DeMarcus v. DeMarcus

12 Tenn. App. 643
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 1, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Tenn. App. 643 (DeMarcus v. DeMarcus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeMarcus v. DeMarcus, 12 Tenn. App. 643 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

SNODGRASS, J.

Complainant sought in this bill to collect a note executed to him by his brother, the defendant, on the 22nd day of January, 1920, for the sum of $5021.60 — payable one year after date with interest at six (6) per cent payable annually— conditioned also if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection to pay ten per cent attorney’s fee.

[644]*644There were many defenses to this note among which were that it was never delivered or intended to be a note bnt only a memorandum of a possible utility that had been surreptitiously taken from defendant’s trunk while in his possession; that material alterations had been made in the face of the note since it had been taken out of possession of the defendant — notably that its date had been changed from January, 1922, to January, 1920 — that it was barred by thé statute of limitations — also interposing a plea of non est factum.

Proof was taken and the cause was heard before the Chancellor who embodying his.findings therein entered the following decree: “This cause came on to be finally heard this day before the Honorable Robert M. Jones, Chancellor, upon the original bill, the exhibit thereto, the answer of the defendant, the depositions on file, and the exhibits thereto, from all of which it satisfactorily appeared to the court from the proof, and the court accordingly adjudges and decrees :

“That the defendant, R. T. DeMarcus, on January 22, 1920, was justly indebted to the complainant in the sum of five thousand twenty-one & 60/100 dollars ($5021.60) ; that on said date the defendant, R. T. DeMarcus, executed and delivered to the complainant, H. G. DeMarcus, the promissory note sued on in this cause for five thousand twenty-one & 60/100 dollars ($5021.60), due and payable one year after date, providing for interest thereon at 6% annually, said note further providing for 10% attorneys fees in the event it is placed in the hands of an attorney for collection or had to be sued on, in addition to the principal and interest, same to be taxed in judgment, and the court, further finds, adjudges and decrees that the defendant has paid no part of said note, but that the same is wholly unpaid, together with interest thereon from the date of its execution.

“The court further finds from the proof and accordingly adjudges and decrees that the defendant, R. T. DeMarcus, within six years prior to the filing of the bill in this cause, repeatedly promised to pay the complainant the amount of said note, as alleged in the bill; that repeatedly during the year 1926 and the year 1927, defendant promised the complainant he would pay -him the amount, of said note; that the last promise to pay said note which the defendant made to the complainant, was in the month of April, 1928; that on said last named date and at all other times, the defendant distinctly and in unqualified language acknowledged that he owed said debt, that it was just, and pi’omised the complainant to pay same; that the complainant refrained from instituting suit against the defendant, who is his brother, on said indebtedness, by reason of the repeated request made of him by the defendant to refrain from instituting suit on said indebtedness; that the complainant relied [645]*645Upon said repeated promises of the defendant to pay him said note; and that but for said promises of the complainant to pay said note, and the indulgences which the complainant extended the defendant, the complainant would have brought suit sooner on said note; that complainant was forced to place said note in the hands of his attorneys, Jennings, Saxton and Wright, for collection, and is entitled to collect 10'% attorneys fees on the amount due thereon, in addition to the principal and interest.

“The court further finds from the proof in the cause and accordingly adjudges and decrees that the defendant’s plea of non est factum is not sustained by the proof, and said defense is disallowed; and the court likewise adjudges and decrees from the proof in the cause that the defense interposed by the defendant by the amendment to his answer to the effect that the note sued on in this cause originally bore the date of January 22, 1921, but was subsequently fraudulently and intentionally changed by the complainant so as to read “January 22, 1920,” is not sustained by the proof, and is disallowed.

The court being of opinion and so finding, adjudging and decreeing from the evidence in the case, and from an inspection of the note sued on, and other writing of the defendant, including the entries made by him in the pass book of the complainant, H. G-. DeMarcus, issued by Bast Tennessee Savings Bank and filed as exhibit ‘6’ to the deposition of R. T. DeMarcus, and exhibit ‘A’ to the cross-examination of R. T. DeMarcus, and exhibit ‘2’ to the deposition of H. G. DeMarcus, that each and every word and figure in the note sued on in this cause written in ink are in the genuine handwriting of the defendant R. T. DeMarcus, and that no alteration of said note has been made by the complainant or anyone else subsequent to its execution by the defendant.

“The court further finds from the proof in the cause and accordingly adjudges and decrees that the other defenses set up and relied npon by the defendant in his answer, are not sustained by the proof, the court finding from the evidence in this cause that both the defendant, R. T. DeMarcus, and his wife, Mrs. R. T. DeMarcus, are impeached and contradicted in their testimony with reference to the letters written by the defendant’s wife at the instance of the defendant, to the complainant, relative to the indebtedness sued on in this cause. The court especially finds as a fact that the letter of April 22, 1924, filed as Exhibit ‘4’ to the deposition iof the complainant in this cause, was written by the wife of the defendant at his instance and dictation, and with his full knowledge, to the complainant in this cause, as a result of the complainant having placed the note sued on in this cause in the hands of an attorney-at-law at Norfolk, Virginia, for collection, as shown by exhibit ‘d’ to re-direct examination of H. C. DeMarcus, by exhibit [646]*646‘F’ to the re-direct examination of H. G. DeMarcus, and by the registry return receipt dated April 21, 1924, signed by the defendant, E. T. DeMarcus, and filed as Exhibit ‘E’ to the re-direct of H, G. DeMareus, and that the defendant, E. T. DeMareus, is otherwise impeached by the record evidence in this cause, by his own testimony, and by the testimony of impeaching witnesses, so that the court cannot and does not believe his testimony with reference to the matters in controversy.

“Upon the trial of this cause the defendant offered to read the deposition of F. H. Poteet, but the complainant excepted and objected to questions and answers Nos. 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, and 13, and to their introduction in evidence on the grounds that the testimony of the witness Poteet is not the best evidence as to the contents of the records sought to be proved by said witness, that it is not admissible to introduce testimony of a witness as to the contents of a public record, that a certified copy of such record must be obtained and relied upon, and upon the further ground that said witness admitted upon cross-examination that he had no personal knowledge as to where the complainant, H. G. DeMarcus, was at any time in January, 1920, or during any other month in said year, all of which objections and exceptions to the introduction of said. testimony were sustained by the court and said testimony excluded.

“It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the claimant, H.

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12 Tenn. App. 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demarcus-v-demarcus-tennctapp-1931.