Lanier v. Tolleson
Lanier v. Tolleson
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action, which was commenced February 10th,. 1882, was brought to recover the amount due on two promissory notes, given by defendant to plaintiffs, one payable on June 9th, and the other on July 9th, 1877, prior to the discharge of the defendant in bankruptcy, the plaintiffs relying upon a promise alleged to have been made subsequent to such discharge.
- It appeared in evidence that the defendant was adjudged a bankrupt on March 6th, 1878, and was duly discharged on October 23d, 1879, with the written consent of plaintiffs to such discharge. L. L. Lanier, one of the plaintiffs, was introduced as a witness, and testified that after defendant had filed his petition in bankruptcy, he paid him on account of said notes $20, and that after his discharge, to wit, on October 7th, 1881, the defendant paid him the further sum of $5, and at the same time “ promised to pay them more the next time that he should see L. L. Lanier, one of the plaintiffs herein,” and that in December, 1881, he promised to pay the balance due on said notes, “ as soon as he was able.”
The plaintiffs also put in evidence two letters of defendant written while the proceedings in bankruptcy were pending, in one of which, after asking plaintiffs to sign their consent to his discharge, he uses this expression: “ I hope to live to see the day when my friends will not regret this act of kindness,” and in the other, after asking plaintiffs to forward proof of their debt to the register in bankruptcy, he says : “ I hope some day to be a man again, and will not forget my friends.” None of this testimony was objected to at the trial, and when the letters were-offered in evidence “plaintiffs’ counsel stated to the jury that these, letters were introduced, not to prove a promise, (as those promises only could bind defendant that were made after his discharge in bankruptcy October, 1879,) but only to show that the
Defendant put in evidence his discharge in bankruptcy, and ■testified that he had never made the promise testified to by Lanier, and had not paid him the $5, as alleged, on the said note's; that he was auditor of the county for several years prior to 1876, and that his family consisted of himself, his wife and .grandson, and that defendant’s health was bad. M. A. Newland and James R. Tolleson were also offered as witnesses to corroborate defendant as to his version of the conversation between him and Lanier, in which the latter alleged the promise relied upon was made, and as to the alleged payment of the $5 to Lanier; but he offered no testimony as to his inability to pay the note at the time the action was commenced.
At the close of the testimony the defendant’s counsel requested the Circuit judge to charge the jury “ that the letters of Tolleson, put in testimony, do not constitute a new promise to pay the •notes,” to which the judge replied “ that he considered that a ■question of fact for the jury, having told them what sort of a promise would bind defendant, to wit, that it must be a distinctj ■positive and unequivocal promise to pay, made after his discharge in bankruptcy, and that neither partial payment nor expression of an intention to pay, did amount to such promise. His Honor then turned to plaintiffs’ counsel, in the presence of the jury, and asked him, did he claim that the letters constituted a promise to pay, and he replied that he did not. His Honor further charged •that the question whether or not defendant made the promise'to plaintiffs alleged in the complaint must be determined by them from all the testimony. That this question of fact must be determined from the testimony; that if the jury believed the testimony for the defense, the verdict must be in his favor, but if .they believed the testimony for the plaintiffs they should find for ■the plaintiffs.” In response to an inquiry from the court before •the jury retired, defendant’s counsel stated that he did not desire to make any other requests to charge.
The defendant appeals upon various grounds which will hereinafter be considered in detail. We are unable to perceive wherein the Circuit judge has committed any error of law, and that is all that we are at liberty to inquire into. The whole of his charge, we assume, is not before us, for in that portion of it which is stated in the “ Case,” nothing is said as to the fact that the promise relied upon was a conditional promise, and that in such a case it would be necessary to prove the allegation made in the complaint that the condition had been fulfilled, and that
But we will proceed to consider the several grounds of appeal in which error is imputed to the Circuit judge. “ I. In refusing to charge the jury that the letters of Tolleson, put in testimony, do not constitute a new promise to pay the claim.” We think it clear, from the statement which we have made — copied largely from the “Case” as prepared for argument here — that this ground has been taken under a misapprehension of the charge. For it seems to us, from that statement, that the jury were not only so charged, in effect, but that the propositen contended for was emphatically impressed upon their minds by the distinct statement, twice made to them by the plaintiffs’ counsel, that the letters were not offered in evidence for the purpose of proving a new promise, but simply for the purpose of corroborating the testimony of Lanier. We do not see, therefore, how the jury could have been misled, for when they were told by the Circuit judge that a promise to be binding must have been made after the discharge in bankruptcy, and when the letters showed on their face that they were written before such discharge, the jury must necessarily have known that the letters did not constitute such a promise as would bind the defendant, especially when the plaintiffs’ counsel had twice, in their presence, distinctly disavowed offering the letters with any such purpose.
“ II. In charging that if a verbal promise, such as is alleged in the complaint, was proved, the plaintiffs were entitled to recover.” We do not exactly perceive the point of this exception. If the allegations of the complaint were proved, then it
“ III. In refusing a new trial.” It has been so repeatedly decided that an exception, couched in such general terms as this,,
“IV. In ruling, upon the motion for a new trial, that a promise to pay, when able, had the same effect as a promise of an administrator to pay when in funds.” We do not understand that the Circuit judge so ruled, or, in fact, made any ruling at all upon this subject. All that he said was said by way of illustration; and it is expressly stated that he did not take this as a ground for refusing the motion. Indeed, what he really did say was that “ a promise to pay when able, resembled a promise of an administrator to pay when in funds,” and not, as alleged in this ground of appeal, that such a promise “ had the same effect as a promise of an administrator to pay when in funds.” The two promises may resemble each' other, and, in fact, do, both being conditional promises, and yet they may, possibly, not have the same effect.
“ V. In ruling that it was not essential to show, on a promise to pay when able, that the promisor was more able to pay at the time of suit than when the promise was made. VI. In ruling that the testimony of the plaintifis, if believed by the jury, was sufficient to sustain the verdict. VII. In ruling that a promise to pay, when able, was not to be governed or controlled or modified by the condition and wants of the defendant and his family.” These three grounds of appeal will be considered together. They seem to have been taken under a misapprehension of the judge’s ruling upon the motion for a new trial. It is true these were grounds urged in support of the motion for a new trial which was overruled, but they presented points which should have been, and were not, made by requests to charge. The Circuit judge, in rendering his decision upon a motion for new trial, did not undertake, to pass upon them as separate and distinct propositions, as he need not have done. If they had been presented by requests to charge and had been refused, then, possibly, this appeal would have had better support. But after the jury have rendered their verdict, we are bound to assume that they were satisfied from the evidence that the promise had been made as alleged, and that the condition upon which it was made had been fulfilled. There having been no error of law in
The judgment of this court is that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- LANIER & CO. v. TOLLESON
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. In action against a discharged bankrupt on a new promise to pay a debt contracted before the bankruptcy, a distinct, positive and unequivocal promise to pay must be shown to have been made by defendant after his discharge in bankruptcy; neither partial payment nor expression of an intention to pay amount to such promise. 2. Such a promise is sufficient, although only verbal, and made upon a condition, if the condition is shown to have been performed. 3. It is also sufficient, notwithstanding the plaintiffs’ written consent to defendant’s discharge in bankruptcy; for such discharge did not operate as an extinguishment, payment or release of the debt. 4. An exception not considered because couched in terms too general. 5. After a verdict responsive to the issues raised by the pleadings, the Circuit judge, on motion for new trial, is not bound to pass upon matters which should have been presented by requests to charge but were not; and his refusal to grant a new trial does not involve any ruling upon the grounds so taken in support of the motion.