18 Colo. App. 335 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1903
On the 13th day of January, 1890, Monroe L. Tourtellotte presented to the county court of Arapahoe county, for allowance against the estate of Francina Hawkins, deceased, a note to Maggie A. Hurd, her daughter, for $8,000, dated July 30, 1887, due thirty months after date, with interest at eight per cent, per annum from date,- payable every six months or to be compounded, and purporting to have been executed by Francina Hawkins. This note had been indorsed by the payee to Steele & Malone, by them to John F. Tourtellotte, and by him to Monroe L. Tourtellotte. The allowance of this note was resisted by Joseph M. Brown, administrator of the estate of Francina Hawkins, upon the grounds as set forth in a verified answer filed by him; that there was no consideration for the note; that the endorsements were all without consideration, and that the note was not the act and deed of Francina Hawkins. The note' was disallowed by the county court, and an appeal to the
A retrial of the cause in the district court, in April, 1892, resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant; and the plaintiff again prosecuted error to this court, where, upon the opinion of a majority of the judges composing the court, the judgment was again reversed. — Tourtelotte v. Brown, 4 Colo. App. 377.
The plaintiff having departed this life, John F. Tourtellotte, the executor of his will, was substituted for him on June 8, 1894. At the third trial in the district court, in June, 1894, a verdict was returned in the plaintiff’s favor for $13,000. The judgment entered on the verdict was then taken for review to the supreme court by writ of error, and by that court reversed. — Brown v. Tourtelotte, 24 Colo. 204.
The result of the succeeding trial in the district court, which occurred in October, 1898, was a verdict and judgment for the defendant; and the case, is once more here on error.
At the last trial but one question was presented, and that was whether the signature to the note was genuine. In his opening brief, counsel for the plaintiff, in terms, abandons all his assignments of error.
We come now to the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict. A number of
There was abundant evidence to sustain a verdict for either party. The jury saw and heard all the witnesses; from the mass of conflicting testimony, to determine what the facts were, belonged exclusively to them; they found those facts to be with the defendant, and their conclusion binds us.
The judgment will be affirmed., - , Affirmed.