28 S.E. 253 | N.C. | 1897
The defendants admitted the execution of the note, which recited a consideration, but averred payment, and asked to assume the burden on the trial. The court held that this course was a proper one, and the plaintiffs excepted. His Honor was right in (116) refusing to sustain the exception. Stronach v. Bledsoe,
The plaintiff excepted to the ruling of the court in allowing the defendant, as a matter of discretion, to open and conclude the argument in the case. His Honor properly refused to sustain the exception. Rule 6 of Practice in the Superior Courts of North Carolina,
The defendants, as we have said, in their answer admitted the execution of the note, but averred that the same had been paid and satisfied at the time it fell due, or very soon thereafter, by the execution of a new note for the like amount by the intestate, Sellars, with J. B. Jobe as surety, due six months after date, and that the plaintiff received the substituted note in full satisfaction and payment of the first mentioned note, the one declared on in this action. The defendants also averred that at the time of the substitution of the note, with Jobe as surety, for the other, the plaintiff agreed to deliver and surrender the first mentioned note, the one sued on, to the defendants, but that the cashier, in looking for it, could not find it, saying it was misplaced, but that he would find it and deliver it to Sellars, the intestate of the defendant. Jobe (117) was introduced as a witness for the defendants, and testified that about two months after the execution of the note sued on, 1 March, 1893, the note made by Sellars, the intestate, with himself as surety, was substituted for the note of Sellars, with Walker as surety, the one which is the subject of this action. On his cross-examination the witness said that he had also signed another note for Sellars, on 27 August, 1892, for a like amount and running for the same time as the one of 1 March, 1893, and that he did not think the note of August, 1892, was paid before maturity. He also said that the note of August, 1892, was taken up two months before the one sued on was given.
The plaintiff, from this testimony, observing that the note of 1 March, 1893, was the date of the maturity of the note of 27 August, 1892, concluded that probably the note of August, 1892, would show on its face or upon its back that it was paid by renewal and with the note of 1 March, 1893, and the plaintiff at once served a notice on defendant administrator to produce the note of Sellars, the intestate, with Jobe as surety, dated 27 August, 1892. The defendant administrator immediately answered the notice, saying that he did not have the note and had never seen it; that Sellars, his intestate, had told him that he had given it to his attorney, who was then engaged in the trial for the present defendant. The plaintiff then asked the court to require the attorney to produce it. This motion was refused by the court, on the ground, first, that there was no *119 evidence that the attorney had the note at the time of the trial; and, second, that no notice had been given him to produce it. There was error in this ruling of his Honor. The notice to the administrator was, in law, notice to his attorney. 1 Greenleaf Ev., par. 560, and note; Baldney v.Ritchie, 1 Starkie, 338.
There was no point made that the order to produce the note was requested on a notice too short, for the administrator answered it at once, and it was conceded here by the defendant's attorney that the notice to his client was notice to him if it was good as to his client. The refusal, then, of his Honor rests upon his finding that there was (118) no evidence that the attorney had the note at the time of the trial. Sellars, the intestate of the defendant, was living when this suit was commenced; and Walker's statement, in his return to the notice, reasonably meant that the intestate had given to his attorney in the action, who is the same employed in the defense at the trial, this note as bearing on the matter of the suit. The inference is strong, therefore, that the attorney kept the note in his possession, and that he had it at the trial. If he had it, the plaintiff was entitled, under section 578 of the Code, to have it produced. The order should have been made and the note produced, or the failure to produce it satisfactorily accounted for. Of course, upon the return to the notice, the attorney could have shown that he never had had the note, and then the rule would have been discharged.
Error. New trial.
Cited: McBrayer v. Haynes,