Fosdick v. Van Arsdale

41 N.W. 931, 74 Mich. 302, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 648
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 41 N.W. 931 (Fosdick v. Van Arsdale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fosdick v. Van Arsdale, 41 N.W. 931, 74 Mich. 302, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 648 (Mich. 1889).

Opinion

Morse, J.

This suit .was brought to recover upon a promissory note dated at Alamo, Mich., June 7, 1886, for $110, payable seven months after its date, to plaintiff or bearer, at 10 per. cent, interest. The note was executed jointly and severally by the defendants'as makers.

The defense was that the note was made without any consideration to them, and was given for the sole purpose of procuring the release of one James Wheeler, who was in jail at Paw Paw upon a criminal charge, at the complaint of plaintiff; that the plaintiff obtained the note by fraud; and that he received it for the purpose of compounding a felony.

[304]*304The plaintiff had judgment upon the verdict of a jury-in the circuit court for the county of Kalamazoo.

It was shown upon the trial, without dispute, that at the time this note was executed the plaintiff gave up to Hannah Wheeler, who was a sister of James Wheeler, two notes that he then held against said James Wheeler. Prior to this time James Wheeler had been arrested on complaint of plaintiff, and bound over to the circuit court of Van Burén county for trial, upon a charge of obtaining the loan for which one of his notes was given by false pretenses. The defendants gave evidence tending to show that the note in suit was made and delivered upon the promise of plaintiff that he would not appear against James Wheeler, and that he should be released from the charge against him.

The plaintiff gave testimony upon his part tending to show that he made no such promise, and that all there was to the transaction was that he simply took this note in payment of the two he held against James Wheeler.

The record shows that, after the primary case of the plaintiff was closed,—

“Y. H. Lockwood proceeded to state the defendants’ case to the jury, and during the opening proceeded to state the law governing the defendants’ case, and upon which the defense was based; whereupon the counsel for the plaintiff interposed an objection, and the said court sustained the objection, stating that the law would come from the court in due time.”

This is made the first assignment of error in defendants’ brief.

We are not able, from this meager statement in the record, to know whether error was committed or not by this action of the circuit judge. But counsel have the right in stating their case to the jury at the opening to briefly set forth what points of the law they rely upon, and the nature of the testimony they propose to introduce [305]*305to support such points. It is true the law is to be given by the court; but, as it is not given in most cases until the testimony is ended, and the counsel have summed the same up in support of their case before the jury, the counsel have the right, both in opening the case to the jury, before the testimony to support their case is offered, and when closing the argument, after the testimony is in, to state to the jury that they claim the law to- be thus and so, and that they shall request the court to so instruct them, and that they will adduce such and such testimony to support their claim under the law in the first instance, or at the close to state that the evidence in the case, under the law as they shall claim it to be, establishes their right to a verdict at the hands of the jury. The counsel have no right to read law to the jury, or to usurp the province of the court in any way in this respect, but they have the undoubted right to state so much of the law, as they claim it to be, as may enable them to lay before the jury an intelligent idea of the force, effect, and bearing of the testimony upon their case, either before or after said testimony is in the case.

Several of the witnesses for the defense, especially the defendants themselves, were asked what was their understanding of the transaction, and What was your undertanding when you,signed the note?” This was properly excluded. The transaction itself — what was said and done by the parties — was to be laid before the jury, and it was for them to determine what the arrangement and the understanding were.

The plaintiff offered in evidence the files in the case against James Wheeler, to show that the prosecuting attorney discontinued the case, — to show the reason why the case was discontinued. The court said:

[306]*306“ It would not be conclusive one way or tbe other, but I think the testimony is admissible.
“Mr. Lockwood (of counsel for the defendants). All right. [After examining the files:] I am glad it has gone in, after examining them.
The Court. Is the objection withdrawn ?
“Mr. Lockwood. No, sir; I object to it as irrelevant and immaterial. I don’t see anything in it. I want to save my rights, of course. I further object to the filing of the statement purporting to come from Mr. Chandler, —the paper marked ‘Exhibit A.’ I object to its being read, for the reason that no prosecuting attorney was produced here, or no one having custody of the files was produced here, to say that these are the files. It is not known whether it is the files, or some paper that is brought in here as a file. I object to the introduction of it, in addition to the further objection I have made.’’

Exhibit A, referred to in the above objection, and admitted in evidence, is as follows:

“State or Michigan, /
“ County of Van Burén, j
The Circuit Court for the County of Van Burén.
“Alonzo M. Chandler, prosecuting attorney for the county of Van Burén aforesaid, for and in behalf of the people of the State of Michigan, comes into said court in the May term thereof, A. D. 1886, and gives it here to understand that one James H. Wheeler, heretofore held to said court for trial by Elam Warner, a justice of the peace in and for said county, ought not to be informed against, for the reason that there is not sufficient evidence that can be procured to insure a conviction.
“Alonzo H. Chandler,
“Prosecuting Attorney for Van-Burén County, Mich.
“Dated July 6, 1886.’’

We do not think the action of the prosecuting attorney would have anything to do with the case, such action being after the making of the note in suit, if the note was given under such circumstances as to make it void. If the evidence, however, as to the consideration of the [307]*307note was doubtful or unsatisfactory, it might have some bearing upon the issue to be determined in that respect. But this paper filed by the prosecuting attorney, without any explanation on the part of that officer, was inadmissible, and we do not think the remarks of Mr. Lockwood waived its admission. It is true it may not have done much harm, as the argument is deducible from it that the transaction between plaintiff and defendants, by which the James Wheeler note was destroyed, may have been the reason why the prosecuting attorney thought “that sufficient evidence could not be procured to insure a convic. tion.” But, as before said, it had no business in the case, and probably affected the verdict. At least, we cannot say that it did not.

The remaining objections are to the charge of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.W. 931, 74 Mich. 302, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fosdick-v-van-arsdale-mich-1889.