229 Mass. 360 | Mass. | 1918
These are actions brought for the conversion of household furniture upon which the defendant held mortgages.
The plaintiffs’ contention is that before the acts complained of were committed they agreed to pay the defendant the amount actually due upon the notes secured by the mortgages, but that the defendant refused to accept such amount, demanded a larger sum and afterwards forcibly took and carried away the household goods described in these actions.
The defendant contended that the plaintiffs had failed to pay the full amount of the debt secured by the mortgages and that he took possession of the goods at the request of the plaintiffs because they were unable to pay the amount due.
The cases are before us upon four exceptions taken by the defendant.
The exception to the admission of the evidence of the plaintiff Anton Mikkelson as to the care and attention given by bim to his wife after the furniture had been removed need not be considered, as the presiding judge afterwards directed the jury to disregard it,
The failure of the defendant to produce his ledger containing his account with the plaintiffs was competent for the consideration of the jury. Whether the ledger could have been produced, or was lost or destroyed, was for the jury to determine. If it was within the power of the defendant to produce it and he failed to do so it could have been inferred that, if produced, it would not have supported the claim of the defendant. The exception to the instruction of the judge upon this evidence cannot be sustained. Eldridge v. Hawley, 115 Mass. 410.
The instructions to the jury with reference to the testimony of the witness Phillips, who was formerly in the employ of the defendant, did not constitute error. Phillips testified that when the goods were removed from the plaintiffs’ premises he was employed by the defendant as a collector, and that no objection to the removal of the goods was made by the plaintiffs. The jury were told, in substance, that they might consider the fact that Phillips was in the employ of the defendant at the time the events to which he testified occurred in determining the degree of credibility to be given to his testimony. This instruction was correct, and the exception to it must be overruled.
The remaining exception relates to that part of the charge in regard to the failure of the defendant to call as witnesses two expressmen who took the goods from the premises of the plaintiffs. The evidence showed that the defendant employed one Wright, an expressman, to go to the plaintiffs’ house and remove the goods. There was no evidence to show that the men were in the employ of Wright at the time of the trial, or that the defendant had any knowledge of them or of their whereabouts or could have produced them as witnesses. There was no evidence that they were in the control of either the plaintiffs or the defendant. Under these circumstances, no inference properly could have been drawn that their testimony, if given, would have been favorable to the contention of either party. It follows that no inference properly
Even if the nature of the transactions between the plaintiffs and the defendant as disclosed by the evidence might have tended to prejudice the defendant in the minds of the jury, still he was entitled to a fair trial conducted in accordance with the rules of evidence.
Exceptions sustained.