Fredricksen v. Fullmer

258 P.2d 1155, 74 Idaho 164, 41 A.L.R. 2d 567, 1953 Ida. LEXIS 270
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1953
Docket7954
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 258 P.2d 1155 (Fredricksen v. Fullmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fredricksen v. Fullmer, 258 P.2d 1155, 74 Idaho 164, 41 A.L.R. 2d 567, 1953 Ida. LEXIS 270 (Idaho 1953).

Opinion

KEETON, Justice.

Elizabeth Blackshaw, a resident of Rex-burg, died intestate on the 13th day of September, 1949. Defendant, appellant, is the administratrix of her estate. Plaintiffs brought this action against the administratrix to compel specific performance of an alleged contract to convey certain real estate. The trial court found for plaintiffs and entered a decree for specific performance. Defendant appealed.

A writing on which the claim is based, Exhibit “A”, is a carbon copy. It is claimed by plaintiffs that deceased signed the original with a carbon between the original and the copy; that -the copy was re *167 tained by plaintiffs and the original by the person who signed the instrument. The original, if there were one, was not produced. The instrument in question is as follows:

“June 29, 1949
“I have received the sum of Twenty five hundred twenty dollars from Albert C and Hazel Fredricksen as payment in full for my property located at 172 North 1st East, Rexburg, Idaho consisting of three room house and 100 ft corner lot. I agree to vacate this property and furnish clear title to same within six months time.
“Signed
“Elizabeth Blackshaw
“172-N-lst East “Rexburg, Idaho”

The answer denies the execution of the instrument.

The writing, the basis of the claim, was not acknowledged, witnessed or proved in any manner provided by law. See sections 55-701, 55-703, 55-718, 55-721 and 55-722 I.C. Hence the signature, the identity of the person signing the memorandum, and the existence of the contract must be proved in their entirety, if at all, by parol evidence. Sec. 55-718 I.C. provides:

“Proof of the execution of an instrument, when not acknowledged, may be made either:
“1. By the parties executing it, or either of them; or,
“2. By subscribing witness; or,
“3. By other witnesses in the cases hereinafter mentioned.”

Sec. 55-719 I.C. provides:

“If by a subscribing witness such witness must be personally known to the officer taking the proof, to be the person whose name is subscribed to the instrument, as a witness, or must be proved to be such by the oath of a credible witness.”

Sec. 55-720 I.C. provides:

“The subscribing witness must prove that the person whose name is subscribed to the instrument as a party is the person described in it, and that such person executed it, and that the witness subscribed his name thereto as a witness.”

It therefore follows that when specific performance of an unacknowledged, unwitnessed and unproved contract is sought, a case is presented which requires the application of the rule that the contract itself, as well as its essential terms, must be established by clear, satisfactory and convincing evidence. Johnson v. Flatness, 70 Idaho 37, 211 P.2d 769.

The contract is alleged to have been signed in Salt Lake City, in the presence of plaintiff, Hazel Fredricksen, and her daughter, Mrs. Edith Harrington. The only direct and positive evidence in the record is the testimony of Mrs. Harrington, who testified she saw the instrument signed. She *168 did not know the deceased, and as far as the records show, had never seen her before; and identified the person who signed the instrument by description only. Except by the statement of the mother (plaintiff) to the daughter, the person signing the instrument was not identified.

The person signing the exhibit, claimed to have been the deceased, was described by the witness as follows:

“She was shorter than I am, and I believe weighed about one hundred, sixty pounds, she had dark hair, but it was gray, I don’t remember the color of her eyes, and she was lame — I guess that is about all.”

This description could be used to describe innumerable persons, and the description itself could easily have been secured subsequent to the signing of the instrument; and-such a description is not a positive identification of the deceased. The witness further testified that there was paid $2,020 in currency by her mother to the person signing the instrument.

The plaintiffs sought to identify the deceased as the one who signed the writing by specimens of handwriting to show that the signature on Exhibit “A” was the signature of the deceased, and for that purpose caused to be identified Exhibit “B”, a relief warrant for $35 given by Madison County to the deceased, which was endorsed and cashed. The witness, F. L. Davis, County Auditor, did not see Elizabeth Blackshaw sign the warrant, and when asked the question: “Are you at all familiar with the signature of Elizabeth Blackshaw?” answered: “Well, I don’t know as I know it sufficient to identify it.” In other words, the witness attempted to identify and establish the signature of Elizabeth Blackshaw on Exhibit “B” simply because the county had cashed a warrant which bore that name. When asked: “Can you say positively that that is the genuine signature without any question of a doubt, that of Elizabeth Blackshaw?” the witness answered: “No.” This exhibit was offered, and over objection received in evidence as an exemplar of handwriting. Appellant assigns such ruling as error.

Section 9-412 I.C. provides:

“Whenever the genuineness of a writing is at issue, any writing admitted or proved to be genuine is competent evidence as an exemplar for the purpose of comparison with the disputed writing: * *

Before the exemplar, or standard of writing, by which the comparison of handwriting is to be made may be considered, its genuineness must first be established.

The decisions of the various states are far from uniform in their holdings on what must be proved to establish the genuineness of the exemplar and the extent to which the proof must go. However, it is a universal rule that before the exemplar can be considered as a standard of. handwriting, the *169 standard itself must, in some acceptable manner, be authenticated and proved as genuine. In the instant case, the witness never saw the deceased write, nor did he see her write the exhibit offered as a standard. He was not familiar with her signature. His opinion that it was her handwriting must of necessity have been based on the fact that the warrant, Exhibit “B”, was cashed by the county. ' Such a standard for comparison, based on no more knowledge than was shown, has been rejected in numerous decisions.

In State v. Brassfield, 33 Idaho 660, 197 P. 559, 560, a cashed check purportedly endorsed by the defendant was offered and received in evidence as a standard for comparison. This Court held:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 P.2d 1155, 74 Idaho 164, 41 A.L.R. 2d 567, 1953 Ida. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fredricksen-v-fullmer-idaho-1953.