208 Mass. 221 | Mass. | 1911
These cases are before us on exceptions taken at the new trial consequent on the decision of this court in Newton Centre Trust Co. v. Stuart, 201 Mass. 288.
1. The first exception argued by the defendant is to the ruling of the presiding justice allowing the plaintiffs to show that Mrs. Stuart’s father said in September, 1902: “ That scoundrel [meaning the defendant’s husband] has persuaded her to put her name to over $100,000 worth of that paper, and I know it because she has told me so.” We speak of Mrs. Stuart as the defendant because no contest has' been made in these actions by her husband’s guardian.
The two actions were on trial at the same time. The first action was on a note for $12,000 dated July 27, 1901 (renewed by a note dated July 12, 1902), and the second action was on three notes, one for $10,000 dated March 25, 1902, and two notes each for $5,000 dated September 24, 1901, and January 1, 1902 (renewed by notes dated July 10, 1902, and July 12, 1902, respectively). All the notes purported to be signed by Mr. and Mrs. Stuart, were payable to their own order and purported to be indorsed by them. They were also indorsed by one Jewell who sold them to the plaintiff corporations before maturity. The defendant’s husband had- been committed as an insane person on September 20, 1902, and the defendant’s contention was that her signatures on the face and back of these notes were forged by him. She testified that she knew nothing of them and had received nothing for them and that her alleged signatures had been made by her husband or some one procured by him.
It was found by the auditor that the defendant’s husband had a series of transactions with Jewell between July 1, 1900, and July 19, 1901, when they were adjusted by a settlement in which the .husband gave Jewell eight notes aggregating $32,000 and a mortgage for $30,000. And that between that date (July 19,1901) and August 6, 1902, the husband gave Jewell sixty-seven notes purporting to be signed by the defendant to the amount of over $277,000. It also appeared from the auditor’s
The statement was not admissible except under R. L. c. 175, § 66, and the presiding justice must be taken to have made the findings necessary under that act. There was no evidence that at the time the defendant’s father made the statement the amount of notes which had been issued by the defendant’s husband was known; and it is not likely that it was. A statement by the defendant under these circumstances that the husband had “ persuaded her to put her name to over -$100,000 worth of that paper,” without other evidence, warranted the inference that the defendant intended to include these notes. The presiding justice, “ in admitting this evidence, stated to the jury that it was not of the remotest consequence and should not be considered unless the jury found, first, that Mrs. Stuart said this to her father, and second, that she intended it to include these notes.” Guarded as it was, there was no error in admitting this testimony.
2. The second exception argued by the defendant is to the admission of various transfers of her shares of stock in the New York Central Railroad Company made by her from July, 1900, to May, 1902.
The statement of these transactions in the bill of exceptions is so meagre that if the question were to be decided upon it alone we should have to sustain this exception.
But the counsel for the defendant at the argument stated that the facts thus briefly referred to here are those set forth in the bill of exceptions before this court in Newton Centre Trust Co. v. Stuart, 201 Mass. 288. This was stated by the learned counsel for the defendant in order that the plaintiffs might have all that they ought to have in the decision of this exception.
It appears in the former bill of exceptions that the transactions in New York Central stock consisted in the defendant’s selling her stock every quarter immediately after payment of the dividend and buying it in with borrowed money immediately before
At the second trial this evidence was offered for a different purpose, namely, as part of a scheme which the plaintiffs relied upon as explaining why the signatures of the defendant to the notes sued on and the signatures, “ about sixty in number,” admitted by the court as standards or some of them were not in the defendant’s ordinary handwriting. At the trial here in question the defendant testified that her father had wished her not to dispose of any property that he had given her. The plaintiffs’ contention was that this manipulation of the New York Central stock and the use of a different signature in case of these notes was part of a scheme to conceal her financial transactions from her father. We are of opinion that it was competent for that purpose.
3. The fourth exception argued by the defendant was to the exclusion of the defendant’s offer to show by Mrs. Erickson, the wife of the defendant’s son, “ that when Mr. and Mrs. Stuart returned from Europe in the summer of 1901,” the defendant’s husband “asked Mrs. Erickson to keep from Mrs. Stuart any message or messages in regard to any promissory notes, and made other requests of a similar character, indicating a desire on his part that ” the defendant “ should not be informed of anything in connection with promissory notes.” And the fifth exception was to the ruling of the presiding justice by which he refused to allow the defendant to show by the same witness that after the return of the defendant and her husband spoken of above he asked her to sign the name of the defendant to a subscription upon rights for stock in a disguised hand, and that she refused to do it.
But the evidence which was the subject of the fourth exception stands on a different footing. The jury’s decision depended upon which of two alternative views of undisputed facts was the true view of them. The facts which were not in dispute were that on July 19, 1901, the defendant’s husband had an adjustment of his transactions with Jewell for the preceding year, in which the defendant’s husband gave Jewell eight notes aggregating $32,000. The first note sued on here is dated July 27, 1901. After this adjustment the defendant and her husband went to Europe. Just when they went and when they returned from Europe is not stated. The request to Mrs. Erickson which the defendant offered to prove was a request made “ when Mr. and Mrs. Stuart returned from Europe in the summer of 1901.” One of the original notes here sued on is dated September 24, 1901, and it does not directly appear that there was any note after July 27, 1901, earlier than the note dated September 24, 1901. It is stated by the auditor and does not seem to have been disputed that “between that date [July 19, 1901] and August 6, 1902, Stuart gave notes to Jewell, purporting to be signed by Mrs. Stuart, to the number of sixty-seven, and aggregating over $277,000.” It is apparent, or at least it could have been found, that the notes here sued on were among these $277,000 of notes. The defendant’s contention (and she so testified) was that she never signed any of these notes including the notes in suit, and never received a cent of their proceeds, and that her husband had forged her name to them or had procured some one to do so. In that connection there was evidence (apparently undisputed) that he had given Jewell a guarantee of payment of notes given by him to Jewell to the amount of $166,635, to which were attached the forged signatures of the defendant and her two sons. It was the plaintiffs’ contention that she did sign the notes sued on, using a feigned signature to these and the other notes to keep from her father the fact that she was signing the notes.
The evidence which the defendant was in a position to offer fell short of that, but in our opinion it was of the same kind. The request made by the husband to Mrs. Erickson was made, or could have been found to have been made, immediately on the return of Mr. and Mrs. Stuart from Europe, where they went soon after July 19, 1901; for the offer was to prove a request made by the husband “ after the return of Mrs. Stuart and himself in the summer of 1901.” That is to say, it was made by the defendant’s husband immediately before he began to give to Jewell notes purporting to be signed by the defendant to the amount of $277,000. The fact which was offered to be proved was that it was immediately upon the return from Europe (where the defendant and her husband went immediately after the $32,000 notes were given) and that it was immediately before the defendant’s husband began to issue the sixty-seven other notes aggregating $277,000 that he asked to have “ any message or messages in regard to any promissory notes” kept from Mrs. Stuart, “ and made other requests of a similar character, indicating a desire on his part that ” the defendant “ should not be informed of anything in connection with promissory notes.” The jury would have been warranted in finding (if indeed they could have found otherwise) that this request, made at this time, had reference to the sixty-seven notes purporting to be signed by the defendant, aggregating over $277,000, and that it had reference to some if not all of the notes here sued bn. If they did find that these requests of the defendant’s husband referred to some at least of the notes here sued on, it was a fact which had enough significance to require its admission. In our opinion it, should have been admitted.
The entry must be Exceptions sustained.