Miller v. Payne
Miller v. Payne
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This voluminous record containing several hundred pages of depositions made up mostly of immaterial matter has been carefully read with a view of passing on the questions of fact raised by the several issues between the parties. In the first place the issues made in nearly all the appeals arise on the plea of non est factum'to various notes alleged to have been executed by Mrs. Payne and her son, Miller H. Payne.
The issues being purely legal and involving questions of fact, this court will not disturb the judgment of the court below, unless palpably against the testimony. It is not pretended that the appellee, Mrs. Payne, signed any of the notes, but the attempt to create the liability is grounded on the fact that the mother and son were partners, and if not that the son transacted the business of the mother and by reason of this agency was authorized to execute the notes in controversy. We have been unable to ascertain from the proof the existence of any partnership between the two, or any agency from which could be implied the power or authority of the son to bind the mother for their debts.
The appellee owned some two hundred ten acres of land upon which she lived, near the town of Columbia, and at the death of her husband it was cultivated partly by her son and some of it occupied by tenants. The control of the farm and the agency of the son was only such as necessarily would exist between the two after the death of the father, and from which no such agency arises, express or implied, as would authorize the son to execute notes in discharge of his own obligation with the name of his mother signed by him as an obligor without her direction, and if as surety the authority must have been in writing.
The exposure of Miller in this case seems to have awakened the appellants to a security of their rights, and the attempt was then made to show the existence of a partnership or agency with a view of making the mother liable for the reckless extravagance of the son. She was a nervous, delicate, consumptive woman, and easily excited and alarmed, and after the transaction with Miller, in the desire for the safety of her only child, she signed, in one instance at least, a paper stating that she had authorized her son to sign her name. This was to the Bradshaw and Strange note. She had prior to the signing of this written statement declined to pay any part of the debt because she had never signed the paper and received no consideration for it. That note was made up of two
Nor is the appellee liable for the debt of her husband alleged to have been assumed by her. In the first place there is no consideration alleged by Walker for this promise. It is not alleged that the estate of her husband had been released, or that there was any estate left by him to pay this debt. It was simply a promise by the wife to pay the debt of the husband. The promise is not in writing and therefore not binding on the wife. The note evidencing this liability is like all the rest .signed by the son. All the appeals except that of Miller invoked similar questions or purely questions of fact arising upon legal issues, and with the evidence conflicting, and in our opinion preponderating for the appellee the judgment below must stand.
It is manifest from this entire record that the appellants were trusting to the prospective inheritance by this profligate young man of all his mother’s possessions, and were giving the credit to the son and not the mother. The assault on the appellee’s character for truth is supported by as flimsy testimony as it is possible to present. Some six or seven of her neighbors speak of their want of confidence in her statements on oath, based on an unfriendly feeling that originated from her refusal to leave her keys with the wife of one of her tenants, another that she refused to pay certain debts. The reason given for such attacks upon the character of a witness are entitled to little if any consideration, and only conduce to strengthen the conclusion that these appellants are basing their right of recovery upon the anxiety of the mother for the protection and welfare of a reckless child.
As to the appellant, Miller, it is plain he has no standing in a court of equity; still, if the other witnesses are entitled to recover upon the ground of partnership or of agency we perceive no reason why the claim of this appellant should not be included. Miller loaned this money to the son upon a note to which the names of
The evidence of the boy’s crime was conclusive, and that fact was presented to the mother as a reason for signing the obligation. This contract will not be enforced. The judgments of the chancellor below on the entire case is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.