Armstrong v. Penn

31 S.E. 158, 105 Ga. 229, 1898 Ga. LEXIS 487
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 25, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 31 S.E. 158 (Armstrong v. Penn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. Penn, 31 S.E. 158, 105 Ga. 229, 1898 Ga. LEXIS 487 (Ga. 1898).

Opinion

Lewis, J.

Mrs. Ann Armstrong brought her petition against L. D. Armstrong, alleging, in brief, that she was informed and believed that he held a note for $1,000, dated 1877 and due one day after date, purporting to have been made to him by her, and that if he held such a note it was not made by her, nor by any one authorized by her to make it, and was fraudulent and a forgery; that the defendant had used for his own benefit certain money arising from the sale of cotton belonging to her, and which she regarded as an advancement to him from her estate; that in her will she had directed that her daughters be each paid from her estate a stated sum, as the equivalent of this advancement, before the defendant should receive anything further from the estate; and that she believed he intended to use the note in question for the purpose of getting an unfair advantage in the final distribution of the estate; and she prayed that he be enjoined from negotiating it or attempting to collect it, and that it be delivered up and canceled. The defendant answered un.der oath, that he had a note for the amount stated, which had been executed to him by the plaintiff in settlement of indebtedness due him by her. He denied that the money arising from the sale of the cotton was an advancement, and averred that the plaintiff let him have it as a gift, and he so received it, and did not become a debtor for it. Attached to' the answer was a copy of the note, dated November 1C, 1877, and due one day after date, and upon which appeared a credit of $20, dated May 25, 1878. Subsequently the defendant filed an amendment, under oath, denying the charges of fraud and setting out an itemized statement of the indebtedness alleged to have been the consideration of the note. By this amendment he struck out the averment in the original answer that the money arising from the sale of the cotton was a gift, and averred that the cotton was turned over to him by the plaintiff in payment of his share of his deceased brother’s estate, and that his counsel, in drafting the answer, misunderstood him and stated it was a gift, and he (defendant) overlooked this statement at the time he swore to the answer. The plaintiff died, and W. H. Penn, administrator with the will annexed, having been substituted as plaintiff, filed an amendment to the petition, in which amendment he alleged: [232]*232The note now in issue was obtained by defendant from his testatrix, if ever executed by her at all, fraudulently, in that the defendant at the time the paper was executed, if executed at all, had some small claim against her, and drew up the note now in controversy, filling the same fraudulently with the amount therein named, when the same should have been for some small amount, if any was due by her. The testatrix having full confidence in her son, the defendant, and relying upon his integrity and honesty, “to which she wrongly thought he was entitled,” acting on the representation that it was for the amount she owed him, signed the note, if she signed it at all, in ignorance of the fact that it was for $1,000, and thinking it was for the small amount she owed him. The note, if given at all and under the circumstances above detailed, was made in the year 1873, and not in the year 1877; and petitioner states his belief and charges it as a fact that his testatrix, having repaid the small amount she owed the defendant, had entirely forgotten the execution of any paper, if she had in fact executed it. The alteration by defendant, both as to the date of the note and the credit indorsed thereon, was fraudulently made, and by the holder of the note, the defendant, and was done for the purpose of relieving said paper from the bar of the statute of limitations, the paper having been executed by plaintiffs testatrix, if made at all, in the year 1873, and the payment being made in 1875. The fraudulent alteration rendered the note void, and no recovery could be had thereon, even if the same was originally bona fide paper, for the reason that all action thereon was barred by the statute of limitations, and in addition thereto, that the paper was rendered void by said alteration. Petitioner’s testatrix had no knowledge of the fact above set out, nor did petitioner himself till the case was tried at the last term, when he discovered by inspection the alterations aforesaid. Discovery on oath as to this amendment is waived. To the petition as amended the defendant demurred on several grounds, which demurrer was overruled, and he excepted. A verdict was rendered for the plaintiff; and error is assigned by the defendant upon the judgment of the court overruling his motion for a new trial.

[233]*2331. The special grounds of the defendant’s demurrer insisted on before this court related to inconsistent and contradictory allegations in plaintiff’s petition, and want of sufficient certainty in its allegations of fraud and forgery. For the reasons set out in the first headnote, we do not think there was any error in overruling the demurrer. The declaration with sufficient clearness seeks a cancelation of the note, first, on the ground of fraud in its procurement; and second, on the ground of forgery, and a fraudulent alteration of the note. Parties are, under thei statute, allowed to file conflicting pleas; and we know of no rule which would exclude the plaintiff from having different counts in his declaration as the basis of his cause of action, not entirely consistent one with the other.

2. The court in his charge stated that the burden of proof was upon the defendant to show, first, that the note was signed, was not obtained from his mother by fraud, and that she signed with knowledge of its contents, and that the note has not since been altered in a material point. The defendant assumed the burden of proof, and upon this assumption claimed, and was allowed, the privilege of opening and concluding. This assumption meant that he would undertake to overcome by a preponderance of the testimony the material allegations in plaintiff’s petition. We do not see upon what idea he was allowed this privilege, or burden, whichever it may be called, unless it was granted by consent of the parties. The law imposes upon the plaintiff the onus of making good the material allegations in an equitable petition based upon alleged fraudulent conduct of° the defendant; but where the defendant claims, and is allowed, the right to open and conclude a case, he can not exercise such a privilege without also bearing the burdens which it legally imposes.

3. Error is assigned on the following charge of the court: “If you find that the note was given as insisted on here by the plaintiff, if given at all, upon misrepresentations by Armstrong, thinking that she was giving it for a less amount than that which was actually due, and that her signature was-thus obtained by fraud, then the defendant Armstrong could not recover anything in the case. Fraud would vitiate the whole contract, [234]*234and he eould not recover whatever amount might have been due at the time.” As an abstract proposition of law, we think this charge free from error. But we fail to find in the record any testimony whatever which authorizes a submission of this issue in the pleading's to the jury. The defendant introduced the attesting witness to the note, who swore to its execution by the plaintiff’s intestate. An effort was made to impeach this witness by proof of bad character, and also an effort to sustain her by proof of good character. The defendant was a witness in his own behalf, and his testimony tended to sustain his answer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 S.E. 158, 105 Ga. 229, 1898 Ga. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-penn-ga-1898.