial court to pass upon that question if a jury were to decide against the appellee before we deprive the appellant of a jury trial. We have searched the authorities for a precedent for the exercise of power inherent in this court to determine a case by making an original determination of a question of fact, where the trial court has taken the case from the jury — where the evidence is in a similar condition as in this record, assuming that it strongly preponderates in favor of the appellee. This is different, however, from a case of a total lack of evidence, of insufficient evidence, or evidence in the scintilla class, in which condition it is the duty of this court to render such judgment as the trial court should have rendered. And we are unable to find such an authority, and the tendency of the holding of the Supreme Court is against the position. Choate v. Railway Company,
The case is reversed and remanded.