Patterson v. Hughes
Patterson v. Hughes
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This is an appeal by the plaintiff in the same case in which we have just disposed of the appeal of the defendant. As there recited, in 1898, C. H. Houghton was indebted to General Robert E. Patterson upon six mortgages in the aggregate sum of $37,000 with interest. In March of that year the defendant gave her mortgage to General Patterson in the sum of $6,000 to cover accrued interest on these other mortgages. After-wards Houghton paid off his mortgages, and in the settlement then had he claimed that no consideration had been given for one of them, amounting to $5,000; whereupon this mortgage with the interest chargeable thereto was remitted, and Houghton was allowed a credit accordingly. The present action was upon the $6,000 mortgage given by the defendant, and on trial it was contended by her that $2,100 interest remitted in the settlement of the $5,000 mortgage was wrongfully included in the mortgage in suit. On the other side it was contended that only $600 remitted interest was em
Subsequently the court below entered the following order: “We adjudge that credit should be given now, non obstante veredicto; that the original principal be deemed $5,400, as of March 7th, 1898, with payments thereon of $180. March 2nd, 1898, $180. September 23rd, 1899, and $2,100. November 2nd, 1899, leaving balance unpaid as of May 17th, 1910, the date of verdict, $5,682.88, to which should be added $150 for attorney’s commission, making total $5,832.88; that the verdict be reduced accordingly, and judgment be entered thereon in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendant in the sum of fifty-eight hundred thirty-two dollars and eighty-eight cents ($5,832.88) with interest from May 17th, 1910. The motion for judgment non obstante veredicto is allowed pro tanto and denied to any greater extent.”
Neither the appellant nor appellee raise any objection to the practice pursued by the court below in thus reducing the judgment; both desire that we shall dispose of the substantial question raised by the assignments of error, viz, on the merits as shown by the uncontradicted testimony, was the defendant entitled to any deductions, and if so, what? The opinion of the learned court below states: “The testimony of Frank E. Patterson is very explicit indeed that the mortgage
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
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- Mortgage — Payment — Interest—Practice. 1. On a scire facias sur mortgage it appeared that the mortgago amounting to $6,000 was given by the mortgagor as collateral security for the payment of accrued interest on six mortgages which the mortgagor’s brother had executed to the mortgagee. The accrued interest was $5,400, and it did not appear why the mortgage was given for $6,000. In a settlement in full between the brother and the mortgagee, one of the six mortgages, the amount of which was $5,000 was repudiated by the brother, and such repudiation was accepted, and settlement made accordingly. On this mortgage there was $2,100 interest, which the defendant contended was wrongfully included in the claim against her, and the evidence sustained her contention. Held, that the sum of $2,100 which had been included in the verdict rendered at the trial, was properly deducted when judgment was entered for the plaintiff on the verdict. 2. In such a case the practice of directing a verdict for plaintiff for the whole amount and adjusting the credit on a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, is not good practice, although approved by the parties, and is not to be taken as precedent.