127 Ind. 172 | Ind. | 1891
The facts, as they appear in the special verdict, are, in substance, these : The appellee executed to the-appellant a promissory note for one hundred and'twenty dollars, and as collateral security gave him an order upon a railway company by whom the appellee was employed. Payments were made on the note at various times, and the entire sum due upon it was paid before October 18th, 1887. The
The facts found entitled the appellee to judgment. A special verdict is not to be defeated by a strict interpretation, but a reasonable construction is to be given it, and the construction is to be put upon it as an entirety, and not in fragmentary parts. Taking the entire verdict into consideration, it appears with reasonable certainty that a demand was made after the collection of the money due upon the order paid to the appellant on the 18th day of October, 1887. It is clear, upon a fair reading of the paragraph of the verdict we have copied, that the demand was made after the collection of the order paid on the day named. The term “ received,” as here employed, denotes a past occurrence, and refers to what took place before the demand was made, for the words associated with’it show that the demand was made after the note was overpaid. The word “ about ” is, as appellants counsel say, of uncertain meaning, but one word does not control a sentence^ for it is a familiar rule that associated words must be given due weight. We think that, as the demand was for money overpaid on the note and for an accounting, it was sufficient to complete the cause of action, inasmuch as it gave the defendant to understand that the plaintiff believed that the note had been overpaid, and that he claimed the remainder due him upon the ground that the money had been previously received. This clearly implies a past occurrence, and