Dawson Town & Gas Co. v. Woodhull

67 F. 451, 14 C.C.A. 464, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2765
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 25, 1895
DocketNo. 509
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 67 F. 451 (Dawson Town & Gas Co. v. Woodhull) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dawson Town & Gas Co. v. Woodhull, 67 F. 451, 14 C.C.A. 464, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2765 (8th Cir. 1895).

Opinion

THAYER, Circuit Judge,

after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

The first error that has been assigned for our consideration relates to the action of the trial court in permitting the notes in suit to be read in evidence without requiring the plaintiff to offer any evidence tending to show that he was the owner thereof. It is insisted in behalf of the plaintiff in error that inasmuch as it had denied the fact of ownership, and had alleged affirmatively that Woodhull had paid no consideration for the paper, and had conspired With Hoile to have the suit brought in his name, but for Hoile’s benefit, the court should have required the plaintiff to furnish some proof of ownership before admitting them in evidence. We think that this assignment is untenable. The legal presumption of ownership which exists in favor of one who is ostensibly in possession of negotiable notes indorsed in blank by the payee, as these notes were, and who brings a suit thereon, is not overcome by a mere denial of the fact of ownership contained in the answer. When these notes were offered, they were in the hands of the plaintiff’s attorneys. The legal presumption was that they had received them from the hands of their client, that they had ceased to belong to the payee, and that they were the client’s property. There was no occasion, therefore, for offering testimony to confirm the presumption before the notes were admitted in evidence. Collins v. Gilbert, 94 U. S. 753, 754, and cases there cited; Brown v. Spofford, 95 U. S. 474, 478; Daniel, Neg. Inst. §§ 812, 574; Tied. Com. Paper, § 312.

[453]*453It is further assigned for error—and these assignments may be considered together—that the court erred in permitting the deposition of Curtis Woodhull, the plaintiff, to he read in his own favor, he being present at the trial, and in refusing to allow the deposition of Thomas Cary Welch to he read in behalf of the defendant company. Both of these depositions appear to have been taken and filed as evidence in the case by the defendant. The plaintiff’s deposition was first taken, but not desiring to use it after it bad been obtained and filed, for fear, no doubt, that tbe defendant would be concluded by certain statements therein contained, counsel for the defendant company resorted to the novel expedient of securing the deposition of said Welch, who was the officer before whom the plaintiff’s deposition had been reduced to writing, for the purpose of proving by Mm certain statements that had been made by tbe plaintiff in the course of his examination. On the trial of the case the deposition of Welch was first offered by the defendant, but the plaintiff interposed an objection to the reading of the same, and it was thereupon excluded by the court. The defendant then offered and read certain portions of the plaintiffs deposition, as admissions made by the plaintiff, whereupon the attorneys for the plaintiff asked and obtained leave to read the residue of the deposition, which had not been read by the defendant’s attorney. We are unable to perceive any error in either of these rulings of the circuit court of which the defendant is justly entitled to complain. The object which counsel for the defendant company obviously had in view was to lay before the jury selected portions of the plaintiff’s deposition, which the defendant had taken, and caused to he placed on file, without being put to the necessity of reading other parts of the deposition, which he deemed prejudicial to his client’s interests. The testimony of Welch, so offered, was in the nature of secondary evidence of the contents of a written document which was then in the defendant’s custody and control. Besides, it was manifestly unfair to the plaintiff to put him on the stand as a witness by means of compulsory process, and then call a third party to prove certain admissions which he may have made while testifying as a witness, without giving him the benefit of other statements contained in the deposition that may have tended to qualify and explain such admissions. When a party to a suit is called as a witness by the opposite party, he is entitled to all the privileges of a witness, and among these is the right to have all that he may have said on a given occasion, on a given subject, read to the juryj if his statements were reduced to writing, and it is proposed to use the writing against him as an admission. This is not only an elementary rule of evidence, but it is one that owes its origin to a sense of fair play and fair dealing.

Passing from these assignments of error, neither of which, in our judgment, is well founded, we have next to consider a more important exception, which was taken to the charge of the trial court The issues raised by the pleadings as to the ownership of the notes, as to the fraud practiced by Hoile, the payee, and as to whether the defendant company had received any consideration for the paper, were submitted to the jury under instructions that seem to have been [454]*454applicable to the case, and that also appear to have been substantially accurate as declarations of law. The trial court then proceeded to consider the question whether, in the event of a partial failure of consideration, owing to the alleged fraud that had been practiced, the defendant company was entitled to recoup the damages it had sustained, and thereby lessen the amount of the recovery. With reference to this feature of the case, the circuit court, in its charge, used the following language:

“Now, where there is a partial failure of consideration, or where the whole contract was the result of fraud,—had its inception in fraud,—if the parties who were so defrauded wish to avail themselves of that fact, they must have repudiated the contract; they must disaffirm it, and tender back to the person the property they receive for the giving of the notes in question. They must, it seems to me, repudiate the entire transaction, and not hold on to the property they have received. That won’t do. Was there any attempt—has there ever been an attempt—to repudiate the transaction, and to put the parties in statu quo; that is, to surrender the property to the Perry Natural Gas Company which they had received from it? If there was no such arrangement as that, then they are not in a position to repudiate it, because they can’t keep the property théy got, and refuse to pay for'it, at the same time.”

Then, after pointing out to the jury that there was testimony before them tending to show that the defendant company had received a conveyance from the Perry Natural Gas Company of land worth $12,500, subject to an incumbrance for only $5,000, and Unit, the defendant had subsequently placed another mortgage on the property, and suffered it to be foreclosed, so that it could not in fact restore the consideration it had received for the notes in suit, the trial court continued its charge as follows:

“What I have said with reference to that relates to the transaction where there is a total failure, perhaps, of consideration; but where there is a partial failure of consideration, as it is possible there may be here, the rule would be different. If they did not repudiate the entire transaction, but kept the property they have received, and there is a partial failure of consideration, then that partial failure of consideration might be set off against these notes if the plaintiff had knowledge of the fact (that) such defense existed at the time he purchased the notes.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Deutsche Bank National Trust Company v. Thomas P. Wuensch
2018 WI 35 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2018)
Adolph Ramish, Inc. v. Woodruff
40 P.2d 509 (California Supreme Court, 1934)
Capitol Hill State Bank v. Rawlins National Bank
160 P. 1171 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1916)
Rondot v. Rogers Tp.
99 F. 202 (Sixth Circuit, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 F. 451, 14 C.C.A. 464, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawson-town-gas-co-v-woodhull-ca8-1895.