103 Ind. 458 | Ind. | 1885
Suit by Sallie R. Mathers against Samuel A. Smith, Solomon Green and Robert Marshall upon a promissory note for two hundred dollars, dated October 14th, 1878, and payable five months after date.
Smith was not served with process. Green and Marshall, appearing to the action, demurred to the complaint, but their demurrer was overruled. They then answered:
First. Denying the execution of the note, upon the theory that the instrument sued on had been materially changed after they had signed it.
Second. That they, the said Green and Marshall, had signed the note as sureties for their co-defendant Smith, and not otherwise, which fact was well known to the plaintiff; that one Henry C. Rhorer was the duly authorized and acting agent for the plaintiff, managing and attending to her business, and having special charge of the taking and the collection-of the note in suit; that in the year 1879, after the note
A demurrer was sustained to this second paragraph of the answer, and the circuit court, after hearing the evidence, made a finding in favor of Green, and against Marshall, and rendered a separate judgment against the latter for a balance found to be due upon the note.
It is first complained that the demurrer ought to have been sustained to the complaint. There was some informality and uncertainty in the complaint; but we do not regard it as having been fatally defective upon demurrer for alleged substantial insufficiency.
It is next complained that the demurrer was wrongfully sustained to the second paragraph of the answer. This paragraph, as has been seen, failed to aver that the appellee did not bring suit upon the note as she was orally required to do, and did not allege any other fact as a reason for the appellant’s release from liability on the note. The averment that the appellant was so released was a mere conclusion of law, when taken in connection with the context. The facts averred did not, therefore, constitute a defence to the action. In the case of Harris v. Brooks, 21 Pick. 195, cited by counsel, the facts which were held to be sufficient to discharge the surety were distinctly stated. The facts, so far as facts were averred in the paragraph before us, do not make a case in all essential respects parallel with that case, nor even analogous
It is still further complained that the finding of the circuit court, as against the appellant Marshall, was contrary to the evidence, and that a new trial ought to have been granted for newly discovered evidence.
As applicable to this branch of the case, it may be said, in the first place, that there was evidence tending to establish certain declarations and conduct on the part of the appellee, occurring after the appellant signed the note, which he claims were sufficient to discharge him from liability as surety thereon, and on that ground it is argued that the finding was contrary to the evidence. But this evidence came out rather incidentally, and was not applicable to any issue formed upon the pleadings. It can not, therefore, be taken into consideration in determining whether the finding was right upon the evidence. Brown v. Will, ante, p. 71.
It was shown by the evidence that when Smith, the principal, signed the note, it was dated July 5th, 1878, and that the date was afterwards changed to October 14th, 1878. It was also admitted that other alterations were made in the note at or about the time the date was changed. As affecting the appellant’s liability upon the note, the important question at the trial became, whether the proven and admitted alterations were made before or after he signed it. As incidental to that question, the precise time at which the appellant signed the note became a subject of inquiry and of conflicting evidence. Rhorer, the appellee’s agent, testified to having procured the appellant’s signature to the note, and that it was somewhere from one to two weeks after the 14th day of October, 1878, when the appellant signed it, at Bloomington, in this State. The appellant as a witness in his own behalf stated that he left the State of Indiana on the 15th
It was proposed to prove by one witness, as newly discovered evidence, that Rhorer had made admissions, previous to. the trial, inconsistent with his testimony as herein above stated, and by other witnesses facts and circumstances tending to show that Rhorer must have been, and in fact was, mistaken as to the time of the signing of the note by the appellant.
The alleged newly discovered evidence was consequently either impeaching or cumulative. As a general rule a new trial will not be granted simply to let in impeaching evidence, and we see nothing in this case to make it an exception to that general rule. It is, also, a well established rule that the discovery of merely cumulative evidence is not sufficient ground for a new trial. See Works Ind. Prac., sections 922, 923; Sullivan v. O’Conner, 77 Ind. 149; Lefever v. Johnson, 79 Ind. 554; Hines v. Driver, 100 Ind. 315.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.