1 Indian Terr. 487 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1897
(after stating the facts.) The pellant’s first assignment of error is to the effect that court erred in granting the appellee the right to open conclude the argument to the jury on the trial of said caí because the burden of proof was placed by law upon ap; lant, as plaintiff in the case, and because appellee faile< admit that appellant was an innocent purchaser for va before maturity, of the note sued on, as appellant alleged claimed. The right to open and close the argument il case is, in cases in which the defendant alleges new ma| of defense, largely in the discretion of the trial court; unless it appeared that, such discretion had been abusecj the prejudice of the opposite party, the case should nc reversed on this account.
The second assignment of error is as follows: court erred in permitting appellee and his witness Si Evants to testify that appellee applied to the Equitable Insurance Company through O. B. Kone, its agent, f<| fifteen-year life insurance policy, — that is, for a life iij anee policy on which fifteen annual premiums would ha-¶ be paid, and which would mature in fifteen years, — the j herein sued on being executed for the first annual prer on said policy, because appellee, said Evants, and appl other witness, W. H. Usrey, all testify that appellee mJ written application for said policy to said company, vl said written application was the best evidence of the kil policy applied for by appellee. No diligence of effort! shown by appellee to obtain the production of said wJ application in court. No written notice to produce| written application in court was ever served on appella any time. No verbal notice to produce said written apj tion in court was ever given appellant until after the tr the United States Court, from the result of which trial
The rule is well settled that secondary evidence of the Lents ‘of a written ^ instrument cannot be given if the linal is shown or appears to be in the possession or power Iverse party, unless the party proposing to offer such Indary evidence gives such notice to produce it as the |t regards as reasonably sufficient to enable it to be pro-id. Steph. Dig. Ev. p. 189, and authorities therein cited, object; of the notice to produce is to enable the party to | the document in court, and, if he does not, to enable his pnent to give parol evidence of its contents. All rea-jble means to procure the original must be taken before lid ary evidence can bo given. Bourne vs Buffington, Mass. 481; U. S. vs Duff, 6 Fed. 45; DeWitt vs Prescott, Mich. 298, 16 N. W. 656; McPherson vs Rathbone, 7 210; Insurance Co. vs Cadwell, 3 Wend. 296. Itap-from the record in this case that no notice was given ipellant or to the insurance company of which he was |gent to produce the written application which appellee to the company, and which would have disclosed the ¡is to whether he had applied for a 15 or a 20 year policy. deposition of O. B. Kone, who was the agent who |s out the application, it is stated that the application writing, and the policy was “to run for a period of ly years, the policy being a twenty-years tontine, on pdinary life plan.' ’ The appellee testified that the that he applied for was to run for 15 years, and that ilined to accept this policy, because it was to run for |ars. This conflict in the parol evidence shows the im-íce and necessity of the rule, which requires all rea-|le means to be taken in order to procure the original
The third assignment of error is as follows: court erred in not giving the following charge, requestJ appellant: “That if the defendant, the purchaser of I policy, failed to return it within a reasonable timei kept it until the time was out, he would be estop J This instruction, or the substance of it, should been given to the jury. It has the merit of brd but the court might with propriety have elaborated j suggested in appellant’s brief, so as to have pres clearly to the' jury the principle ‘ ‘that appellee would topped from claiming that he had received a policy ing in twenty years instead of one maturing in fifteen if he failed to return the twenty year policy witlj reasonable time, and kept it until the year during whiij policy he contracted to obtain was kept in full force premium represented by the note sued on had exj The true test as to whether there had been a failure o| sideration was this: In the event of the death of the ini the appellee in this case, during the year for which hi insured, could the beneficiaries of the policy have rec| from the insurance company the amount for which insured? If appellee had died with this policy in hid
There is much contention shown in the record a whether the appellant was an innocent purchaser of the for value, before maturity. ' This fact, in view of the e ence, was immaterial. Kone, the payee of the note, wa, he testified, working under Perry as subagent for the company. Perry was charged with knowledge of K acts, and he stood in the same position that Kone did, s< as the contract with appellee is concerned. He was i| sense an innocent purchaser of the note. Counsel fo pellant should have conceded this point. Contention f untenable position always obscures, and frequently p| dices, the merits of a case. The judgment in this case i| versed, and the cause is remanded, with instructions to der a judgment for appellant for the amount due on the according to its tenor and effect, and for costs.