Filby v. Turner
Filby v. Turner
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This judgment rests on a verdict. For this reason the outlines and salient features of the case will serve to indicate the legal errors asserted and afford an ample basis for their disposition. In many of its aspects it is the most extraordinary case which has ever come under my observation. No evidence can be found in the record which discloses the origin or motive of the plaintiff’s case, and it is equally barren of testimony which serves to illustrate and explain the defendant’s theory. I am very far from a state of conviction respecting the truth of either story. The relations of the parties are left unexplained, and yet the odor which exudes from the record suggests, rather than discloses, what is the evident situation. The only excuse I have to offer for these .preliminary suggestions is to explain the difficulty which I have in stating the testimony and our conclusions concerning it, and in assigning reasons for the affirmance of the judgment.
Agnes Turner came to Denver from Montreal early in the year 1884. In April she made the acquaintance of the appellant, Filby. She was at that time married and lived with her husband in a somewhat moderate way until his death, which occurred a year or so afterwards. The acquaintance between Mrs. Turner and Filby continued from its commencement until the happening of the events which will be narrated. After her husband’s death, which occurred some year or so after she arrived, her acquaintance with Filby grew, and they remained on somewhat intimate terms until the disagreement in 1893. The radical differences between the statements of the two parties to the transaction, who were1 the principal witnesses in support of the main facts, will readily appear from a statement of the issues. The suit was brought on two promissory notes alleged to have been made in June and October, 1888, for the sum of $500 and
The defendant, who is the appellant Filby, admitted that he gave a note for $500, which he had not paid, though he could not state the date of it, nor answer whether it was correctly described in the complaint. He then set up that the note was given without consideration, and as a gift from him to the plaintiff. As a defense to the second cause of action, he admitted the making and delivery of a note for the sum of $2,000, though he was unable to state whether the description in the complaint was correct; denied that it was given for value, and as a special defense averred a want of consideration therefor.
For a third defense he set up a demand by Mrs. Turner that he pay his note; alleged a refusal, and then set up a compromise whereby he paid $700 to get rid of his paper, and then averred that the plaintiff destroyed the notes. A compromise resulting from the same facts was set up in a different form. He denied the third cause of action with reference to the loan of $100 in May, 1893, but admitted the loan of $105 in July, 1893, and averred payment. The defendant then proceeds to set up a counterclaim, consisting of a great many items, and aggregating $3,443.25, which he seeks to offset, and likewise to recover a judgment for, against the plaintiff.
This statement of these two causes of action and these defenses hint at what is otherwise hidden in the record. The plaintiff went on the stand to support her complaint. She was unable to produce the notes, but undertook to describe •them, state their terms, and on this proof obtain a judgment. It is highly probable she would have been totally unable to recover on the proof which she made but for the admissions contained in the defendant’s answer and his statements on the stand. Significant as it is, and unusual as it may be, the
The errors assigned on this record are of the most meager proportions. There were some objections to the introduction of testimony and some questions were asked which it would not have been error to permit the witnesses to answer, but the refusal to admit the testimony constitutes no serious error which warrants the reversal of the ease. We are not called on to state the entire case, the questions asked, or the testimony offered in order to demonstrate this fact. The rulings as to the greater part of it in any event constitute immaterial error, aud such errors we seldom feel compelled to discuss.
The appellant insists that the procedure to recover on the lost note was inaccurate and cannot be maintained. We do not agree with appellant’s theory on the law respecting commercial paper. At the common law suit could not be brought on a lost note regardless of its circumstances or conditions because, as a general proposition, the plaintiff must give indemnity in order to become entitled to judgment, and the court at the common law was powerless to enter the proper
According to the evidence of both parties in this case, the notes were burnt up. They never could rise in judgment against the maker; they were past due and the rule requiring indemnity before bringing a suit on a lost note was not applicable. There was a difference between the stories told by the plaintiff and defendant respecting the destruction. According to the defendant’s story the plaintiff destroyed them; according to the plaintiff’s story the defendant destroyed them'. If the last were true, the plaintiff might recover. If the other, there are several cases in this country which hold that she could not recover, having voluntarily destroyed the promise. In any event it would require most extraordinary proof of good faith on the part of the plaintiff to permit her to recover on a note which she had herself destroyed. The jury were correctly instructed on this subject if the question is preserved. In any event, it does not appear in the record to have been called to the attention of the court, and it is utterly unavailable for the purpose of this appeal.
On the conclusion of the testimony, the defendant asked
The only two questions of evidence which have occasioned the court any difficulty are those which relate to the proof offered by the plaintiff concerning the sale of a house at Montreal. During the progress of the trial, and in order to show a reason for the advancements of money which Filby claimed he made from time to time, he stated that the plaintiff was without means and required assistance, which, according to his testimony, was the real motive which influenced this benevolent gentleman to advance considerable sums to his friend. To counterbalance this testimony, the plaintiff undertook to prove that she came here with a good deal of money, and that quite a considerable sum of money had been received afterwards from Canada. Her stories are marvels of ingenuity, but they lack some elements which commend themselves to people familiar with business affairs. She had a financial agent here by the name of Heinrichs, who is dead, and with whom she deposited a good deal of money. In 1889, however, when she received, according to Filby’s testimony, considerable sums from him, she opened a bank account and became a business woman. We do not find it-necessary to discuss where the truth lies with reference to this matter, because the only inquiry is as to the admissibility of this particular testimony concerning her ownership of property in Montreal. She testified that she owned a house there from which she was in receipt of rents, and was otherwise a woman of means. We think this testimony entirely legitimate to overcome the proof which Filby offered concerning her pecuniary condition. In the progress of her case, the deed to the Montreal property which she executed in the
The other evidence to which we have adverted is that which was offered to prove, that after the giving of the notes, and once to Mrs. Turner’s knowledge, Filby made a couple of wills, by which he attempted to provide for his neighbor. In one he left her $5,000, and in the other provided her with a more substantial competence of $10,000. The evidence was excluded and this rejection is complained of. We do not discover the relevancy or pertinency of this testimony under the issues. The defendant did not admit the making of the notes and aver that they were given as a protection 'for Mrs. Turner’s benefit in case of his death, nor did he plead any other defense to the paper than a simple lack of consideration. If the wills had been produced and received, this would in no manner have tended to support his plea. The fact that he had made a will or two wills in favor of Mrs. Turner, by which she was devised a veiy considerable sum, would in no manner tend to show a want of consideration for the giving of the notes. The notes were executed and delivered. They matured at very short intervals, according to the life of commercial paper, and bore inter
We are unable to discover any errors which inhere in the record of sufficient consequence to compel or justify the reversal of the judgment, which will accordingly be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.