56 Minn. 491 | Minn. | 1894
The only question in this case is whether the evidence justified the finding that the money in the hands of the garnishee, Edwards, belonged to the defendant, Donald, and not to the claimant, Magraw.
The case rested entirely on the testimony of the claimant and the defendant. They both testified to substantially the following state of facts: Defendant, Donald, and a number of others, had formed a voluntary association to search for and secure mineral properties which were supposed to exist in valuable quantities in the vicinity of St. Paul; and for the purpose of defraying the expenses of these searches, and securing title to the mineral when discovered, it was agreed that each member of the association should pay to its treasurer, the garnishee, Edwards, the sum of $250. In pursuance of this arrangement, defendant gave to the treasurer his check for $250, but the check remained unpaid, for want of funds to meet it. At defendant’s solicitation, the claimant, Magraw, agreed to invest $250 in the enterprise, the money to remain Magraw’s, and to be invested for him, but in the name of the defendant, who was to manage and look after the investment, and to receive a “fair”
The testimony of defendant and Magraw was corroborated by certain documentary evidence, viz. the articles of agreement between the members of the voluntary association, the check given by defendant to Edwards and that given by Magraw to defendant, showing the dates at which they had been respectively paid, also the memorandum receipt given by defendant to Magraw for the $250, at the time of its payment by the latter to the former.
Plaintiff introduced no rebutting evidence. Magraw, the claimant, is the only appellant
The plaintiff does not claim that, if the facts were as thus testified to, this money would be defendant’s, and not Magraw’s; but its contention is that the court was not bound to accept the testimony of defendant and Magraw as true, although there was no direct evidence contradicting it; that it contained such inherent improbabilities as to furnish a reasonable ground for concluding that it was not true. While recognizing the correctness of the general rule invoked, and the propriety of its liberal application, especially in cases of alleged frauds, yet it must be remembered that in all cases the positive testimony of an otherwise unimpeached witness can only be disregarded when its improbability or inconsistency furnishes a reasonable ground for doing so, and this improbability or inconsistency must appear from facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence in the case. It cannot be arbitrarily disregarded by either court or jury, for reasons resting wholly in their own minds, and not based upon anything appearing on the trial.
Even giving all possible weight to the appearance of the witnesses on the stand, we fail to discover in their testimony any such inconsistencies or improbabilities as would justify a court or jury in disregarding it as untrue. Corroborated, as it was, by the documentary evidence, their testimony left no reasonable doubt of the fact (probably the pivotal one in the case) that this money was originally, at
The first fact indicates rather loose business methods and poor business judgment, but not more so than the act of investing money at all in such a visionary scheme.
The conduct of defendant after the garnishment was entirely consistent with an honest desire to protect the money of a friend, who had placed it in his hands for investment.
We can see nothing in either or both of these facts that furnished any reasonable ground for rejecting the testimony of the witnesses as untrue.
Order reversed.
(Opinion published 58 N. W. Rep. 269.)