63 Cal. 56 | Cal. | 1883
This case has been before the court on a former appeal. (58 Cal. 165.) Upon the going down of the remittitur from the decision then rendered, a re-trial was had in the lower court which resulted in a verdict for the defendant, Heffner; but upon a motion for a new trial made by the plaintiff, upon a statement of the case and two affidavits of newly discovered evidence, the court set aside the verdict. Whether that was done upon the grounds of newly discovered evidence, or of any of the specifications of error contained in the statement does not appear by the record.
But the newly discovered evidence related to an alleged conversation between the plaintiff and Heffner about the promissory note upon which the action was brought; and the affidavits concerning it were made by the plaintiff himself and one Wilson, both of whom had testified as witnesses in the case. In his affidavit the plaintiff deposes to “ absolute forgetfulness ” of the conversation, until it had been recalled to his memory by Wilson after the rendition of the verdict. Wilson, however, had not forgotten it, and could have testified to it at the trial, if he had been questioned at all about the subject; but he was not. Yet, as the evidence was obtainable by the exercise of ordinary diligence, the neglect or omission of the plaintiff to draw it from the witness by a proper course of examination, is no ground for a new trial. It is well settled that a new trial will not be granted because new evidence has been found which was known to a witness at the trial of the case, and might have been obtained from him by due attention. (Bond v. Cutler, 7 Mass. 205; MoIntire v. Young, 6 Blackf. 496.)
The issues in the case which Avere submitted to the jury comprised “payment and satisfaction” of the note in suit, and fraud in obtaining a qualified indorsement of the note from the payee after it had been paid; and it is urged that the verdict of
Four or five specifications of error relate to rulings made by the court in denying objections by counsel for plaintiff to leading questions asked by counsel for Heffner, in the direct examination of his witnesses. But these are not errors for which a new trial will be granted. We are not aware of any case in which a verdict has been set aside for the reason that leading questions, although objected to, have been allowed to be put to a witness. (Green v. Gould, 9 Allen, 466; Hopkinson v. Steel, 12 Vt. 582; Parsons v. Huff, 38 Me. 187; Mershoi v. Hobensack, 22 N. J. 372.) And the reason is that the examination of a witness in the trial of a case is a matter within the sound discretion of the trial court, who may, in the exercise of that judicial discretion, allow or disallow leading questions. (§§ 2044-2046, Code Civ. Proc.) A matter resting in judicial discretion is not reviewable in an appellate court; it is only the abuse of such a discretion of which we will take cognizance. In this case no such question is presented by the record.
It has been also urged that the court erred in permitting the defendant, against the objections of plaintiff’s counsel, to cross-examine the plaintiff upon matters of record, without producing the record itself. But the objections made were not tenable because the cross-examination related to the testimony which, it was claimed, the plaintiff had given while under examination in a court of record, and not to any record of the court. The cross-examination had developed the fact that Abbey, the principal maker of the note in suit, had been adjudicated a bankrupt before the maturity of the note; that the plaintiff had become possessed of all the available property of the bankrupt before the act of bankruptcy; and that he had been cited to appear in the Bankruptcy Court to answer under oath what property or effects of the bankrupt he had in his possession or under his control; and the object of the cross-examination objected to evidently was to show that the plaintiff had, while under examination in the Bankruptcy Court, produced or presented the promissory note in suit to that court, and testified that he had paid
if or was it error for the court to strike out the oral statement of the plaintiff in response to his counsel as to the determination by the Bankruptcy Court of the contest between him and the creditors of Abbey. Whatever judgment or order had been made by the court, as the result of the plaintiff’s examination, in awarding to the plaintiff the property involved in that contest, was a matter of record provable only by a production of the record itself.
The next exception which is the subject of a specification of error relates to the refusal of the court to strike out the answer of a witness to a question which had been put to him. The witness had given testimony tending to prove that Abbey, the maker of the note, and the plaintiff came together to the bank, where the note had been left for collection, to take up the note, and that the witness, after receiving from the plaintiff the money due upon the note, surrendered it. Upon being asked “ To whom?” he answered: “ I supposed I was surrendering it to Abbey.” It was that answer which the court, upon motion of the plaintiff, refused to strike out..
The ruling, if error, was not a substantial one. The fact in question was the identity of the person to whom the note was surrendered after the money for it had been paid. All the facts and circumstances attending the entire transaction had been given in detail by the witness; and after his answer as to the surrender of the note he testified that he received the money, laid the note upon the counter for the party to take possession of it, and his impression was that the plaintiff took it up from the counter, and he and Abbey then went away. This left the question upon the circumstances connected with it, for the jury, whose duty it was to draw the proper inferences from them, and the plaintiff had the full benefit of the proof. So that if there was any error in the refusal to strike out the answer it was harmless, and would not justify directing a new trial.
This brings us to a consideration of the grounds of litigation in the case as it was submitted to the jury under the instructions
From this testimony alone it is evident that in the transaction there Avas no concurrence or privity on the part of the payee , of the note and the plaintiff Both Avere, as to the transaction, strangers to each other. There Avas therefore no sale of the note, and no obligation on the part of the payee, arising out of the transaction,. Avhich entitled the plaintiff to a transfer. As a friend of Abbey and at his request, the plaintiff advanced the money to take up the note. He and Abbey were therefore the only parties to that transaction. The legal effect of the transaction AAras to extinguish the obligation of the note; and the only obligation Avhich arose from the transaction was on the part of Abbey.
It has been argued, hoAvever, that “ if there was no contract of sale by reason of a want of mutual consent betAveen the plaintiff and the payee of the note, then, for the same reason and under the same rule of law, there Avas no payment; and that it folloAvs as a necessary conclusion that the note, being neither paid nor purchased, still existed, and belonged to Hancock until he indorsed it to the plaintiff.”
But payment of a promissory notéis not a contract; it is performance of the obligation arising out of the promise to pay. Any one of the several parties to a joint contract, or any one in his behalf and at his request, or with his consent, may perform the obligation; and Avhen performance has been offered or made, and the money accepted, the obligation becomes extinguished. The parties to the contract are no longer bound to each other by the vinculum legis of right and duty. The duty being discharged
In the charge of the court to the jury we find no substantial error. Considered as a whole, in connection with the evidence and the pleadings, and construed with reference to the subject-matters in controversy, and the claims of parties before the court, it was substantially correct. It fairly presented the case to the jury, and there was nothing in it calculated to mislead the jury. There were therefore no grounds for a new trial. Order reversed.
McKixstry, J., and Boss, J., concurred.