70 Ala. 443 | Ala. | 1881
The controlling question in this cause is one of fact, and involves the revision of a finding on testimony. Our former decisions have declared three rules, from which we have no wish to depart:
Pirst: When a contest of fact, properly triable before a jury, is, by consent, submitted to the judge presiding for decision. In this class of cases, this court will not review the finding of the judge on the facts, an.y more than it would the
Second: When the case is properly triable before the court, as in chancery causes, but is tried on testimony reduced to writing; not examined in the presence of the court. A finding thus rendered is presumed to be correct, and will not be reversed in this court, unless there is a decided preponderance of evidence against the conclusion he attained.—Rather v. Young, 56 Ala. 90; Bryan v. Hendrix, 57 Ala. 387.
Third: When the law authorizes the disputed question to be tried, and. it is tried, by the court without a jury, on testimony given viva voce in the presence of the court. In such cases, the rule is, not to reverse the finding, unless it is so manifestly against the evidence, that a judge at nisi prius would set aside the verdict of a jury, rendered on the same testimony. Kirksey v. Kirksey, 41 Ala. 626 ; Harwood v. Harper, 54 Ala. 659; Gaillard v. Duke, 57 Ala. 619; Harwood v. Pearson, 60 Ala. 410; Ex parte McAnally, 53 Ala. 495; Ex parte Weaver, 55 Ala. 250; Ex parte Nettles, 58 Ala. 268.
When objections are properly made to the allowance of a claim filed against an insolvent estate, “ the court must cause an issue to be made up between the claimant and the administrator; * * in which issue, the correctness of such claim must be tried, as in an action of law against an administrator, if required.”—Code of 1876, § 2575. Our construction of this section is, that either party to such issue may demand a jury trial; and if a jury is required (demanded by either party), then a jury must be called;, and if, after such demand, the judge should proceed to try the issue without a jury, this would be error. On the other hand, if neither party require a jury, it then becomes the duty of the judge to hear the evidence, and determine the issue. In doing so, lie simply performs a function the law casts upon him, constituting him judge alilm of the facts and of the law.—Blankenship v. Nimmo, 50 Ala. 506. The Court of Probate, in such trial, is a court of law,' and governed by the rules which pertain to law courts. As a rule, the evidence is introduced orally before the court, and he has the opportunity of observing the witnesses and their manner while testifying. This case falls within the third class defined above.
The Probate Court allowed the claim in controversy. On appeal to the Circuit Court, the ruling of -the Probate Court ivas reversed, and the claim disallowed. The ruling of the
Exception is raised to the competency of the witness Thornton, to prove transactions with, or statements by Garner, defendant’s intestate. His material testimony is confined to admissions of indebtedness, alleged to have been made by Garner in 1866. We think the testimony satisfactorily proves that, at that time, Garner was of unsound mind; and hence his admissions must go for nothing. His testimony being thus rejected from consideration, we need not inquire whether the interest he had in the result of the suit rendered him incompetent to testify. This reduces the question of the indebtedness of Garner’s estate to Nooe’s estate, to the single inquiry, does Garner’s letter, which was put in evidence, admit an indebtedness of the three thousand dollars, claimed for services rendered in the chancery suit of Prewitts v. Garner? If it does not, there is no evidence in support of that item of the account. If it does amount to an admission, this constitutes the claim a stated account, and is an answer to the plea of the statute of limitations, so far as this record discloses.
On the 17th October, 1859, Garner wrote to Nooe, as follows : “ Please advise me how much I am owing you and Mr. Irvin, for attending to my business, or law matters.” On the 27th December; Garner again wrote to Nooe, in which he said: “ I also received your esteemed favor, advising me of your views in reference to law matters. I agree with you, and think myself that your exertions in the appeal -case are well worth the five hundred dollars you charge. But I did think, and do now believe the 3,0.00 dollars, the charge in the case, was too much. Still, as the opposite party received that amount, I did not expect to get off with less. Still, let me have two or three years to draw breath, and I will pay you five hundred dollars, at present I am pressed in money matters. I have not heard from the judgment against Prewitts; you will be so good as to collect all that money, or the amount of the judgment, and apply the same to your own use; see what amount I am due you, give me credit for half of the judgment against Prewitts, and ascertain the amount I am due you to date, and I will forward the money to you. Please forward all my notes that I have paid, and, if you prefer retaining the deeds, I am perfectly sat
There was put in evidence a letter from Nooe to Garner, dated October 18th, 1859, which was evidently an answer to Garner’s letter of October 17th, copied above, so far as material to this case. The first sentence of that letter is, “Ongoing to the office to day, to mail the other sheets included with this, I received your letter inquiring the amount of fees due from you to Mr. Irvin and myself.” The letter then goes on to speak of a suit and recovery of judgment in favor of Garner against Prewitts, for $970, one-half of which was to be fees, and the other half, $485', would be due to Garner. The letter proceeds to vindicate this charge, as both reasonable, and in accordance with the agreed terms of the retainer. This is the sum which Garner refers to in his letter of December 27th, in which he says, “give me credit for my half of the judgment against Prewitts.” This money was collected by Nooe, and amounted, with the interest, to a fraction over five hundred dollars. Nooe, in his said letter of October 18th, uses this language: “As you have seen my arguments — the one printed on the merits of Chancellor Walker’s decision in the chancery case, and the other on the motion to dismiss the appeal — you have some idea of the labor I did.” lie then speaks of the time and labor he employed in preparing the two arguments, his expense in attending the Supreme Court, and adds: “ As you had such bad luck, I don’t feel disposed to charge you a fee commensurate with my services; but I think you ought to be willing to pay me $500, and it may be in full discharge for my printed argument. * * I know you appreciate this argument, and without making any charge of a fee in the Supreme Court, I submit to yon. Respectfully, John A Nooe.”
It is manifest, this is not the entire letter written by Nooe to Garner. The first sentence shows there were other sheets “included with this.” What was their subject, or substance, we have no means of knowing. Garner’s letter of 27th December shows that he had learned that Nooe’s charge in the Chancery Court was three thousand dollars. That charge, and. that subject, are not referred to in Nooe’s letter, or part of letter, that was put in evidence. Hence, Garner must have known it previously, or must have learned it from some other source. It is to be lamented that Nooe’s entire letter was not in evidence; and if its destruction or loss is not shown, the failure
But, in the letters themselves, there is an embarrassing want of precision, if not' an irreconcilable incongruity. This may, to some extent, grow out of the fact, that Garner owed Nooe on the land purchase, and Nooe was also claiming for professional services; and a discrimination between the two classes of claims was not always preserved. The fragmentary character of the correspondence also tends to obscure the transaction. Still, the want of precision is patent. The pains taken by Nooe to explain two items of charge, and his silence as to the other and much larger claim, are noteworthy circumstances in this investigation. This is relied on by appellee, as tending to show that, at that time, Nooe had no other claim for professional services. On tire other hand, assuming that the fee for services in the Supreme Court, and for the printed brief, was the extent of Nooe’s charge, it is difficult to understand why Garner, in his letter of December 27th, should “ want two or thrtíte years to draw breath.’” Ilis interest in the Prewitt judgment would about pay the $500 Nooe charged for the printed brief. The following two clauses in Garner’s letter are difficult to reconcile: “ Still, let me have two or three years to draw breath, and I will pay you live hundred dollars. At present I am pressed in money matters. * * See what amount I am due you, give me credit for my half of the judgment against Prewitts, and ascertain the amount I am due you to date, and T will forward the money to you.” In one sentence he asks for breathing time; in the other, he speaks of forwarding to Mr. Nooe what should be ascertained to be due him, and speaks in such terms as to imply a promise to pay promptly and presently.
It is certainly true, and well settled, that the admission by one of an indebtedness to another, in a specified sum, whether made orally, or in writing, constitutes the claim an account stated, and it may be recovered on as such.—Langdon v. Roane, 6 Ala. 518; Walker v. Driver, 7 Ala. 879; Ware v. Dudley, 16 Ala. 742; Chapman v. Lee, 47 Ala 143; Ryan v. Gross, 48 Ala. 370; Wharton v. Cain, 50 Ala. 408. Less than this will sometimes constitute an account stated. Appellant contends that the following sentence in Mr. Garner’s letter makes the present claim an account stated: “But I did think, and do. now believe the 3,000 dollars, the charge in the case, was too much. Still, as the opposite party received that amount, I did not expect to get off with less.” This language immediately
The testimony speaks of a printed brief in reply to Chancellor Walker’s decree, and also speaks of Nooe’s services on the motion to dismiss in the Supreme Court. Whether these .are one and the same thing, we have no certain means of ascertaining, but they appear to be separate items. This was probably understood, or could have been explained in the Probate Court. The land purchase made by Garner of Nooe, a part of which we suppose was then unpaid, adds to the uncertainty of the admission and promise in Garner’s letter, in which he admitted he owed five hundred dollars, and promised to pay it. Fie also impliedly admits a larger indebtedness than his half of the Prewitt judgment, when he says: “ See what I am due you; give me credit for my half of the judgment against Prewitts, and ascertain the amount I am due you to date, and I will forward the money to you.” But the admission is sufficient, only to the extent of five hundred dollars. To that extent, and that only, does the letter constitute the claim an account stated. If Garner’s share of the Prewitt jndgment was applied to thisi — -in other words, if it was not shown that it was
We have thus shown that there is an entire failure of proof to establish the item of $3,000 in appellant’s claim, and, to that extent, the judgment of the Circuit Court is free from error. The item of $500 stands in a different attitude. As to that item, the Circuit Court could not affirm there was no testimony. ITe should have remanded the cause, for further trial and judgment in the Probate Court.—Harwood v. Harper, 54 Ala. 659.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause remanded, that that court may reverse the judgment of the Probate Court, and remand the cause for another trial, in conformity with the principles above declared. The question of the whole claim will be open for further proof, if it can be made.