36 Me. 287 | Me. | 1853
This action was commenced on February 4, 1851, upon a judgment recovered in March, 1831, for the sum of $531,47, debt and costs. The defence was alleged payment. Evidence was introduced tending to prove, that Mowry was the principal on the note, which was the cause of action in the first suit, and the other defendants were his sureties.
In these instructions no imperative rule of law was given to the jury to give weight to the delay of the plaintiff to enforce his execution, if he could probably have done so successfully, but they were allowed to consider the effect due to these facts, in connection with the other evidence before them. The jury could not have understood the Judge to have held,
Exceptions overruled.
If the instructions had evidence for their basis, the jury were to judge of all the facts, under the direction of the Court; and their finding cannot be disregarded, simply because the evidence was weak, and such as would have inclined the Court to believe, that it might have come to a different conclusion.
Positive evidence was introduced, that the plaintiff had received moneys belonging to the defendants, sufficient to cover the amount of the judgment now in suit. When the parties were together in May, 1851, the books and papers of both parties being present, and to some extent examined, the plaintiff admitted, that he had received from the Rice and the Wm. Clark note about five hundred dollars, and also one hundred dollars by balance of the Moon receipt, upon the note on which judgment was rendered; that he had agreed, that these sums should go in payment of the joint note, (which is understood to be the same,) and if they had not been so allowed on the note, they should go towards the execution ; and the plaintiff thereupon remarked, being some excited and angry, “ if that’s allowed, as I have received it, towards the joint note, you will owe me $200 or $300 on the general account,” which Mowry denied. This evidence, if true, when