Forcheimer v. Holly

14 Fla. 239
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 14 Fla. 239 (Forcheimer v. Holly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forcheimer v. Holly, 14 Fla. 239 (Fla. 1872).

Opinion

WESTCOTT, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action by the payee against the maker of the following promissory note:

$500. Mobile, March 23d, 1864.

One day after date I promise to pay to A. Eoreheimer, or order, five hundred dollars, value received. Negotiable and payable at the Mobile Savings’ Bank-.

E. F. Holly.

To the complaint describing this note as the cause of action, tlie defendant, Holly, filed two distinct answers — -one consisting of five grounds of defence — the other of two. The plaintiff, Eoreheimer, demurred to each of the answers and to the several matters of defence therein set up. This demurrer the court sustained, with leave to defendant to file an amended answer instanter.' The defendant availed himself of this leaver and filed an amended answer. The order [241]*241of the court sustaining this demurrer is the first error assigned here by the appellant.

The defendant, by amending his answer, elected to change his defence and not to rely upon matters set up in his first answer. ■ If it was his desire to rest his case upon these defences, he should not have availed himself of leave to amend them. lie should have submitted to a.final judgment, and on appeal from that judgment all the questions raised by the demurrer wonld have been presented to this court. When a pleading under the circumstances here disclosed is amended, the original pleading ceases to be a part of the récord, because the party has elected to mate the change. 18 New York, 496. Plaintiff’s demurrer being thus sustained, with leave to defendant-to amend, he filed an amended answer. The return now before the court shows neither a reply, which in some cases may be required, (Code, Section 103,) nor demurrer to this amended answer, the entries following the amended answer ■ being a verdict of the jury for the the plaintiff and a judgment in his favor for the amount of the verdict. The following memorandum attested by the judge presents the only questions involving a consideration of the testimony and arising upon the trial, which we can consider:

“ In this case, plaintiff offered as evidence an unstamped note for five hundred dollars, given by defendant to plaintiff, to the admission of which defendant objected as forbid■den by act of Congress. The court held that Congress could not prescribe rules of evidence for State courts, and admit-the note as evidence. To which ruling the defendant excepted. The defendant offered to prove that since the close of the war he had offered to pay said note in legal United States currency, at a specified rate as compared with Confederate currency, which plaintiff refused to accept, but the witness being questioned by the court as to any actual proffer of money by the defendant, stated that there had been no such proffer. The court held that the proposed evidence [242]*242was inadmissible to show a legal tender. To which ruling the defendant excepted.”

These rulings being excepted to, are assigned here as error. • The act of Congress fixing stamp duties enacts that such a contract as this note shall not be used as evidence in any court,- until a legal stamp denoting the amount of tax shall have been affixed thereto as prescribed by law. Some of'the courts hold that this act, not applying in terms to the courts of the several States, can have full operation if it is construed to apply to those courts only which have been established under the Constitution of the United States by acts of Congress. Thus construing the act, they hold' that it does not relate to the State courts. Some State courts have sustained the act in its bx’oadest construction, while others, admitting that its language and intent embraces State as well as-Federal courts, deny the power of Congress thus to prescribe rules of evidence to govern the State courts, holding that the general government is as powerless to regulate the course of justice and rules of evidence in the State courts as the State courts are powerless to interfere -with the subjects and rights exclusively confided to the courts of the United States, and that neither can thus interfere with the course of justice in the courts of the other. 45 Ill. 29; 97 Mass. 452; 1 Bush., 239.

-Our views are expressed by the Supreme Court of Illinois, when disposing of the same question in a case before it. That court says, If our system of government is to remain as the wise and good men fashioned it, a strictly federative system, the States sovereign over all subjects within their pi’oper sphere of action as the 'gexxeral government is over all subjects confided to it by the Constitution, then no power exists in Congress to declare by law what shall or shall ixot be evidexiee in a State court, and what domestic contx’acts made by the people of the States in virtxxe of their own laws, and having no connection with the Federal gov-[243]*243eminent, shall be valid.” 45 Ill. 30. There was no error im admitting the note without a stamp.

As to the other ruling assigned, for error, the witness admitted that there was no actual proffer of the money. What occurred was simply a proposition to pay what defendant thought he should pay. This is the evidence as stated by the judge.

The plea under which this evidenee was offered was availuble for no purpose, as it was not accompanied with a proferí in cwria of the money. Where there is no proferí, a plaintiff, even after issue and verdict for' defendant, would be entitled to judgment non obstante veredicto.

What we have said disposes of everything occurring in the trial which this record presents for our consideration. This case and exceptions verified by the judge and just considered, and the final judgment upon the verdict, are the only actual determinations by the court which this return presents. This record shows neither issues of fact nor law upon the several defences set up in the amended answer. There is neither reply nor demurrer to it, and yet there is a general verdict of the jury upon issues of some kind which they considered.

Under the Code there are cases in which neither a reply nor demurrer is necessary. Whether in this case either was essential we do not determine, as in the view we take of the case, it is not necessary to decide that question. If the matters set up in this amended answer amount to no defence, it-is plain that the judgment should be affirmed here. It certainly cannot be correct practice to send a case back to try issues either of law or fact which can amount to nothing, and when the only result can be an affirmance of the judgment now in the return before us. With this view, wre ex-' amine very briefly the several matters of defence set up in. this amended answer. The first defence is that the note was made by the defendant and delivered to the plaintiff in. the State of Alabama, where the contract was made, and [244]*244where the consideration for which it was so made and delivered was at the time, and where the said plaintiff and defendant were then domiciled, and where the defendant has ever since resided and is now residing. These facts constitute no defence to the action.

The second defence is that the consideration for which the note was given was Confederate Treasury Notes, and that the note described in the complaint was to be paid in the same notes. There have been two conventions of the people of. this State since May, 1865.

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

Related

Sisco v. Rotenberg
104 So. 2d 365 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1958)
Rodriguez v. Powell
172 So. 849 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1937)
Gray v. Moss
156 So. 262 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1934)
Masser v. the London Operating Co.
145 So. 72 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1932)
Kreiss Potassium Phosphate Co. v. Knight
124 So. 751 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1929)
Haughey v. Heaney
103 So. 400 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1925)
Farmers Savings Bank v. Neel
193 Iowa 685 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1922)
Clark v. State
67 So. 135 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1914)
Bremen Mining & Milling Co. v. Bremen
79 P. 806 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1905)
Cleland v. Hostetter
13 N.M. 43 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1905)
In the Matter of the Txn. of the Salaries of Judges
42 S.E. 970 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1902)
Small v. Slocumb
53 L.R.A. 130 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1900)
Greeley v. Whitehead
35 Fla. 523 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1895)
Asia v. Hiser
22 Fla. 378 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1886)
Matthews v. Lindsay
20 Fla. 962 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1884)
Holland v. State
15 Fla. 455 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1876)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Fla. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forcheimer-v-holly-fla-1872.