Haines v. Goodlander

84 P. 986, 73 Kan. 183, 1906 Kan. LEXIS 227
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 10, 1906
DocketNo. 14,312
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 84 P. 986 (Haines v. Goodlander) 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
Haines v. Goodlander, 84 P. 986, 73 Kan. 183, 1906 Kan. LEXIS 227 (kan 1906).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnston, C. J.:

Several months after the death of C. W. Goodlander, H. T. Haines and his wife presented a joint demand in the probate court against the Good-lander estate for $28,368.90, founded upon a note said to have been executed by C. W. Goodlander on August 2, 1901, for $26,000, payable to the order of Mrs. H. T. Haines, one year after date, with interest at eight per cent, per annum. Haines and his wife claimed that the [185]*185note had been accidentally destroyed and therefore a copy of it was not set forth. The execution of the note and the validity of the demand were contested by the executrix of the estate before a jury, who found against the claimants. An appeal was taken to the district court, where another trial was had with a jury, and again the verdict was against the claimants.

The first objection is that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence. This point may be easily determined. There is testimony tending to discredit the claim that the note was ever executed by Good-lander. Aside from the great disproportion between the amount of the note and Mrs. Haines’s financial resources, there is testimony to the effect that she was not only without means but was largely in debt when she began business in Fort Scott; that during the time she claims to have. accumulated the money loaned her business was in fact unprofitable; and that a great deal of the time she was financially embarrassed, and from-time to time borrowed money to meet her most pressing obligations. Mention might be made of testimony' that she never deposited this great amount of money in a bank, but that it was kept in insecure places about her house, and carried with her when she traveled. She said the note was burned accidentally the’day of Good-lander’s burial, but she did not present her claim to the representative of the estate, nor mention the burning of the note to any one, not even her husband, for fifty days after the claimed destruction. There were other circumstances which may have led the jury to discredit the claim that a loan was made, or that a note existed; and, besides, quite a large number of her neighbors gave impeaching testimony against her. It is true that several witnesses were produced by her who said they had seen the note, or heard an acknowledgment of its existence, but the accuracy of their observation as well as the credibility of their testimony were questions for the jury. The verdict, which in [186]*186effect rejected the theory and testimony of the plaintiff, is not without substantial support.

Many objections were made to the rulings upon testimony, some of which are not sufficiently material to require attention.

Complaint is made of the exclusion of the testimony of a cashier of a railroad company as to the approximate amount of checks delivered by him to Mrs. Haines. The checks were in favor of her husband, who had been running a boarding-train for the railroad company, and who at first claimed to be a joint owner with Mrs. Haines of the note in suit. Later in the litigation, and before the final trial, Mr. Haines disclaimed any interest in the note, withdrew from the action, and was thereafter to be regarded as an outside party. Being no longer a party to the action, his transactions with others had no direct bearing upon the case. Again, the witness stated he did not know the amount of the checks, and a mere conjecture or surmise cannot be made the basis of a judicial finding. The court did allow the plaintiff to show that her husband’s checks were delivered to her, and, if it had been claimed that the money loaned to Goodlander was derived by her from that source, it might have been shown by competent evidence. The fact that the checks may have come to or passed through her hands does not of itself prove that the money represented in them belonged to her. No testimony as to her own earnings or accumulations was excluded.

The testimony of the auditor of the railroad company as to payments made to Mr. Haines, as shown by the books, was inadmissible for the same reason that applied to the exclusion of the cashier’s testimony. It is true, as plaintiff claims, that where book entries, vouchers or accounts are voluminous or complicated, the testimony of a competent witness who has made an examination and summary of them may be received, but the evidence of the auditor was excluded, not because it was not the best evidence, but because it was [187]*187not competent to show the pecuniary means of the plaintiff.

Objection is made because plaintiff was not permitted to testify whether she had any papers in her hands when she left the presence of Goodlander on February 2, 1900. As he had died, of course she could not testify to any transaction had personally with him. What she was carrying after her visit to Goodlander can hardly be regarded as a personal transaction with him, but it did not appear that the testimony invited was material or competent. The character of the papers which she had was not suggested, the time mentioned appears to have been long prior to the date of the note in question, and there was no offer to prove that the papers had any connection with the alleged loan.

There is no reason to complain of the testimony of Comingore, who professed to have seen the note in suit in Mrs. Haines’s possession. Many questions were evidently rejected because they were suggestive and not in proper form. Answers were evidently excluded because not responsive or because they were conclusions or repetitions. In discriminating rulings the court undertook to confine the testimony within due bounds, and permitted the witness to state pertinent facts which he assumed to know as to the size and form of the paper on which words and figures were printed and written; that it was dated; that it had Mrs. Haines’s name on it; that it was for a large sum of money — more than $20,000; and that the name of C. W. Goodlander was at the bottom of it. Proper questions as to the contents of the paper were allowed, but of course the witness was not permitted to state the ultimate fact that what he saw was a note, nor to give other conclusions of fact.

The testimony of Copeland as to an admission by Goodlander that he had obtained a loan of $25,000 was not competent. No identity was shown between that loan and the note in suit.

[188]*188Complaint is made that part of an answer of the witness Reese was excluded. So much of it as alluded to a certain letter was properly rejected. The statement that “to the best of my recollection the name of C. W. Goodlander was at the bottom of the note” might have been admitted, but was probably excluded because of the uncertainty implied by the language of the witness. Later, however, the witness stated in no uncertain terms , that the name of C. W. Goodlander was at the bottom of the note, and this testimony the court refused to strike out.

The witness Shaffer was asked to give her opinion as to whether the signature of C. W. Goodlander on a letter was in the same handwriting as his signature on the note. The offer was properly rejected because she was not shown to be a competent witness, and had admitted that- she did not know Goodlander’s handwriting.

In order to meet the testimony of her financial inability to make the loan, plaintiff offered to show that in July, 1901, she had proposed to pay to one of her creditors a debt of $4000, but that the payment was not accepted. This was a self-serving declaration, and was rightly refused.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 P. 986, 73 Kan. 183, 1906 Kan. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haines-v-goodlander-kan-1906.