Calwell's Ex'r v. Prindle's Adm'r

19 W. Va. 604, 1882 W. Va. LEXIS 16
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 19 W. Va. 604 (Calwell's Ex'r v. Prindle's Adm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Calwell's Ex'r v. Prindle's Adm'r, 19 W. Va. 604, 1882 W. Va. LEXIS 16 (W. Va. 1882).

Opinion

Haymond, Judge,

announced the opinion of the Court:

The case of Calwell v. Prindle’s administrator has, as we have seen, heretofore been before this Court. Calwell v. Prindle’s adm’r, 11 W. Va. 307. The case was decided by this Court on the 10th day of September, 1877, and remanded to the circuit court of the county of Greenbrier for further proceedings therein to be had. This Court in the opinion then rendered therein as the opinion of the Court, at page 317, says: “The deposition of David Watts was taken and filed by the plaintiff, but it was excepted to by the defendant, Mathews, as being incompetent and irrelevant; and the Court sustained the exception, I think, properly.” Again, at page 320, the Court said : “The deposition of James Cox was also taken and filed by the plaintiff; and the defendant, Mathews, filed exceptions to it as being hearsay, incompetent and irrel[631]*631evant. The court sustained the exception rightly, I think, as the witness only deposed to what other persons had told him ; his evidence is simply hearsay and inadmissible. The plaintiff also took and filed the deposition of Joel McPherson, the trustee, in which he testified, that he is fully persuaded, that the debt referred to was adjusted by E. S. Cal well with P. A. Prindle; but he has no personal knowledge of said adjustment. He also says, that his impression was derived from hearsay, but that Prindle had never admitted to him, that said debt was paid, and that he never saw said Prindle after 1861.” Again at page 328 the Court further said : “ The deposition of McPherson simply stated an impression derived from hearsay. This deposition neither proves nor tends to prove anything — it is too uncertain and inconclusive in its very nature to be of any efficacy or force as evidence”

Again at page 323 : “ At the time the property conveyed by said deed of trust was advertised for sale by the trustee, only about fourteen years had elapsed, since the debt became due and payable. The plaintiff in order to prove payment of the debt caused himself to be examined in his own behalf and, as we have seen, he states in his deposition, that he paid the debt before the expiration of the two years from the date of the trust, and that he paid it with the Thomas order to Prin-dle, and took up the bond or note, which he had given for the debt, and that during the war the said bond or note was lost or destroyed, as he believes, in the manner stated in his evidence. He further states, he has made diligent search for the bond or note, and has not been able to find it, but that he found said order, which he exhibits with his deposition.”

At page 326 : For the foregoing reasons it seems to me, that no part of plaintiff’s deposition given in his own behalf, or to be more explicit, in chief is admissible under thestatnte, except so much as proves the making and delivery of the Thomas order; and it cannot therefore be read except as aforesaid in his behalf for any purpose.” Again at page 328 : “Under the views I have presented there is no proof of payment of the said debt of $777.00 to Prindle. The only question left for consideration is, whether the lapse of time, between the time the said debt became due, and the time the property was advertised for sale, which was about fourteen [632]*632years, iu connection with other circumstances appearing in the cause, is sufficient to authorize us to infer or presume, that said debt was paid or satisfied. There is in fact but one circumstance in the cause entitled to any consideration after excluding the deposition of plaintiff, and that is, the failure and inability of the defendant, Mathews, to produce the bond or note, which plaintiff alleges he made to Prindle for said debt. I have shown that the said note or bond, if ever made, was not material or necessary to prove or establish the plaintiff’s deb*1 in this cause. The copy of the deed of trust filed by plaintiff with his bill as evidence in the cause establishes the debt. The plaintiff seems to have forgotten or overlooked the fact, that said deed of trust contains an express covenant on his part to pay said debt in two years. Under the circumstances of this case, as it now stands, 1 do not understand, that the mere circumstance of the inability of the defendant, Mathews, the administrator’, to produce the said bond or note, is sufficient in connection with the lapse of time to authorize or justify the inference or presumption, that said debt has been paid. Indeed in this case, as it is now presented, I do not consider the failure or inability to produce said note or bond, being a circumstance unconnected, as it is, with other circumstances or facts proven or properly appearing bearing upon the question of payment, as being entitled to any efficacy, or as authorizing any reasonable inference or presumption of payment of the debt in question, connected with the lapse of time in this case. The mere lapse of fourteen years, since the debt became due in this case, unconnected with pertinent circumstances proved, from which an inference of payment of the debt may reasonably be drawn, does not authorize a presumption of payment by a court or jury.”

Again at page 330: “Upon the whole it seems to me, that the circuit court erred in its decree of June, 1876, in ascer-tainingand determining, that the claim of defendant, Mathews, administrator of P. A. Prindle, deceased, from what appears in the cause, is not a subsisting debt, and in perpetuating the injunction theretofore awarded in the cause. The creditors named in said trust-deed, their assigns or personal representatives, as the case may be, should have been made parties to the bill. They as well as the plaintiff, if their debts secured [633]*633by said trust-deed have not been paid, have the right to ¡contest the debt claimed by Prindle’s administrator in this cause, and to have their debts, if existing, paid. The trustee, McPherson, should not have advertised the property in the said deed of trust mentioned, to be sold to pay the Prindle debt to the exclusion of the other creditors named in said deed, from anything that now appears in this case. If the trustee entertained any reasonable doubt, as to whether the Prindle debt was paid or not, and did not know certainly, that the other debts in said deed of trust mentioned were satisfied, or did not exist, he should not have proceeded to advertise the property, or any part of it for sale, until the existence or nonexistence of the said trust-debts, or any part of them, had been first judicially ascertained and for that purpose he should have filed his bill in equity. The decree rendered in the cause must be reversed with costs to the appellant and against the appellee, Edmund S. Calwell, and the cause remanded to the circuit court of the county of Greenbrier, with instruction to said court to permit the plaintiff to file an amended bill, making new and additional parties to the cause, in accordance with the opinion of this court, if he shall ask permission to do so in such time, as said court shall deem reasonable ; and if the plaintiff shall fail to file such amended bill in such time as said circuit court may deem reasonable, then the said circuit court to dissolve the injunction awarded in the cause and dismiss the plaintiff’s bill at his costs. And if the plaintiff shall file such amended bill, leave is given him to take and file further depositions of witnesses upon the subject of the payment, and the existence or non-existence of said Prindle debt, that question being reserved and left open for further inquiry and consideration,” &c.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 W. Va. 604, 1882 W. Va. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calwells-exr-v-prindles-admr-wva-1882.