110 Kan. 804 | Kan. | 1922
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The only questions presented by this appeal concern the competency of certain evidence and the overruling of demurrers to evidence.
Ernest F. Siscoe died September 27, 1904, in Leavenworth county, leaving a will devising all of his estate to William T. Sinclair of Lawrence, in trust, certain parts of the estate to be conveyed to each of the testator’s children after the lapse of ten years, the trustee to make the conveyances. Eugene O. Siscoe was one of the children. August 25, 1905, Eugene and wife, and Wm. T. Sinclair, trustee under the will, made a mortgage to E. W. Sanborn of Chautauqua county, New York, for $1,000, due in five years at six per cent, payable semiannually. About August 1, 1906, Eugene 0. Siscoe and brother Clyde entered into negotiations which early in August resulted in the purchase by Clyde of the real estate involved in this action. This deal involved a five-thousand-dollar note and mortgage made by Clyde F. Siscoe, claimed to have been purchased by John W. McAuley who alleged that he purchased from E. O. Siscoe when there was $1,000 due on them. The petition to recover on this note set up the provisions of the will of Ernest F. Siscoe, the trusteeship of Wm. T. Sinclair and his death .and prayed for the appointment of his successor.
Clyde F. Siscoe’s answer denied generally, but admitted the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage set up by the plaintiff and alleged that when it was made Wm. T. Sinclair was the agent of Eugene 0. Siscoe; that the note was made payable at the office of Wm. T. Sinclair; that he paid the installments thereon up to August to Wm. T. Sinclair who accepted the payments as agent of Eugene 0. Siscoe, giving up the cancelled coupons, and' that in August, 1907, Clyde F. Siscoe paid Wm. T. Sinclair $4,000 as such agent, which was credited on the note, and until the 4th of August, 1912, he continued to pay the interest due on the balance of the note and paid fifty dollars a year, semiannually, which payments were made to Sinclair as agent, upon his demand, the payments being made at his office. He alleged that August^ 12, 1912, there was due on the note $25 which was paid to him, Wm. T. Sinclair, in full satisfaction; that Sinclair was then the duly authorized and acting agent to receive such money. He alleged that if the assignment set up in the plaintiff’s petition was made it was irregular and void for certain reasons. He asked that Bowen, as trustee, make a deed to the property to him.
To this answer the plaintiff replied, alleging that he did not know whether Sinclair acted as the agent of Eugene O. Siscoe in making the note sued on; did not know whether Sinclair received the money paid Eugene by Clyde; and demanded strict proof determining such agency. He alleged that if Clyde F. Siscoe made any payments to Wm. T. Sinclair they were made voluntarily; that he requested Sinclair to forward them to the plaintiff and procure coupons'from him. He denied that Sinclair was agent of the plaintiff for the purpose of collecting the thousand dollars, and alleged that Sinclair had no authority to collect such sum or receive the payments from the plaintiff.
At the conclusion of the trial the court sustained the objection made to certain letters and documents offered by Clyde F. Siscoe to show agency, holding that McAuley was the holder and owner of the note and mortgage and that defendant Boener was the holder of the other note set out in her answer and cross-petition.
Clyde F. Siscoe filed a motion for a new trial, which- was overruled, and he it is who appeals.
It is first claimed that carbon- copies of certain letters were wrongfully received in evidence. On behalf of the defendant R. C. Manley was called, who testified that he knew Mr. Sinclair about 25 years, was administrator of his estate, and as such had in his possession numerous files and papers pertaining to his business. Referring to page 907 of letter file “P” he was asked whose handwriting it was and said in his opinion it was Mr. Sinclair’s signature and writing; that he thought he was familiar with it; and then the letter on that page was offered in evidence. It was dated April 24, 1909, addressed to E. O. Siscoe and stated that—
“The best I have been able to do on the one thousand dollars $1,000 balance of your mortgage from Clyde is nine hundred fifty dollars $950. If you desire to assign the mortgage to me on those terms I will send you assignment for execution.”
Another letter of May 7, 1909, purporting to cover the assignment was received in evidence. Then there were letters purporting to be from Sinclair to McAuley and from McAuley to Sinclair, introduced in evidence. One letter of June 29, mentioned the mortgage of Clyde’s for $1,000. It was addressed to McAuley: "If you would like the Siscoe mortg I would take in exchange two of your mortgages ...” A letter from the plaintiff to Sinclair of July 2, 1909, stated that either the Siscoe or Jones mortgage would be acceptable and that he would leave the choice with Sinclair. A letter
Modern ways of doing business and modern inventions have necessarily modified the rigidity of ancient rules of evidence touching correspondence. We know -that letterpress copies like carbon copies are mechanical impressions of original letters taken by pressure while the ink is susceptible of being sufficiently pressed on the copy to be legible. If a relevant letter sufficiently shown to be in the handwriting of Mr. Sinclair had been exhibited no doubt of its competency could arise and there is no reason why letterpress copies of such original letters found in his letter book should not be received with equal probative effect. True, the fact of stamping and mailing are assumed rather than proved, but when numerous replies were introduced, showing that they were in response to the originals of these very letters they all became convincing to the ordinary person of their own genuineness and of their own transmission, and they are and should be no less convincing to the court. In Glass Co. v. Pierce, 87 Kan. 548, 125 Pac. 108, it was held that a carbon copy of a typewritten letter is an original, and “either impression is primary evidence of the contents of the letter.” (Syl.) It was said in the opinion:
“It is not material which one is mailed and which one retained by the writer and either one may be offered as primary evidence of the contents of the letter.” (p. 549.)
This was followed in Barker v. Railway Co., 88 Kan. 767, 770, 129 Pac. 1151; Wilkes v. Coal Co., 95 Kan. 493, 148 Pac. 768, and Enright v. Railway Co., 96 Kan. 546, 152 Pac. 629. The letterpress copies being competent, letters in reply thereto were likewise competent. (Huber v. Claudel, 71 Kan. 441, 80 Pac. 960; 3 Wigmore on Evidence, § 2104; 22 C. J. 908.)
Complaint is also made that the court overruled Clyde F. Siscoe’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence and his demurrer to the evi
For the error in striking out the correspondence, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance herewith.