Demelman v. Burton

57 N.E. 665, 176 Mass. 363, 1900 Mass. LEXIS 921
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 20, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 57 N.E. 665 (Demelman v. Burton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Demelman v. Burton, 57 N.E. 665, 176 Mass. 363, 1900 Mass. LEXIS 921 (Mass. 1900).

Opinion

Hammond, J.

The declaration was upon a note alleged to have been made by the defendant payable to his own order and by him indorsed to the plaintiff.

The answer contained several independent defences, one of which was a denial of the genuineness of the “ signature of said note,” and another was that “ there was no lawful consideration for the same.”

Interrogatories were filed by the plaintiff to the defendant. Of these the first ten related to the issue as to the genuineness [364]*364of the signature, the eleventh to the writing of other parts of the note, and the twelfth to the delivery of the note, while the remaining eight interrogatories related to the consideration.

The defendant answered the first twelve, but declined to answer the others unless so ordered by the court. Subsequently he answered them. At the trial the plaintiff read the first ten interrogatories and the answers thereto. The defendant moved that the remaining interrogatories and answers be read. The plaintiff stated that he was willing to read any of the answers to the first twelve, and read the eleventh, but he declined to read the answers to the last eight interrogatories unless so ordered by the court. The court refused to order that these be read. To this refusal the defendant excepted.

We think that this action of the court was correct. The practice act originally provided that “ the party interrogated shall be entitled to require that the whole of the answers shall be read if any part of them shall be read.” This was changed in the following year by St. 1852, c. 312, § 73, so as to read as it now stands in Pub. Sts. c. 167, § 77, “the party interrogated may require that the whole of the answers upon any one subject matter inquired of shall be read, if a part of them is read.” One of the issues was the genuineness of the signatures, and that was the only “ subject matter inquired of ” by the first ten interrogatories. There was no other interrogatory or answer upon that subject matter. All that the defendant had said upon that was read to the jury. In Churchill v. Ricker, 109 Mass. 209, upon which the defendant relies, it was held that the “ subject matter inquired of ” was not the particular fact covered by the interrogatory, “ but the matter put in issue by the pleadings and thus inquired of,” and that since one subject matter put in issue by the pleadings in the case was whether or not the defendant was negligent in leaving 'open and unguarded a hole in a sidewalk, all the answers of the defendant bearing upon that issue should be read if any of them were.

But this is far short of saying that if the answers bearing upon only one issue are read, the answers upon all other issues must be read. The “ subject matter inquired of ” in these first ten interrogatories was the matter "put in issue by a denial of the genuineness of the signatures and nothing else.

[365]*365The bill of exceptions is not very clear respecting the use made of the amended answer in the closing argument of the plaintiff’s counsel. The real defence relied upon at the trial was that set up in the amended answer, namely, that the consideration for the note in suit was an agreement on the part of the plaintiff to prove against the estate of the defendant in insolvency certain prior notes held by the plaintiff and indorsed by the defendant, and to vote for the latter’s discharge.

In the course of the trial the evidence was conflicting as to whether the note was signed and delivered at the Traders’ Bank, as claimed by the defendant, or at the plaintiff’s office, as claimed by the plaintiff; and whether at the time of the delivery of the note the defendant, as claimed by him, was ignorant that such an agreement was illegal, or, as claimed by the plaintiff, knew that such an agreement was illegal.

In his closing argument to the jury the counsel for the defendant virtually admitted that his client was wrong “ as to where the note was signed,” and continuing said that “if the defendant had testified that the note was signed in the plaintiff’s office on February 15, he (the defendant) would have had a better case and a less troublesome case, and that he (counsel) wished the testimony had been the other way on this point, so far as his duty as attorney was concerned, and argued that even if the conversation before the bank took place on February 7, and the note was signed in the plaintiff’s office on the 15th, this was immaterial.” Counsel for the plaintiff in his closing argument claimed that a “radical change of position by counsel during the progress of a trial, as to material facts, indicated that his client had deceived him as to the facts, and that there had been such a change of position by counsel for the defendant in the present case; and in support of this contention counsel for the plaintiff compared the amended answer, the opening to the jury of counsel for the defendant, and the direct testimony of the defendant and the witness Hutchinson on the one hand (in all of which it was stated that the note was given before the defendant was advised of the illegality of the alleged agreement, and that as soon as he was so advised he repudiated that agreement), with the closing argument of counsel for the defendant on the other hand. In the course of this argument counsel for the plaintiff proceeded to [366]*366read the amended answer, to which counsel for the defendant objected. The court overruled the objection and permitted counsel for the plaintiff to read the answer, to which ruling the defendant duly excepted.”

While this statement as quoted from the record is somewhat indefinite, still we construe the record to mean that the plaintiff’s counsel read the amended answer, not simply to indicate the issue raised thereby, but also as evidence that the counsel when he drew it was deceived by his client, for he “ compared ” the allegations of the amended answer with the position of counsel at the close, and he made that comparison in support of the "argument he was'urging and in connection with certain other things upon which he relied as evidence in support of his argument. And we are confirmed in that view by the following statement in the plaintiff’s brief: It must be particularly observed that this comment did not in any way treat the answer as evidence, or attribute it to the defendant; on the contrary, it was treated as a pleading merely, and attributed solely to counsel, who had drawn and filed it in the presence of the jury. The entire comment was upon the attitude of counsel, and his shift of position.”

And we are still further confirmed in this view by the following language in the charge of the court: “ The pleadings are generally drawn by the attorneys in the case, and their clients are not parties to that, and, therefore, usually, the parties to the pleadings are not responsible for them, and they are not to be treated as evidence against them, except so far as they authorize them and direct them and have knowledge of them.”

There would seem to be no reason thus to charge the jury as to the pleadings in a case on trial unless the intent was to allow the jury to use the allegations of the answer as evidence according as they should find that the defendant did or did not know what they were.

Pub. Sts. c. 167, § 75, is as follows: “Neither the declaration, answer, nor a subsequent allegation, shall be deemed evidence on the trial, but allegations only whereby the party making them is bound.” See also St. 1851, c. 233, § 112 ; St. 1852, c. 312, § 75.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 N.E. 665, 176 Mass. 363, 1900 Mass. LEXIS 921, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demelman-v-burton-mass-1900.