Richardson v. Planters Bank of Farmville

94 Va. 130 | Va. | 1896

Riely, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

During the examination into the fitness of the jurors summoned for the case, they were asked by the counsel for the plaintiff if any of them were indebted to the defendant, the Planters Bank of Farmville. The counsel for the defendant objected to the question, and the court sustained the objection, and refused to permit the question to be answered. This was assigned as error.'

Confidence in the trial by jury depends upon the purity of the tribunal, and the fairness of its decisions. To secure this, the trial must be by impartial men. Purity of the tribunal is the watchful care of the law, and “it has guarded against the influence of those passions most likely to pervert the judgment of the jurors in.deciding upon the conduct and controversies of their fellow-men.” If the juror does not stand indifferent to the cause,he is not competent. If he has any interest in the cause, or is related to either party, or has expressed or formed any opinion, or is sensible of any bias or prejudice, he is excluded by the law. The last disqualification has been applied in numerous business relations. The partner, *135or the clerk or other employee, of either of the parties has been held to be incompetent. But we have been cited to no case that has gone so far as to hold that a debtor of the defendant was incompetent. To hold, as a legal presumption, that such relationship would be likely to warp the judgment would be, in our opinion, to estimate too cheaply integrity under the sanction of an oath.

The foundation of the suit is the following receipt:

“Deposited with Planters Bank of Farmville, by W. H. Richardson for collection:

“Farmville, Va., 4th March, 1892.

“Rote of A. S. Herndon and O. O. Hazel, for the sum of six thousand dollars, dated 15th December, 1890. A. S. Herndon, trustee, has left a note drawn by A. S. Herndon and others for $6,600, .which note, if paid, is to be used in payment of note of W. H. Richardson.

“W. G. Y., Or.55

The note referred to as having been left by A. S. Herndon, trustee, bore date on January 7, 1892, and was payable six months after date at the Planters Bank of Farmville. On July 5, 1892, a few days before it would mature, A. S. Herndon, the payee of the note, withdrew it from the bank and cancelled it.

The plaintiff contended that the receipt given to him by the bank, which is described above, shows that the note for $6,600 was deposited as collateral security for the note of Herndon and Hazell to him for $6,000, which latter note was placed by him in the bank for collection; that it was the duty oí the bank to hold the note for $6,600 until it matured, and, if it was not then paid, to take the necessary steps, by presentment, protest, and notice, to ñx the liability of the parties to the note; and that not having done this, but having instead delivered it up to Herndon before maturity, he was thus de*136prived of a solvent security for his debt of $6,000, and the bank thereby rendered liable to him for the loss he had sustained, which was the amount of his debt.

On the trial the defendant propounded a number of questions to the witnesses for the purpose of proving the circumstances under which the receipt was given, which were permitted by the court to be answered, against the objection of the plaintiff. The ground of the objection was that the receipt constituted a contract between the plaintiff and the bank, which this testimony tended to contradict and vary, and was therefore inadmissible.

It is a well settled and familiar rule that parol contemporaneous evidence, in the absence of fraud or mistake, is inadmissible to contradict or vary the terms of a valid instrument. Towner v. Lucas, 13 Gratt. 703; Woodward, Baldwin & Co. v. Foster, 18 Gratt. 200; and Allen v. Crank, 23 S. E. 772. The defendant did not question the rule, but claimed that the evidence it sought to introduce did not violate it.

The receipt, upon a fair construction, does not sustain the contention of the plaintiff. It does not evidence a contract between him and the bank in respect to the note for $6,600, but expressly states that it was “left by A. S. Herndon, trustee,” and not that it was deposited by Richardson for collection, or as collateral security for the note of Herndon and Hazell to him. It discloses no appropriation by Herndon of the proceeds of the note when collected, nor any authority to the bank to use the proceeds in paying the note held by Richardson, or to place the same to his credit. It appears to be simply a memorandum by the cashier of the bank of the existence of an intention to make that disposition of the proceeds of the note if it be paid; a disposition which the bank could not make without authority from the payee and owner of the note, and an intention which he at any time could revoke.

If this, however, is not the proper construction of the writing, then its language, as respects the note for- $6,600, is equivocal and the paper ambiguous. In what way and man*137ner was it “left” by Herndon, trustee? And by whom, and upon whose order, was the money due on the note, if paid, to be used in payment of the note to Richardson? If in these and other respects the writing was equivocal and ambiguous, it was not an infringement of the general rule against the admissiblility of parol evidence in the case of a written instrument to permit the circumstances relating to its execution to be shown. Crawford v. Jarrett's Adm'r, 2 Leigh 630; Knick v. Knick, 75 Va. 12; Talbot v. Rich, & D. R. Co., 31 Gratt. 685; Tuley v. Barton, 79 Va. 387; and French v. Williams, 82 Va. 462.

Without going into particulars, it may be said in general terms that the circumstances surrounding the transaction, when proved, do not vary nor contradict the writing, but, while shedding light on its meaning, are consistent with its language, and make clear what was otherwise obscure. As wa!s said by Judge Burks in Knick v. Knick, supra, “oral evidence to this extent is always admissible in the construction of written instruments where ambiguity exists.”

It appeared that Richardson did not have the custody or control of the note, but that it was in the possession and under the control cf Herndon. It also appeared that neither Richardson nor Herndon, deposited it with the bank as collateral security for the note for $6,000, but that it was depositen by Herndon, trustee, for collection, who stated, when he did so, that he wanted to use the money, if the note was paid, in paying the note due to Richardson. It further appeared that when he deposited the note, he took from the bank the following receipt:

“Deposited with Planters Bank,of Farmville, for collection, by A. S. Herndon, trustee, Farmville, Ya., 4th March 1892, a note drawn by A. S. Herndon and other for the sum of sixty six hundred dollars.

“W. G. Venable, Or.”

*138After the receipt had been given to him, Richardson asked the cashier to give him a receipt for the note for $6,000, due to him from Herndon and Hazel. The cashier wrote the receipt, but before be had signed it, Richardson asked him to add what Herndon had said about using the money from the note for $6,600 in paying his note for $6,000, if the former was paid; and, at the instance of the cashier, he dictated the last clause of the receipt given to Richardson, and on which his suit is founded.

Herndon retained in his possession the receipt given to him for the note for $6,600 until he withdrew the note from the bank July 5, 1892, when he presented the receipt and demanded his note. This receipt, together with the facts referred to, and others that might be enumerated, proves that Herndon never surrendered control of the note, except for collection by the bank, and that the bank had no right, if it had been so disposed, to hold the note as collateral security for the note of $6,000, or to use or appropriate to its payment one dollar of any money that it might receive on the note for $6,600, without authority from Herndon, trustee.

Whether we view the writing in question merely as a memorandum, or in the nature of a contract, the testimony objected to by the plaintiff was properly admitted by the court.

Eor did the court err either in refusing instructions 9, 10 and 11 asked for by the plaintiff, or in the instructions it gave to the jury. The questions arising upon the instructions have been virtually disposed of in passing upon the propriety of the admission of the parol evidence. Without passing upon the instructions separately, it may be said of them as a whole that those of the plaintiff w ere based on an erroneous construction of the writing of March 4, 1892, and on the claim that it was not proper for the jury to consider the extrinsic evidence in forming iheir verdict, while those given by the court were in accord with the construction we have placed on *139the writing, and the right of the jury to consider it in the light of the circumstances which surrounded the transaction.

The motion for a new trial was properly overruled. Much of the evidence, from necessity, has been already discussed. Without rehearsing it at length, it must suffice to say that considering it according to the rule prescribed in such cases (Code, Sec. 3484), we cannot doubt its sufficiency to sustain the verdict of the jury.

The judgment of the Circuit Court must be affirmed.

Affirmed.