Denman v. McMahin

37 Ind. 241
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 37 Ind. 241 (Denman v. McMahin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denman v. McMahin, 37 Ind. 241 (Ind. 1871).

Opinion

Downey, J.

The appellant filed a claim, consisting of two promissory notes, payable in American gold, against the estate of Moses H. Denman, his deceased son. The administrator answered, first, the general denial, which was afterward withdrawn; second, that the amount of money mentioned in the notes, five hundred dollars, was paid to the (deceased by his father as an advancement under an agree•,ment, then made, that the deceased should pay the taxes of ■•the plaintiff on the amount of the notes, and that the note should riot be collected, but should, at the death of the plain-stiff, be the property of the deceased; that the deceased . accordingly paid the taxes during his lifetime, and his administrator was ready still to pay them; that since the contract was made, February, 1857, the plaintiff has become so .impaired in mind that he is incapable of business; and that (this suit is being prosecuted without his knowledge or consent; third, set-off for forty-four dollars and fifteen cents; fourth, that subsequent to the giving of the notes, the plaintiff agreed with the deceased that he would not require him to pay them, that all he would require of him was to pay to him whatever amount would be necessary to pay the taxes that might be assessed on said amount from year to year during the lifetime of said plaintiff and that at his death the said notes should not be collected, but should belong to the deceased, .and be received as so much 'of said plaintiff’s .estate, to which said deceased would be entitled as one of [243]*243his children; that deceased had paid said taxes during his lifetime, for said plaintiff, from the date of said note until the year 1869, was ready and willing to carryout his contract at his decease, and said administrator is still ready to do so.

Separate demurrers to the third and fourth paragraphs of the answer were overruled, and the plaintiff excepted.

Reply by way of traverse. Trial by jury. General vertí idf for the defendant, and special findings, as follows:

xst. Did the plaintiff loan the deceased, Moses H. Den-man, five hundred dollars in American gold at the date of these notes in controversy, and take these notes to secure the payment thereof? Answer. Yes.

2d. Did the plaintiff enter into any contract subsequent to the execution of the notes in suit which was binding on him to discharge the defendant from payment of the same? Answer. Yes.

3d. If any such contract was made, when was it? Answer. In August, 1868, and several times subsequently.

The plaintiff moved the court for a new trial, for reasons which will be hereafter noticed, which motion was overruled, and he excepted, and put the evidence in the record by bill of exceptions.

The errors assigned are, first, that the court erred in overruling the plaintiff’s(demurrers to the third and fourth paragraphs of the answer; and, second, in refusing to grant a new trial.

The third paragraph of the answér was a set-off for an amount so much less than the amount of the plaintiff’s ' claim, that the jury could not have found for the defendant on that paragraph. For this reason, notwithstanding we regard the paragraph as substantially defective, we cannot reverse the judgment.

The fourth paragraph sets up an alleged contract between the plaintiff and the deceased, .made subsequent: to the making of the notes, and alleges performance of that contract during the lifetime of the deceased, and readiness on the [244]*244part of the administrator to complete the same. Two objections are urged in the demurrer to this paragraph; first, that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a defence; and, second, that it contains two distinct causes of defence. The objection based on alleged duplicity could not be raised by demurrer. Rielay v. Whitcher, 18 Ind. 458, and case cited. The other objection we need not decide, as the case must be reversed on other grounds, and the answer can be amended.

The first and second reasons assigned for a new trial relate to the action of the court on the demurrers to the paragraphs of the answer. ( These are no reasons for a new trial.

The third reason is, that the court improperly admitted in evidence the statements of the plaintiff concerning the notes, unconnected with any act. There is no ground for this objection. The admissions of a party are evidence against him, whether made in connection with an act done or not.

The ninth reason is, that the court refused to allow the plaintiff to prove the declarations of Moses H. Denman, the deceased, made subsequent to the execution and delivery of the notes, and prior to August, 1868, which were offered to prove that the deceased recognized the notes as being a debt he owed, and did not claim the amount secured by them as an advancement. We cannot see any ground on which this ruling can be sustained. One or more of the defendant’s witnesses had testified to a conversation by the plaintiff in August, 1868, in which he said that he never intended to collect the notes. But this was no reason for excluding all evidence to the contrary. Under the issue formed by the second paragraph of the answer, which was passed by as sufficient, without being demurred to, and the denial thereof, this proposed evidence was important to the plaintiff and should have been -admitted.

The twelfth reason is the refusal of the court to allow the plaintiff to prove his own statements to the effect that the deceased owed him the amount which the notes called for, and that he was anxious to get the money. There was no error in this. A party cannot, as a general rule, prove his [245]*245own statements as evidence for himself. Scobey v. Armington, 5 Ind. 514.

The thirteenth reason is the admission- of the evidence of Wesley Rountree, who testified that in 1865 the plaintiff told him that some years before he had let the deceased have some money, he thought six hundred and sixty dollars; and that he had told Moses that all the interest he would ■ charge him was to pay the taxes on it, and that it would all belong to him some day, anyhow. It seems to us that this evidence had a tendency to prove 'the matters set up in the answer, and.that it was properly admitted.

The fourteenth reason is the admission of a tax receipt as evidence of the payment of the taxes of' the plaintiff This receipt does not show that the taxes were paid by the deceased, but it shows that they were paid, and other evidence might show that they were paid by the deceased. It was part of the defendant’s case to show the payment of the taxes. The genuineness of the receipt was not questioned. It was properly admitted.

The fourth reason relates to the correctness of the first, second, third, fourth, and fifth instructions given by the court at the request of the defendant. We see no objection to the fourth instruction. The first, second, third, and fifth are as follows:

“1. Natural love and affection is a good consideration for a promise or agreement from father to child.

“2. If the jury believe that after the execution of the notes in controversy, the said plaintiff determined to permit the said Moses H. Denman to retain the said money, and that he, said plaintiff never intended to' collect the same while he lived, and so told him, and that after his death the same should be his, the same was an advancement to his said son, and cannot be-recovered back in this action.

“3.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Ind. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denman-v-mcmahin-ind-1871.