13 Wash. 471 | Wash. | 1896
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The record in this case is in such shape that it has been with great difficulty that the real controversy between the parties could be determined, and we would probably be justified in affirming the judgment for the reason that it does not sufficiently appear from the record what particular errors on the part of the trial court are relied upon for reversal. But since, by the aid of the brief of appellant, we have been able to discover what we deem to be the questions which were material to a correct determination of the controversy between the parties, we can overlook the imperfections in the record and examine the rulings upon these questions.
The first complaint made by the appellant is that the trial court committed error in amending the proposed statement of facts before settlement, and he contends that we should consider it as though it had been settled without such amendment. This we cannot do. If the court wrongfully refused to settle a proper statement of facts, the remedy of appellant was by mandamus to compel it to do so. Until a statement has
From the pleadings and the undisputed proofs, it appeared that the plaintiff and defendant had numerous business transactions together, commencing sometime in January, 1890, and continuing until about February 24, 1891. That on said 24th day of February the plaintiff made to the defendant a promissory note for the sum of $6,000, payable one day after date, with interest at the rate of ten per cent, per annum; and the material question upon which the rights of the parties depended was as to the force to be given to this note. On the part of the plaintiff it was contended that it was given without consideration, to enable the defendant to avail himself of an interest in certain moneys which were expected to be paid upon a contract held by the plaintiff and defendant against a third party, and that, if such money was not paid and on that account the contract was forfeited, the note was to be of no force and was to be canceled and surrendered. There was no dispute as to the fact that the money was not paid and that the contract was canceled; hence, plaintiff claimed that he was entitled to have the note canceled and delivered up. The defendant claimed that the promissory note was made upon the settlement between him and the plaintiff of the transactions in which they had been interested up to the time of the execution of the note; that upon such settlement it was agreed that, for moneys advanced and services rendered by him for the plaintiff, there was due to him the sum of $6,000, and that the note was given in settlement of the amount so due.
The proof offered by each of the parties to sustain these adverse contentions was almost entirely the evi
The presumption that a written instrument was executed for the purposes disclosed upon its face cannot be overcome except by satisfactory proof, and the transaction as testified to by the plaintiff was so unreasonable that it would be doubtful whether the presumptions flowing from the production of the note in the hands of the defendant would have been overcome, even if no testimony in support thereof had been introduced by the defendant. But these pre
The court refused to find in detail as to the state of the account between plaintiff and defendant at the time the note was executed, and it is claimed that by reason of this refusal the judgment should be reversed. But the evidence was of such a nature that it was impossible for the court to find just what items entered into the account between the parties, and having found that there was a long unsettled account between them and that on a certain day they had fully adjusted it, and that the note in question had been given in settlement of the amount found due from the plaintiff to the defendant upon such adjustment, such finding was sufficient upon which to found the legal conclusion that the defendant was entitled to have the note enforced against the plaintiff according to its terms.
Complaint is made as to other rulings during the progress of the trial, but in the light of the finding as to the force to be given to the note, such rulings, even if erroneous, could not have affected adversely the rights of the plaintiff.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Dunbar, Anders, Scott and Gordon, JJ., concur.