76 Ga. 52 | Ga. | 1886
At the trial, defendant moved for a continuance for the want of, and in order to obtain, the testimony of one Brantly. By him he desired and expected to prove that, in witnesses presence, Wilde C. Cleveland had actually paid to him $500. Defendant had all along known that Brantly was present at the transaction, and that he lived out of the county. But, although the case had been in court several years, he had not sued out his depositions, nor engaged him to attend, nor even consulted him on the subject. As an excuse for this apparent negligence, he made the following showing: Defendant’s counsel stated that, at the
preceding term, he had heard that complainant expected to prove by Wilde C. Cleveland that the latter did not, in fact, pay to defendant the $500 for which defendant had given him a receipt. Thereupon, he called on said Cleveland to know what his testimony would be on that point. W. C. Cleveland replied that, to the best of his recollection, defendant’s statement was correct. Defendant himself swore that said Cleveland had told him that his (defendant’s) statement of the matter was correct; and also testified that said Cleveland and said Brantly were the only persons present at the transaction. Both defendant and his counsel swore that they had no intimation of any change in W. C. Cleveland’s mind on that point until the evening preceding the trial, when they discovered in depositions executed that afternoon Cleveland’s contrary evidence. Defendant swore that he was misled by this course of W. C. Cleveland (who was brother to complainant) into the belief that his own statement would be confirmed by that of W. O. Cleveland, and contradicted by nobody, and therefore did not deem it needful to procure Brantly’s testimony. lie also exhibited a postal card received from said Cleveland as follows:
“ Dear Sir—I promised Judge Hall ” (who was and is defendant’s counsel) “at your last court to come over to Forsyth during this term. He requested me so to do; and while I hope sincerely that*56 yotl will neither need me or sustain any loss, yet I am willing to do anything for you, and will be over Monday night or Tuesday morning, and desire to see you and Judge Hall together. I am exceedingly sorry that you are troubled in this suit as you are, and truly hope that you will come out victorious in loto.
February 22, 1881. Wilde 0. Cleveland.”
The case was called Thursday, the 2Sth of February. Cleveland had come as promised, but had not apprised defendant or his counsel of any change in his mind, and having sudden occasion to leave the county on Wednesday afternoon, by consent, his depositions weie taken at the instance of complainant. Immediately upon discovering what said Cleveland had sworn, every effort practicable was made to get Brantly there. It was ascertained that he was somewhere abroad, traveling in the interest of a Macon mercantile house, and could not be found. Defendant swore that he did not ask the continuance for delay, but in order to get Brantly’s testimony. The court overruled the motion.
It was not disputed below, or here, that the testimony of Brantly was highly material. The court placed its judgment on the proposition of law, that as the misleading of the defendant was not done by complainant or his counsel, a continuance could not be allowed. This court has repeatedly held that continuances are in the discretion of the court, and that, when refused, unless there is an abuse of discretion, this court will not interfere.But where it plainly appears that the court below acted on an erroneous notion of the law, and that without that error, the showing would have been satisfactory, and that in consequence of the refusal of the continuance the party has suffered a serious disadvantage, we hold that a tribunal for the correction of errors of law has distinct ground for reviewing the decision.
That defendant suffered a serious disadvantage is clear. He and Wilde 0. Cleveland were both parties to the transaction under inquiry. Their testimony conflicted on the precise point. Brantly, as appears by his affidavit in sup
In 5 Ga., 80, it is held, “ It would be no reply to his want of diligence that he and his counsel did not think the testimony would be needed in the cause until it was on trial.” That was a suit against indorsers of a bill of exchange, who, by the well-settled common law, were entitled to demand and notice. The bank cashier, who made the demand and served the notices, though residing m Columbus, where the trial occurred, had not been subpoenaed, nor even requested to attend. When the cause was being tried, the cashier could not be found. For want of this indispensable part of the plaintiff’s case, he was non-suited. On his motion for a new trial, we are not surprised that the court should hold the language above cited.
The case cited by defendant in error in 23 Ga., 613, has for a head-note, “ A party is not entitled to a continuance on the ground of the absence of testimony, unless he has taken some steps to procure that testimony.” But the showing set forth that defendant had “failed to
In 55 Ga., 21, during the trial, defendant moved to continue because he was surprised at the testimony of plaintiff’s witness, and desired to procure contradictory evidence. There was no diligence in trying to learn what the plaintiff’s witness would say, no authorized reliance on his favorable testimony, no misleading: Held, that there was no legal surprise at the testimony of his adversary.
In King vs. The State, 21 Ga., 221., the defendant, indicted for assault with intent to murder, claimed surprise because the prosecutor testified to his guilt, and asked a new trial in order to get the evidence of two witnesses, whom he all along knew to have been present at the difficulty, but had not summoned, because he did anticipate his need of them. He was not misled by anybody. Such surprise was manifestly entitled to no favor, and received none.
Susan Eberhart, convicted cf murder, asked a new trial because a continuance had not been allowed her. Her grounds were, first, that owing to the recency of the homicide, and her arrest, and the public excitement against her, she could not safely go to trial; second, her counsel had not had sufficient time to prepare her defence. The first ground was mere matter of opinion, and obviously was better left to the discretion of the presiding judge than to a distant reviewing tribunal, who could not so well know the state of the public feeling. The latter ground showed no particular, either as to fact or law, wherein the counsel could not be prepared. This, too, was rightly left to the discretion of the court, where the counsel were well known. In that case, the Supreme Court held that, as there was no abuse of discretion apparent, a new trial would not be granted.
None of these decisions seem at all in the way of a
The case at bar is claimed tobe distinguished from (hat last cited, because the misleading witness here was not the defendant’s, on whom he had a right to rely, but the complainant’s, on whom he was not authorized to rely. Can it be possible that this makes any difference ? When W. 0. Cleveland was summoned, or examined, asa witness at complainant’s instante, did that give complainant any exclusive property in him or his evidence, so that defendant might not consult his knowledge of the facts, and rely upon his statements as to his evidence? Nothing is more common than for both sides to subpcena the same witness. His testimony may bo indispensable to both. In part it may favor one, in part the other. Here Cleveland’s postal shows that Judge Hall had asked him to attend in favor of defendant, and that he had promised to do so. The presumption of law is, that a witness, summoned to court by either side, comes as an impartial witness to the truth. The mere fact that one party has first summoned him may. indeed, excite the suspicion of the other party, that his adversary has ground to expect to be benefited by Ihe testimony. Thus he may be put upon inquiry. But when he has actually inquired of the witness himself, and been told that, on a certain point, he will support the inquirer, then whether the inquiring party may rely on him or not, depends on all the considerations which ought to influence
The complainant introduced in evidence an original receipt, of which here follows a copy, to-wit:
*61 “ This is to state that "Wildo C. Cleveland has this day paid to me, for Iiowell Adams, fivo hundred dollars, and-this is my receipt for the same. • "W. T. Maynard.
January 14, 1871.”
VV. 0. Cleveland, by interrogatories above referred to, testified for complainant, that he did not actually pay or pass any money to Maynard, as stated in said receipt, but explained the receipt as follows : Howell Adams owed Maynard $500 ; Cleveland owed Howell Adams; Maynard owed TV. C. Cleveland, as trustee for complainant, a note hereinafter described ; for mutual convenience, Cleveland credited Maynard on his noto, and received this receipt from Maynard. The jury was called on by a special inquiry to find whether Cleveland did actually pay this $500 to Maynard for Howell Adams; and, by another query, they were asked whether any arrangment was made between TV. C. Cleveland and Maynard, by which the former got his indebtedness to Adams settled by crediting Maynard on the latter’s indebtedness to the trust estate. The jury found a negative answer to the first inquiry, and found that such an arrangement as last described was made with the $500. On these findings, the court decreed in favor of complainant against Maynard for this $500 and interest. To the above evidence of TVilde ó‘. Cleveland, defendant objected, on the ground that the bill contained no allegation “ of a misappropriation of any part of the trust funds in the payment of the debt of Cleveland to Howell Adams.” The objection was overruled.
TVe find no specific mention in the bill, either of Howell Adams, or of the particular credit on Maynard’s note. Neither does the bill charge expressly that any part of the payment which Cleveland, trustee, credited to Maynard was produced by any credit procured for said Cleveland on his own individual indebtedness. But the bill charges as follows, to-wit: That Maynard, being indebted to TVilde Cleveland, as trustee for complainant, upon a promissory note for $2,500, the said Maynard and the said trustee “ en
On this branch of tho caso, as to the $500 said to be paid “ for Howell Adams,” the defendant asked the court to submit to the jury tho following charge, to-wit: “ Although you may believe that W. C. Cleveland did not pay any money to Maynard for Adams, but that tho transaction was an exchange of debts, yet if you believe that Wilde 0. Cleveland, the trustee, was perfectly solvent at the time, and had funds and property to pay his debts, and that the arrangement was made simply as a convenience to Wilde C. Cleveland, trustee, then I charge that such a transaction would be a good payment to Cleveland, trustee.” This request the court overruled, and that is made the 22d ground for moving a new trial.
In Manning vs. Manning, guardian, et al., 61 Ga., 136, a
Another question, which constitutes the issue involved in numerous grounds presented by the motion for a new trial, arises upon the following state of facts : The bill was filed against Wilde 0. Cleveland, the trustee of complainant, and against Maynard. It sought to make Cleveland responsible for the amount of a note which Maynard had owed to him as trustee, and which it was charged that Cleveland had delivered up to Maynard for much less than the amount due thereon, and of which so much as Cleveland had collected he had wasted. A decree had been rendered at a preceding term, as against-Cleveland, for the full amount, but the bill was now on trial against Maynard alone, seeking to make him liable for his alleged fraudulent co-operation with Cleveland, trustee, in the waste of
“ $2,566.00. Ono day after, dato I promise to pay Wildo O. Cleveland, trustee for Oliver Cromwell Cleveland, twenty-five hundred and sixty-six dollars, to be paid at my option, by paying the interest 3'early.
This February 5tb, 1869. • W. T. Maynard.”
It appears by the testimony of Maynard and of Wilde Cleveland that, at the final settlement of the note (in March, 1S71), there was a deduction from the amount of the note allowed by Cleveland to Maynard. The evidence differing as to the amount of that deduction, the jury found it to b<5 $200. The complainant claimed that this concession was fraudulently allowed by the trustee, then insolvent, in order to induce Maynard to pay over to him at once the balance of (he note, which he meant to apply to his own use, and that Maynard, knowing the insolvency and fraudulent designs of the trustee, was in fraudulent collusion, induced by the concession to pay the said balance to the trustee. Maynard claimed that the concession was allowed by the trustee upon Maynard’s demand as a compromise of a controversy between them concerning the obligation of tho latter to make payment at that time; that it was a fair and honest demand on bis part as compensation for yielding up his right to postpone the payment, and was fairly allowed by the trustee to get rid of a difficulty in the way of immediate collection—a difficulty which, if he could otherwise overcome it at all, could be surmounted only by litigation and heavy expense. This statement brings ns to the construction of the note. The court and counsel below all treated tbe note as ambiguous
Now, upon this evidence, as to the true import of the note, Maynard claimed that his construction of the note, in his controversy with Wilde Cleveland, was correct. He testified as follows concerning the settlement and the deduction allowed him : “ The note was never presented tome. . . . during the lifetime of Washington Cleveland. After the note went into the hands of Wilde C. Cleveland,” [the record shows Washington’s death in 1869, and his will of February 22, 1869, appointing Wilde trustee], “James M. Simmons, in 1870, presented the note to me for payment. I told him it was not due, but that I was ready to pay the interest; he said he' was instructed not to receive any part of the note unless he could get all. Wilde C. Cleveland presented the note; he insisted that it was due; I insisted it was not; he threatened to sue me. Thos. J. Simmons presented the note and demanded payment, insisting that it was due, and I insisted that it was not. I offered to pay the interest, but it was refused.” He states that Wilde and he afterwards agreed on the settlement in 1871, with the deduction, and that he paid the balance
Maynard was. on objection, disallowed to testify that when Wilde 0. demanded payment, he refused, claiming that the note was not to be paid, except at defendant’s option, until complainant’s majority; that Wilde 0. threatened to sue defendant in the United States Court; that to save expense of suit and for the surrender of defendant’s option, the deduction was allowed and the settlement made. The exclusion of this evidence is the eleventh ground of the motion for a new trial. The twelfth ground is the refusal of the court to allow defendant to testify that, “ in order to raise the money to pay off the note, he had to borrow $2,000 at 12 per cent per annum, for three months.”
' When Wilde Cleveland was oh the stand iñ behalf of complainant, defendant asked him “why and-how the!deduction was made from the amount due by Maynard in their settlement,” stating that he could prove by the witness that the “ witness threatened Maynard with sending the note to Texas, and suing it in the federal court;” that Maynard claimed the right to hold the money till complainant’s majority, which right -Wilde C. denied; that Washington Cleveland’s estate was insolvent; that the Zeigler children were pressing a large claim against said estate and looking for an opportunity to serve garnishments thereon; that by advice of his attorney, to prevent this debt of Maynard from being so garnished, to save it to complainant by getting it immediately into the trustee’s hands, and to avoid the expense and the exposure of a suit, he was prompted to allow Maynard the deduction. The court ruled out the question,.and thence arises the sixth ground of the motion for a new trial. Defendant then otfered to prove by said Wilde that the witness “ acted in good faith and solely for the purpose of protecting the interest of complainant,” which the court disallowed, and the seventh ground rests- on that. The eighth ground is the refusal of the court to allow Wilde C. -to • testify to his ownership of funds of his own, which he loaned out, and used the collections made for complainant to place the latter beyond such garnishments. The ninth ground is because the court refused to let defendant prove by said Wilde C. that defendant claimed “the option to pay the note at any time he saw proper, or when complainant should arrive at age, by paying the interest on it;; and that the deduction was the consideration that induced * Maynard to waive his alleged option and to pay then.”
As to the exclusion of the evidence described in the 8th and 7th grounds, it is to be observed that the evidence has exclusive reference to the good faith of W. C. Cleveland in allowing this deduction. It is, therefore, claimed by
It is evident from the record that the court below held as the law of this case that, irrespective of the good or bad faith of either the trustee or Maynard, of both, in the matter of the deduction allowed, and regardless of whether or not it was a compromise of an honestly disputed liability
• It is maintained by the defendant in error that the Code (§§2538 and 2539) denies to a trustee the power to make such a compromise, except by virtue of an order of the ordinary first obtained. Section 2538 is as follows : “ Administrators, guardians and others, holding trust estates, are . . authorized to compromise claims in favor of the estate they represent or their wards, where their debtors deliver bona fide all their property for the use of creditors, except such as is, or may be, exempt from levy and sale in cases of insolvent debtors: Provided, the ordinary, after an examination of the facts, shall first make an order directing such compromise.” What does this section authorize to be compromised ? “ Claims in favor of the estate” or “ wards” represented; i. e., whatever is claimed to be due to such estate or ward, whether the claim be disputed or admitted. When is the compromise authorized by this section? When the debtor bona fide delivers all his property (except exemptions) for the use of creditors. This case is clearly the specific one of entering into an arrangement in the nature of a bankruptcy by which the debtor’s assets are assigned for the benefit of creditors and the debtor is discharged, the trustee looking to his share in the proceeds of the assignment. The assignment may jield, more or less, on liquidation and final distribution. But if the ordinary, in advance, regards it as fair, and thinks the prospects justify it, he can authorize the trustee to enter into.the arrangement and release the debtor. This order passed, and the trustee 'entering into the agreement accepting the assignment, the claim is com
Here the subject-matter to be compromised is, firstly, “claims,”—i. e., what is claimed to belong or be owing to the estate; secondly, such claims as are “contested or-
But it is observed that while §2538 mentions' “ administrators, guardians and others holding trust estates,” and §2539 names guardians, administrators, executors and all other persons acting in a fiduciary capacity,” '§2537 mentions only “administrators, executors and guardians.” Does it, then, include other trustees ? Literally, it does not. But let us look to the reason and spirit of the law. This section is the result of §2500 in the Code of 1863, as amended by the act of 1866, p. S3. The original section mentioned only administrators. It also expressly applied only to contested claims. By the act of 1866, executors and guardians are added, and the claims are described as “'contested' or doubtful.” These are the only substantial changes effected by the amendment. In 1866, shortly after the close of the civil w'ar, when so much confusion and uncertainty had fallen upon the property and financial interests of the country, it was the spirit of the legislature to facilitate the settlement of controversies, and especially those in the hands of fiduciaries. This amendment was made to serve such a purpose. Sections 2538
But if this section, for want of express mention of trustees, fails to cover them, then it can be asserted that we are without statutory law to affect the question atbar. Section 253S applies not, because this is not a case of assignment for creditors. Section 2539 does not reach it, for, as held in 62 Ga., 118, “ this section is applicable,” not to “ contested or doubtful claims,” but “to the one subject of doubtful debts.” At least, then, wo have no prohibition against a fair compromise by a trustee of a “ contested claim.” He holds the legal title to a note payable to him as trustee. In Fountain vs. Anderson, 33 Ga., 372, it appeared that a guardian took, payable to himself as guardian, or bearer, a note for the interest of his ward in an estate. He sold and assigned the note on discount to Fountain. The guardian absconded. A successor was appointed and sued the transferee of the note for it, or its value. It was held that, notwithstanding the addition of the word guardian to the payee’s name in the note, the payee held the legal title and could sell it; and that, if the purchaser bought in good faith not intending to de
In the case at bar the note was payable to Wilde C. Cleveland, trustee. He could have received payment in a depreciated common currency if Maynard had in good faith paid it to him, without fraudulent intention or knowledge of such, on the trustee’s part. His power to make such a compromise of a contested claim as would be legal in favor of Maynard involves the same principle. It all depends on whether there was a bona fide contest raised by Maynard, and whether the deduction allowed was in good faith claimed and received by him in compromise and settlement of that dispute. If he had, or honestly claimed to have, an option to hold on to the fund until complainant’s majority, paying interest annually, such claim was of a valuable right, and its surrender might constitute a valuable consideration to Wilde Cleveland for allowing the reduction. The question as to the good faith of Maynard ought to have been, as it was not, submitted to the jury. The evidence above quoted, tending to -show the circumstances and consideration and motives of the parties to the compromise, ought to have gone to the j ury.
Complaint is made in the 18th ground, that the court refused a requested charge therein recited involving this principle. The charge, however, as worded, was faulty, in that it might be applied to the entire matter ofi: the settlement,” instead of to the precise question about the red'uction last discussed. The 19th ground is the refusal of the court to submit to the jury a prepared question offered
Several grounds of new trial are predicated upon the refusal of the court to allow the defendant to put in evidence certain <parts of the depositions of James M. Simmons, sued out by complainant, and other parts of which complainant introduced. But all the evidence referred to was statements of said Simmons of the contents of the written note, contrary to the note itself in evidence. Defendant desired them admitted, not in support of the facts which they asserted, but to bear on the credibility of the witness. We know no rule for impeaching a witness that Way. The ruling which we have already made as to the admissibility of the facts of the Zeigler claim against Wilde Cleveland, as executor of Washington Cleveland, and of the record of the suit in their favor, will determine that the evidence specified in the 16th and 17th grounds should have been admitted. It is the same matter in another shape.
Let the judgment below be reversed.