Guthrie v. Merrill

4 Kan. 187
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 4 Kan. 187 (Guthrie v. Merrill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guthrie v. Merrill, 4 Kan. 187 (kan 1867).

Opinion

By the Court,

Safford, J.

There are several assignments of error in this case, which have been presented and insisted upon by counsel with much earnestness, as furnishing, and each in itself, ample grounds for the reversal of the judgment herein, as entered by the district court. But it will not be necessary to consider all of the errors complained of, inasmuch as the views we entertain, respecting a small portion of them, practically determine the disposition of the case, as far as we are concerned. But even if we were disposed to discuss all the points which have been raised by the argument, we should, perhaps, be unable to do so with satisfaction to ourselves, owing to the condition of that part of the record — ■ confused and meager — in which those portions of the proceedings below upon which some of such points rest, are stated in the exceptions, or rather in the “ case made.”

The first alleged ground of error, which we propose to examine, is that in relation to the admission of secondary evidence to the jury for ihe purpose of showing the contents of the written contract or instrument, upon which the action was founded. The record shows [191]*191that the plaintiff was a witness in Ms own behalf, and that in regard to the written contract he testified as follows : That such written contract was executed by himself and the defendant, on behalf of the Quindaro company; that at the time this suit was commenced, he went to the office of Mr. Chadwick, who had the custody of the contract, and took a copy of the same ; that he left the contract with Mr. Chadwick, in Quindafo, where he then resided ; that at some time during the progress of the suit, he delivered the original contract to his attorney. And on cross-examination the plaintiff further stated that he would not be positive whether the paper he gave his attorney was a copy of the contract, or the original. Stockton, who was the attorney referred to in the plaintiff’s testimony, was then called, and testified that he received from plaintiff what purported to be a contract like the one described in the petition, and which he filed in the action; but whether it was the original or not, he was unable to state. C. S. Q-lick then testified that when he filed the reply to defendant’s answer, he saw a paper in the files that purported to be the contract, but whether it was the original or not, he could not state. The above seems to comprise all the evidence which was submitted as preliminary to the introduction of secondary evidence of the contents of the contract.

The defendant below insisted that a sufficient foundation had not been laid to authorize such secondary evidence to go to the jury. But the court overruled Ms objection, and allowed the evidence. We think that this ruling of the court was clearly erroneous. In our view, there was nothing in the evidence even tending to show that the original contract was lost, or that it was beyond the reach of the plaintiff. And, indeed, [192]*192from all tliat appears tó the contrary on Ms part, it might have been, at the very time of the trial, in Ms own possession, or in that of some of his friends. The plaintiff’s own testimony shows that a third party had been made the custodian of the contract, thus rendering it certain that he knew where to look for it, and especially so, when we consider thé fact that he declares that he took a copy thereof at the time of the commencement of the suit, and that he left the original with the party having the custody of it. Besides this, he does not show, or attempt to, that it had, in any manner, been removed from the care of the depositary (who had been mutually agreed upon between the parties), unless his own statement, to the effect that sometime during the progress of the trial he delivered to his attorney the- original contract, would tend to such result. But even this statement is rendered of but little value by Ms after-assertion that he was not sure that the paper delivered to Ms attorney was the original. Taking all of the statements of the plaintiff and his attorney together, which bear upon this point, it would seem to be quite certain that the paper which he delivered to Ms attorney as the contract, was really and in fact not so, but the very copy of the contract which he himself had made. And this conviction is rendered irresistible when we consider the testimony of the depositary, Mr. Chadwick, to the effect that he had no knowledge or recollection of having been called upon by either party for the contract.

It is a well settled principle of law, governing the introduction of testimony, that secondary evidence of the contents of written instruments, is not admissible when the originals are within the control or custody of the party, or when they are witMn Ms reach, and may [193]*193be obtained with reasonable effort on his part. If under such circumstances he does not produce them, or cause them to be produced, or at least make some reasonable effort to secure such production, their absence is the result of his own laches, and he will not be permitted to substitute secondary evidence. 1 Greenleaf, § 84, p. 99 ; 9 Wheaton, 558; 2 Phillips Ev., 215 to 217, and notes to text.

In this case we think it is clear that the plaintiff did not make such effort as he ought to have made to procure the original contract, to entitle him to offer secondary evidence of its contents to the jury.

But while we think that secondary evidence of the contents of the written contract should not have been allowed to go to the jury at all, under the testimony of the plaintiff and his attorneys, our conviction is doubly strong that after the evidence of Mr. Chadwick had been introduced, all such secondary evidence should have been ruled out, and the jury instructed not to take it into account in making up their verdict. The court refused so to do, and thereby committed another error, calculated to prejudice the rights of the defendant.-

As a further ground of error, it is alleged that the court erred in instructing the jury that they must allow and compute the interest on the plaintiff’s claim, at the rate of ten per cent, per annum, from the 2d day of October, 1857. This was clearly wrong, inasmuch as the laws regulating interest, in force at the time, when it is alleged the money became due to the plaintiff, to wit, on the 2d day of October, 1857, and at the time when the judgment was rendered, to wit, on the 6th day of October, 1865, did not permit of such a rate of interest upon such claims.

[194]*194It is claimed that the court erred in failing to charge the jury in relation to the subject of the plaintiff’s claim for pay for extra services on the Sabbath. This question is not very clearly presented in the record, and we are unable to discover just the position it assumed before the court and jury, by reason of the failure of the parties to set out all of the evidence.

But we really cannot see how such a claim could be brought in under the contract. The plaintiff agreed to work on the ferry for the sum of one hundred dollars per month, and the whole record, taken together, shows that he did so work for the term of six months, and perhaps two or three days.

The contract is silent as to any extra pay for services on the Sabbath, or otherwise : and if he chose to perform such service, he will be held to have performed it under the contract. We think, from all the circum-' stances developed in the record, that any claim for extra service was simply without foundation.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Kan. 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guthrie-v-merrill-kan-1867.