62 Me. 155 | Me. | 1873
The plaintiff, as payee, sues the executrix of the maker of two promissory notes. The grounds of defence, taken by the defendant, seem to have been that tbe notes were forged ; or, if genuine, tbat tbey were obtained without a valuable consideration therefor. Tbe parties did not testify; no witnesses to the original transactions were called; the evidence is mostly circumstantial and somewhat indefinite, and was introduced by both sides upon tbe issues involved.
The judge presiding said to tbe jury, “if you find tbat tbe signature is genuine, tbe burden is upon tbe defendant to show be should not pay it — “if you are satisfied tbat those signatures are genuine, then tbe presumption of law is, tbat tbe notes were given at tbe time tbey purport to have been given, and for a valid consideration, and tbe plaintiff is entitled to judgment for tbe amount and interest on tbe notes, unless tbe defendant taking the burden upon herself, has satisfied you tbat there is some legal reason why she should not pay them. It is incumbent upon the defendant to satisfy you by a balance of testimony, if you find tbat tbe signatures are genuine, that she has some ground for being discharged from liability.”
Tbe effect of tbe instruction was to impose tbe burden of proof upon tbe defendant, to show tbat there was a want of consideration for the notes; and in this respect tbe instruction was erroneous. In one sense a burden of proof would be upon tbe defendant ; a particular burden, to rebut tbe facie case made by tbe production of a genuine note, but the general burden of proof was upon tbe plaintiff to show a consideration for tbe notes, and tbat burden does not shift. Tbe weight of evidence may preponderate on tbe one side or the other, but tbe burden of proof remains on tbe plaintiff, unless tbe defendant sets up a new and
The same question arose in Delano v. Bartlett, 6 Cush., 367, where it is said, “It was incumbent on the plaintiff to prove a consideration for the note, which was the foundation of the suit. That was a part of her case, and the burden was on her to establish that fact. But the note itself wasprima facie evidence of a consideration, so that, by producing the note, the plaintiff made aprima facie case. That evidence, if not rebutted, would be sufficient to maintain the plaintiff’s case. But it was competent for the defendants to rebut the evidence on the part of the plaintiff, and thus to avoid the prima facie case made by her. Accordingly the defendants did offer evidence to rebut the evidence on the part of the plaintiff, and to show that there was no consideration. The evidence on both sides applied to the affirmative or negative of the same issue or proposition of fact, a consideration for the note, and the plaintiff’s case requiring her to show that fact, the burden of proof was all along on her to satisfy the jury upon the whole evidence in the case, of the fact of a consideration of the note.”
In Powers v. Russell, 13 Pick., 76, Chief Justice Shaw says, “where a party having the burden of proof establishes a prima facie case, and no proof to the contrary is offered, he will prevail. Therefore the other party if he would avoid the effect of such prima facie case, must produce evidence of equal or greater weight to balance and control it, or he will fail. Still the proof
In a note to the case of Commonwealth v. McKie, 1 Leading Criminal Cases, by Bennett & Heard, the editors clearly express the' legal proposition in this way : “The production of a note written by the defendant, containing the words ‘value received’ is equivalent to proving an admission of his, that there was an original consideration for the note, and nothing more. It is a prima facie evidence of a consideration, sufficient, if not rebutted, to maintain the plaintiff’s case. But to hold that such an admission in the note of a consideration therefor, changes the burden of proof, and compels the defendant to assume it, would be to hold that such an admission, when made orally, and when not contained in the instrument, would have the same effect.”
Other authorities are to the same effect. Noxon v. De Wolf, 10 Gray, 343; Estabrook v. Boyle, 1 Allen, 412; Crowninshield v. Crowninshield, 2 Gray, 529; Burnham v. Allen, 1 Gray, 496; Smith v. Edgeworth, 3 Allen, 233; State v. Flye, 26 Maine, 312; Tarbox v. Eastern Steamboat Co., 50 Maine, 339; Bourne v. Ward, 51 Maine, 191.
In Sawyer v. Vaughan, 25 Maine, 336, it is .stated that the burden of proof would be upon the defendant to prove a failure ■of consideration of a note. In Delano v. Bartlett, 6 Cush., 368, before cited, a distinction is made in respect to the burden of proof, between a want of original consideration and a failure of it; while in Burnham v. Allen, ubi supra, no such distinction is taken by Chief Justice Shaw. If no distinction exists, the statement by Shepley, J., in Sawyer v. Vaughan, if he intended to convey the idea that the defendant would be required to show more than enough to control the prima facie case made by the note, which ho probably did not, would be erroneous. A later case in this State, Quimby v. Morrill, 47 Maine, 470, evidently
It might be regarded that the instruction in this case was not given in the strict and technical sense of the meaning of onus probandi; and that the burden alluded to was merely a requirement to nullify the effect of the .plaintiff’s prima facie case, were it not that the defendant was required to show the grounds of her discharge from liability by a balance.of testimony; which would seem to imply, and might be so regarded, as requiring more rebutting evidence by the defendant than sufficient to nullify the value of all that the plaintiff had produced, and so that the defendant would be held, even if, upon all the testimony of both sides, upon the disputed proposition, it was left uncertain whether there was any consideration for the notes or not. The defendant would thus be held even if the scales of evidence were in equilibrio. He would be required to produce evidence not only equal to, but greater than the weight of all presented by the plaintiff. He would have to satisfy the jury not only that upon the whole evidence no consideration for the note was proved, but that none existed. He was required not only to control and overturn the presumption created by the note, but to proceed further, and prove the negative of a proposition, the affirmative of which was upon the other side. In Burnham v. Allen, 1 Gray, 501, ubi supra, the court say : “As the burden is on the plaintiff to prove a good' consideration (for the note), if the whole evidence, offered on both sides, leaves it in doubt whether there was a good consideration or not, the plaintiff fails of making out his case, and the defendant will be entitled to a verdict.”
Although it might not be incorrect, ordinarily, to say, in general terms, that a production of a note would cast the burden of proof upon the maker of it to show some defence to it, a somewhat common but inaccurate use of the phrase — meaning no more than that it would be incumbent on a defendant to offer evidence to