Crowley v. Goodrich

44 A.2d 128, 114 Vt. 304, 162 A.L.R. 691, 1945 Vt. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 2, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 44 A.2d 128 (Crowley v. Goodrich) 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
Crowley v. Goodrich, 44 A.2d 128, 114 Vt. 304, 162 A.L.R. 691, 1945 Vt. LEXIS 85 (Vt. 1945).

Opinion

Jeffords, J.

This is an action of fraud and deceit based on alleged falsq and fraudulent representations in procuring a loan from the plaintiffs to the Goodrich-Daniell Lumber Corporation, of which the defendant was the president and principal stockholder. Trial was by court with a resulting judgment for the plaintiffs. The case is here on exceptions by the defendant.

The loan in question was for $2,000.00. The court found that the defendant told Crowley that this amount was needed to take up an option on a certain timber lot which was worth more than that amount and was ample security for the loan. A mortgage on the timber on the lot was given after the procuring of the loan by the Lumber Corporation as security. The value of the timber on the lot thus became material and both parties introduced testimony as to the amount of timber standing on the lot at various times and as to its value.

A witness for the plaintiffs gave his estimate of the amount of timber as 'of December 10, 1943. The defendant later attempted to introduce entries in a ledger of the Lumber Corporation and certain checks to workmen as tending to show that between the', time of the alleged fraudulent representations and the above date a certain amount of timber had been cut on the lot. This evidence was excluded and an exception granted the defendant to the ruling of the court.

*306 The witness through whom the entries and checks were attempted to be introduced was the bookkeeper of the Lumber Corporation. She testified that the entries in the ledger were made by her from scale slips furnished her each week by the foreman on the job showing the cutting done by each workman and that the entries were made in the due course of business immediately upon receipt of the information from the foreman. The witness also testified that the ledger entries showed the names of the men who did the cutting, the amounts paid them and the amount of timber cut by each man. It also appeared from this witness that after she made the entries the scale slips or memoranda from which the entries were made were destroyed by her.

By No. 48 of the Acts of 1939 the Legislature passed what is known as the Uniform Business Records as Evidence Act. Section 2 of No. 48 reads as follows:

“Business records. A record of an act, condition or event, shall in so far as relevant, be competent evidence if the custodian or other qualified witness testifies to its identity and the mode of its preparation, and if it was made in the regular course of business, at or near the time of the act, condition or event, and if, in the opinion of the court, the source of information, method and time of preparation were such as to justify its admission.”

This act governs here and makes unnecessary a discussion' of the cases cited by both parties of the rules of the common law from this and other jurisdictions relating to the admission of ledger'entries as evidence, especially those made in the book of a person not a party to the action being tried.

By the terms of the act the admissibility of a record is conditioned on the opinion of the trial court that “the source of information, method and time of preparation were such as to justify its admission.” It is to be inferred from the transcript that the foreman who gave the scale slips or memoranda was present in court during most of the time that the bookkeeper was on the stand and he later, as a witness for the defendant, gave his opinion as to the amount of timber on the lot in issue. At no time was he interrogated as to the scale slips or memoranda which he *307 had given the bookkeeper. The noncalling by the defendant of the foreman to testify in respect to the scale slips or memoranda afforded sufficient grounds for the ruling of the court excluding the ledger entries. Squires v. O’Connell, 91 Vt 35, 39, 99 A 268.

The defendant says that the offered evidence was excluded because the entries were not the original tally slips. But this is not necessarily so. It is true that before it appeared that-the slips had been destroyed the court stated that these slips were the best evidence of the amount of timber cut. This statement was approved by counsel for the defendant who stated that the foreman who made them would later be present in court. Later the court again stated that the best evidence would be the tally cards and upon being reminded that they had been destroyed said that it did not believe that this fact in and of itself made the ledger entries primary evidence. When the court ruled on the offer of the entries no grounds for the exclusion were stated.

Since there was a sufficient ground for the ruling it is sustained as we uphold rulings made below if there be any legal ground for the same. Bristol v. Noyes, 106 Vt 418, 422, 174 A 924; Andrews v. Aldrich, 104 Vt 235, 237, 158 A 676.

The defendant claims no grounds for error in the exclusion of the checks different from those advanced for the ruling on the ledger entries.

The defendant excepted to the judgment for the plaintiffs. The only question for our determination raised by this exception is whether the judgment is warranted by the facts found. Campbell v. Ryan, 112 Vt 238, 240, 22 A2d 502.

The court found that the actual loss sustained by the plaintiffs by reason of the fraud perpetrated upon them by the defendant is $2,214.33. Judgment was entered for the plaintiffs for this amount, with costs, and their motion for a certified execution was granted. Both parties agree that the above amount represents the face value of a note given by the Lumber Corporation to the plaintiffs with interest. The court found the giving of this note and it is also found that the standing timber on the lot in question on January 6, 1943, the date of the alleged fraudulent representations, was not worth more than $600.00.

The defendant claims that the amount of the judgment should be reduced by $600.00 and further that- a judgment-for nominal damages only should have been rendered in the absence of any *308 finding that the Lumber Corporation, the maker of the note, was insolvent.

Where a plaintiff has lost money through making a loan on collateral, induced by false representations as to the value of the property given as collateral, the measure of his damages is the net amount of money actually lost which is ordinarily held to be the amount by which the loan exceeded the actual value of the collateral at the date of the loan with interest. 37 CJS Fraud, § 142, p. 473; While v. Gordon, 130 Or 139, 279 P 289; Briggs v. Brushaber, 43 Mich 330, 5 NW 383, 38 Am Rep 187; Ganow v. Ashton, 32 SD 458, 143 NW 383. Also see McKinley v. Warren, 218 Mass 310, 105 NE 990, and Whittier v. Collins, 15 RI 90, 23 A 47, 2 Am St Rep 879.

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Bluebook (online)
44 A.2d 128, 114 Vt. 304, 162 A.L.R. 691, 1945 Vt. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowley-v-goodrich-vt-1945.