Chaffee's Sons v. Blanchard's Estate

168 A. 695, 105 Vt. 442, 1933 Vt. LEXIS 237
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 3, 1933
StatusPublished

This text of 168 A. 695 (Chaffee's Sons v. Blanchard's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chaffee's Sons v. Blanchard's Estate, 168 A. 695, 105 Vt. 442, 1933 Vt. LEXIS 237 (Vt. 1933).

Opinion

Moulton, J.

Here we have a petition for a new trial brought by the hitherto unsuccessful defendant upon the ground of newly discovered evidence. The original proceeding was an appeal from the award of commissioners upon the defendant estate, heard in the trial court without a jury and resulting in a judgment for the plaintiffs to recover upon two promissory notes, signed by the decedent, one for $31,175.75 and the other for $250. This judgment was affirmed in this Court (105 Vt. 389, 165 Atl. 912), it being held that the notes were witnessed, thus defeating the defendant’s plea of the statute of limitations. The other question raised, and decided against the defendant, was whether the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to reopen the ease to permit the defendant to file an additional plea of payment, the motion to obtain this result being based upon the affidavit of S. Wayne Terrill to the effect that, at some time before the trial, Newman K. Chaffee, one of the plaintiffs, had exhibited to him a note, signed by the decedent for thirty-seven thousand and odd dollars, which was not the note produced in court, but which it is claimed was given in payment of it. This, in a little more detail, and accompanied with a similar but some *444 what less positive affidavit from Bert L. Stafford, who was attorney for the defendant while the case was in the probate court, is the newly discovered evidence relied upon.

Without considering the question whether the requisite diligence in the' discovery of the claimed newly discovered evidence has been employed, there are two reasons why this petition cannot be granted. The testimony of Mr. Terrill has already been submitted to the trial court, as a reason for allowing an amendment to the answer and reopening the case, and its action in denying the application has been sustained by this Court. True, no affidavit of Mr. Stafford was presented at that time. But what he was prepared to depose was then known to the defendant’s counsel, and, if the latter desired’ an opportunity to introduce his testimony, he should have made it known in a proper way in his application, since he had adopted that method of procedure. As it is, the matter stands substantially as though there had been a petition for a new trial filed in the trial court, and denied there, after which the ruling so made had been affirmed. It would be an extraordinary procedure which would permit a new petition based upon the same evidence which had been presented, or, being known, might have been presented by the first petition to be thereafter preferred directly to this Court.

Furthermore, "a new trial on the ground of neAvly discovered evidence will not be granted unless such evidence is so controlling or so persuasive as to make it reasonably probable that it will produce a different result.” Johnson v. Rule, 105 Vt. 249, 164 Atl. 681, 683. An examination of the depositions taken upon notice by each of the parties makes it clear that such is not the case here. The testimony of the executrix and her present attorneys, so far as material, only goes to show when they were actually informed of the evidence. The notes in suit were demand notes and were dated respectively March 26, 1913, and December 22, 1913. Each was typewritten on a sheet of letter size paper and contained a statement that it was secured by a certain mortgage on real estate and the pledge of certain corporate stock. On the back of each was written "Renewed, March 23, 1921, J. W. Blanchard. Witness, A. M. Burr.” These indorsements were held in our former opinion in this case (105 Vt. 389, 165 Atl. 912, 913) to constitute them wit *445 nessed promissory notes, so that the fourteen-year period of limitation prescribed in G. L. 1853 applied, thus preventing their outlawry at the time of the decedent’s death, October 9, 1930. The testimony of Mr. Terrill is to the effect that the note exhibited to him by Mr. Chaffee was for thirty-seven thousand and odd dollars and was dated sometime in March, 1921, and payable on demand; that it was made out upon an ordinary stock form for such an obligation, much smaller than letter size paper, but whether the blanks were filled in by typewriting or script, he cannot recall; that it contained no reference to any security, but that Mr. Chaffee told him that it was secured by mortgage; and that there was nothing upon the back of it except some cancelled revenue stamps. Such a note, it is needless to state, would have become outlawred six years after the right of action upon it had accrued (G. L. 1849), and long before the decedent’s death. Therefore, if the notes in suit had in truth been paid by it, the plaintiffs would now be without a remedy.

In his deposition all that Mr. Stafford says concerning the note shown to him is as follows: “I have no distinct remembrance about that (the amount of the note), except that it was in the 30’s; my best recollection about it is, it was thirty-seven thousand dollars; but I have no distinct recollection of it; I paid no particular attention to the note, other than the signature; I remember that quite distinctly.”

The plaintiffs took the depositions of Newman K. Chaffee and Mrs. Anna M. Burr. The former stated that he showed to Mr. Terrill the note for $31,175.75, and, he thought, the note for $250 also; that he showed both notes to Mr. Stafford; that, at the time of decedent’s death, these were the only notes against him held by the plaintiffs and had been in the plaintiff’s possession continuously ever since their execution; that these notes had never been paid by another note; that the decedent never gave to the plaintiffs a note for thirty-seven thousand and odd dollars; and that no such note as described by Mr. Terrill has ever been in their hands. This witness was not cross-examined. Mrs. Burr testified that from 1917 until October 6, 1922, she was employed by F. Chaffee’s Sons as bookkeeper and had charge of the note files of the firm; that she had access to the file containing the Blanchard notes and from time to time examined them; that when the two notes in suit were renewed, on *446 March 23, 1921, she took them from the files, and at the decedent’s request witnessed his signature; that up to the time she left the plaintiff’s employment in 1922 there were no other notes in the file or appearing upon the books of the plaintiff; that there was at no time a note for thirty-seven and odd thousand dollars; and that she made an indorsement upon the back of the larger note as follows: “Dec. 31, 1921. Interest paid by book account to apply. $94.84.”

It is truly said in the plaintiff’s brief that the testimony of Mr. Terrill can be explained upon the ground of an erroneous memory; but the testimony of Mr. Chaffee and Mrs. Burr can be rejected only upon the ground of deliberate falsity. Mr. Stafford does not attempt to state more than his best recollection, which he admits to be indistinct. Indeed, the recurrence of the figure 7 in the amount of the larger note of $31,175.75, may well account for an undoubtedly honest mistake on the part of Mr. Terrill and the equally honest uncertainty of Mr. Stafford, neither of whom made any memorandum of what he had seen. Opposed, as the testimony of these two witnesses is, by the categorical denial by Mr. Chaffee and Mrs. Burr, it cannot be said that the evidence upon which the defendant relies is of a sufficiently persuasive nature to warrant any expectation of a different result upon another trial.

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Related

Johnson v. Rule
164 A. 681 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1933)
Chaffee's Sons v. Estate of Blanchard
165 A. 923 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1933)
State v. Flint
60 Vt. 304 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1888)
Phelps v. Utley
101 A. 1011 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
168 A. 695, 105 Vt. 442, 1933 Vt. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaffees-sons-v-blanchards-estate-vt-1933.