58 Mo. 408 | Mo. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought on the 14th day of May, 1872, to recover the amount due on a promissory note executed by the defendant, payable to the plaintiff, for the sum of one hundred and twenty-two dollars and fifty-nine cents. The note was dated February the 19th, 1856, and made payable one day after date.
The answer of the defendant averred that no cause of action had accrued on the note within ten years, and relied on the statute of limitations. The defendant by his answer also set up as a further defense to the note, that in the year 1859 he and the plaintiff had a settlement of all demands and liabilities existing between them, and that upon said settlement he assigned and transferred to plaintiff certain claims and demands which he then had and held against one Duckworth and others, which were accepted by plaintiff in full satisfaction of all debts and liabilities of defendant to plaintiff, including the note sued on.
The plaintiff, by his replication to the hnswer, set up a promise in writing, by the defendant, to pay the note sued on, made on the 8th day of January, 1867, which it was claimed took the case out of the statute of limitations. The replication also averred that the defendant, shortly after the execution of the note, secretly, and with intent to defraud his creditors, absconded from the State of North Carolina, where the note was executed and where he then resided, and had remained absent from said State ever since; and then denied all other allegations in the answer.
The case was tried Sept. 28, 1873, by a jury. The verdict was for the plaintiff, for the sum of $215.50, and judgment rendered thereon. Unsuccessful motions were made for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, and the case brought to this court by appeal.
There are several grounds relied on and urged in this court by the defendant for the reversal of the judgment. It i& first insisted, that the Circuit Court erred in overruling the motion made by the defendant to suppress the depositions
The caption to the depositions reads as follows : “ State of North Carolina, Burke County, March 12th, 1873. Pursuant to notice heretofore served, the following depositions of witnesses produced, sworn and examined, on this 12th day of March, in the j-ear of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-three, between the hours of eight o’clock in the forenoon and six o’clock in the afternoon, at the post office, in the town of Morganton, county of Burke, and State of North Carolina, before me, William A. .Ross, an acting justice of the peace,” etc., and proceeding in the usual form.
At the conclusion of the depositions the justice certified that, in pursuance of the annexed commission and notice, came before him, at the post office at Morganton, in the conn-' tv of Burke, State of North Carolina, between the hours of eight o’clock in the forenoon and six o’clock in the afternoon, (names of witnesses) of the same county, and State, “who were severally sworn to testify the whole truth of then-knowledge touching the matter in controversy, between Philip Warlick, plaintiff, and Daniel Peterson, defendant; that they were examined and their examination reduced to writing, and subscribed by them, respectively, in my presence, at the time and place above mentioned, and that said depositions are no'w herewith returned. Given at the-post office in Morganton, in the county of Burke, State of North Carolina, this 12th day of March, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-three.”;
It is further objected, that there is no proper seal attached to the certificate of the officer who certifies to the official character of the justice before whom the depositions were taken. The officer certifies that the certificate is given ' under his hand, and the official seal of his office attached; and the clerk of the Circuit Court, in making out the transcript, copies the certificate and affixes a seal at the proper place, in the only way that it could be done, which is by placing a scrawl at the proper place, where the seal should be, placing within the scrawl the letters L. S., to indicate the place of the seal. This is the usual wray of copying such certificates in bills of exceptions. It would be wholly impracticable to require the clerk to make an impression of the official seal of the officer on the record. We think the motion to suppress the depositions was properly overruled. (Thomas vs. Wheeler, 47 Mo., 363; Moss vs. Both, 34 Mo., 316; Dale vs. Wright, 57 Mo., 110.) There were other technical objections to the depositions, but the defects suggested are either not material or do not appear on. the record.
It is next insisted, that the court erred in excluding the depositions of Thomas A. Dorsey, T. R. Caldwell and others; offered in evidence by the defendant. These depositions were offered to prove the general bad character of Alexander Duckworth and one Dailey, whose evidence had been intro
The questions asked the witnesses were in substance, “Are you acquainted with Alexander Duckworth, if so, state how long you have known him; also, state if you are acquainted with his general character, and if you are acquainted with the same, state what it is for truth and honesty ? ” To this question the defendant answered, that he had been acquainted with Duckworth for sixty years, and was acquainted with his general character, and knew that his general character for truth and honesty was not good. Other similar questions were asked of other witnesses, in which they were asked if they knew the general character of said Duckworth, of Morganton, Burke County, North Carolina, etc. The answers-to these questions were full and explicit, from which it appeared that they were testifying to the character of the witness in the community where he resided, in fact, the witness Caldwell expressly speaks of his character “ in the community where he resided.”
It is true that the questions did not in direct-terms call for evidence of the character of the witness in the neighborhood or community where he resided, which is the usual and proper form in which such questions are asked ; (1 Greenl. Ev., § 461) yet as the answers given to the questions plainly refer to the neighborhood where the witness resided, the evidence would be admissible, notwithstanding the informality of the question, and particularly where the attorney for the plaintiff was present, (as in this case) and cross-examined the witness, but made no objection to the questions and answers at the time. It would be too late to object on the trial. The objection in such case is more in the nature of an objection to the form than to the substance of the evidence. If the
It is next insisted that the court erred in permitting the plaintiff to read in evidence two letters written by the defendant to plaintiff, one in February, 1880, and the other in January, 1860. These letters were introduced in evidence after the plaintiff had closed his evidence in chief; and after the ‘defendant had introduced evidence tending to prove the facts in that part of his answer in which he set up and alleged a settlement between himself and the plaintiff, in which he had transferred claims to plaintiff, which were accepted in full satisfaction of the note sued on. During the examination of the defendant as a witness in his own behalf, the plaintiff exhibited these letters to him, and proved by him that the letters were written by him and were in his handwriting.
After the defendant concluded his evidence in defense, the plaintiff offered these letters in rebuttal of the defense and evidence introduced on the part of the defendant. The letters tended to show that the defendant had admitted his indebtedness to plaintiff on the note sued on, long after the time at which he alleged and attempted to prove that it had been settled and discharged. The letters were objected to by the defendant, because the promises to pay the note contained therein were conditional promises, and were made more than ten years before the commencement of the suit, and because they tended to contradict the evidence of defendant given on
If these letters had been offered to prove a promise to pay the debt sued on within ten years, in order to take the case but of the bar of the statute of limitations, they would certainly not have been admissible for that purpose, as they were written more than ten years before the bringing of the suit; but it does not appear that they were offered or relied on for any such purpose. The plaintiff had offered and read, along with his other evidence in chief, a letter dated January 8th, 1867, which was relied on as a promise within ten years to defeat the statute of limitations, and it fully appears that this last letter was the only one relied on for that purpose. The other two letters objected to were offered in rebuttal of the defendant’s other defense, which asserted that the note had been paid or discharged, as is set forth in the answer. They certainly tended to rebut that defense and were admissible for that purpose. The other objection to the letters was, that they tended to contradict the evidence given by the defendant, by showing that he had made different statements at other times, and that no foundation was laid for said impeachment.
It must be remembered that the defendant not only occupied the position of a witness in the ease; but he was also a party. The evidence might not be admissible if it had been offered simply to impeach a witness; but they were offered as admissions of a party which tended to disprove and rebut a defense set up and relied on by him to defeat the plaintiff's action. The defense was an affirmative defense relied on by the defendants, and the plaintiffs certainly had a right to rebut this defense by the admissions of the defendant, without any reference to any impeachment of the defendant as a witness, and the letters were properly received for that purpose.
By the first of these instructions the jury are told, “ That the acknowledgment of indebtedness contained in the letter of January 8,1867, offered in evidence, is sufficient to prevent the bar of the statute of limitations, and if the jury find from the testimony in the case, that the defendant wrote and signed said letter on the said 8th day of January, 1867,'con-taining the acknowledgment therein of defendant’s indebtedness to the plaintiff, the jury will find for the plaintiff the amount of such indebtedness, as shown by the evidence; unless it further appears to the satisfaction of the jury, that the defendant has heretofore assigned or transferred, in payment and satisfaction of plaintiff’s demand against him, certain claims, notes and demands, or has otherwise paid plaintiff’s claim.”
The second instruction is substantially like the first, except that the jury are further told by said instruction, that the burden of proving such payment and discharge rests upon the defendant, and defendant must show by the weight of evidence and to the satisfaction of the jury, that such payment has been made; and unless defendant has so shown, they must find for the plaintiff, and in determining on which side the testimony in reference to payment preponderates, they may take into consideration the reasonable probabilities of the truth or falsity of the evidence on either side.
The grounds of objection to these instructions are, first, that the letter read in evidence and referred to in the instructions did not contain a sufficient acknowledgment of the debt sued on, to take it out of the bar of the statute of limitations ;-'and secondly, that the instructions assumed that the acknowledgment contained in the letter referred to the debt in controversy, when that fact should have been submitted to the jury. The letter in question referred in clear terms to a note of the defendant, which was dne and unpaid, to the plaintiff, and also a note which was also executed by the defendant to a third per
The present case coinés almost exactly within the principle recognized in the' ‘case of Carr’s Adm’r vs. Hurlbut’s Adm’r, (41 Mo., 264). Whether the acknowledgment or promise relied on is sufficient to take the case out of the operation of the statute, is a question for the court; but as to whether the promise or acknowledgment referred to the debt in controversy, is a question of fact for the jury. (See the case last referred to, and cases there cited.)
The instructions given in this ease improperly assnmed that the acknowledgment of indebtedness referred to the debt in controversy ; that fact ought to have been left to the jury. The latter part of the second instruction is also in the nature of a comment on the law of evidence applicable to the case; but while the language of the instruction may be improper, the judgment would not be reversed on that.account alone.
The instructions refused by the court on the part of the defendant, were properly refused, as they seemed to leave a question of law to be determined by the jury. As already stated, it was for the court to say whether the promise or acknowledgment was sufficient to avoid the bar of the statute of limitations.
It is lastly objected, that the verdict of the jury and judgment of the court are excessive; that more interest was calculated on the note than was justifiable under the law.
For the reason that the eonrt improperly excluded the depositions offered in evidence by the defendant, and improperly instructed tbe jury as before indicated, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded;