162 Ind. 26 | Ind. | 1904
This action was prosecuted in the lower court by appellant to recover against appellee upon a promissory note executed by the latter on November 3, 1898, to Joseph E. Smith, for the sum of $166.66, negotiable &nd payable at a bank in this State. The complaint alleges that the note in suit was for a valuable consideration assigned by an indorsement to the plaintiff.
The answer of the defendant (appellee herein) consisted of three paragraphs, the first being the general denial which was subsequently withdrawn. The second paragraph alleges substantially the following facts: In August, 1898,
The errors assigned relate to the court’s ruling in denying these respective motions, and for these alleged errors counsel for appellant earnestly contend that the judgment should be reversed.
Some of the special findings made by the jury by their answers to the interrogatories are in some respects indefinite, while others are open to the objection that they are mere conclusions, and others are but a statement of the.
Appellant, under the facts alleged in his reply, claimed to be a bona fide holder of the note in suit. In order to avoid or break doAvn the defense alleged in the third paragraph of the ansAver, the burden upon the trial was upon him to establish, inter alia, that he purchased the note before its maturity, without having any notice that the execution thereof had been procured by fraud as alleged in the said paragraph of answer. Shirk v. Neible, 156 Ind. 66, and cases there cited.
Erom aught appearing in the general "verdict, the jury may have found in favor of appellee upon the issues tendered by both paragraphs of his answer, or they may have found in favor of appellant upon the second paragraph and against him on the third. It is certainly evident that under the circumstances the trial court would not have been Avarranted in awarding appellant a judgment on the answers to the interrogatories, over the general verdict, when the special findings of the jury in ansAver to interrogatories sixteen and nineteen disclose that at the time he purchased the note ho had notice and knew that it had been procured by the fraud alleged and set out in the third paragraph of the answer. If the verdict was in favor of appellee on the third paragraph of the ansAver, as it
It is disclosed by the record, together with an affidavit filed therein, that the regular judge of the lower court who presided at the trial, until after the overruling of the motion for a new trial and the rendition of the judgment, but before the bill of exceptions containing the evidence was settled and signed, resigned the office of judge, and thereupon one of appellant’s attorneys, who had actively participated as such attorney in the trial of this case in the lower court, was, by the Governor of the State, appointed to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation. Said appointee duly qualified as the regular judge of the lower court, and after assuming the duties of the office ho settled and signed the bill of exceptions in this case without the knowledge or consent of appellee or his attorneys. It expressly appears that neither appellee nor any one of his attorneys had any knowledge of. the settling and signing of the bill in question until the transcript came into the hands of appellee’s attorneys for the purpose of preparing a brief in the appeal. There is no attempt made on the part of appellant to controvert these facts, or to parry the force of appellee’s contention that under the circumstances the bill of exceptions can not be legitimately regarded as part of the record. That the settling and signing of a bill of exceptions is a judicial act is an uncontroverted proposition. The point in question, as here presented, is directly ruled by the decision of this court in Waterman v. Morgan, 114 Ind. 237. In that case one of the attorneys
The principle affirmed by this maxim is not confined alone to a case in which the judge is directly a party, but extends to and applies to a cause in which he can be said to have a personal interest. In the application of the principle asserted by the maxim in controversy in respect to the point herein involved, the question to be determined is not whether the judge who settled and signed the bill of exceptions was influenced 'in any manner by reason of his having been of counsel in the case (and we do not wish to be understood as intimating that lie was in any manner, unfairly or otherwise, influenced in his action), but the purpose of the principle as affirmed is that a judge in the discharge of his judicial functions shall not be placed in a position where he may be subjected to imputation that he labored under the influence of his own interest in the matter. We. conclude that under tlie circumstances the evidence can not be regarded as properly before us, hence no question depending thereon can be reviewed.
Judgment affirmed.
Monks, J., did not participate in the decision of this cage.