Harmon v. Decker

68 P. 11, 41 Or. 587, 1902 Ore. LEXIS 130
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 68 P. 11 (Harmon v. Decker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harmon v. Decker, 68 P. 11, 41 Or. 587, 1902 Ore. LEXIS 130 (Or. 1902).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Moore,

after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.

1. The account began December 31, 1889, when the defendant was credited with sundry items, and charged among others, as follows:

“To amount of note.............................$5,448.51
To int. on same for 14 mo. at 6% per annum........ 381.39
To cash advanced Karewski...................... 300.00
To cash advanced Nunan........................ 200.00
To bal. due from 1889.......................... 4,803.50”

This remainder is carried over to 1890, and the defendant is charged, among other items, with the two following:

“Int. bal. on note...............................$ 288.21”

leaving due from him, after deducting sundry credits appearing at length in the ledger, a remainder of $4,564.62. Bach year thereafter the defendant was charged with a remainder, and with the interest thereon until March 1, 1896, when, having been credited with all payments made, there was due from him, as appears from the bill of particulars, the sum of $2,908.80, which is sought to be recovered in this action. He was also charged, among other items, with the following:

“Jan. 22, 1892. To check favor of Balkenstein.....$ 143.30”
“Mch. 23, 1893. To check favor Levi Strauss & Co... $ 154.22”

At the trial his counsel admitted the correctness of said account, except the items thereof hereinbefore enumerated, which they contend could not be established by a book account. The defendant, having been called as plaintiff’s witness, identified his own ledger, which, being introduced in evidence, shows that his account with Gasquet purports to commence December 12, 1893, from which time the items thereof coincide with the latter’s account, except that Decker does not charge himself with the principal, but only with the interest thereon. Bred Frantz, a resident of Crescent City, Cal., one of the executors in that state of the last will of Horace Gasquet, deceased, testified, as plaintiff’s witness, that he found in the latter’s effects a pass [590]*590book, which being identified by the witness, the following entry therein was offered in evidence, to wit:

’88 “Charles Decker Ae’t.
10 — 6 1375.00)
4073.51)................................. 5448.51
Jan. 1st, ’90, 14 months interest.................... 381.39
5829.90
Charged on ae’t on deductions on his bill............ 1026.40
Balance due by Ch. Decker, Jan. 1, ’90............... 4803.50
Paid in by Ch. D., J an. 1, ’91.............. 1014.28
Bal. due Jan. 1, ’92...................... 3789.22
4803.50
Jan. 1, ’92, Bal. due by Ch. D...................... 3789.22
Condition 6% per annum.
Security, all the buildings which were deeded to my name.”

To explain this entry, plaintiff’s counsel offered in evidence the following memorandum:

“Waldo, Josephine Co., Oregon.
October 6, 1888.
“Received from H. Gasquet two drafts, No. 138 vs. Porter, Sleisinger & Co. for W. J. Wimer, sum ($1375.00) thirteen hundred and seventy five dollars.
“Also No. 139 vs. Porter, Sleisinger & Co. for G. W. Wimer, sum ($4073.51) four thousand and seventy three and 51-100 in payment of goods and buildings in Town of Waldo.
Rece’d. Oct. 6th, 1888.
Geo. W. Wimer.

To supplement the entry in the pass book, plaintiff offered in evidence a deed purporting to have been executed October 9, 1888, by Geo. W. and W. J. Wimer and their wives to Horace Gasquet, in consideration of $30,000, and conveying certain lots, stores, dwellings, barns, and other buildings; and they also offered Gasquet’s ledger, containing the charge against the defendant of $5,448.51. The defendant’s counsel having objected to the introduction of the deed, on the ground that neither of the subscribing witnesses thereto had been called, or their hand[591]*591writing, or that of the grantors, proved, so as to establish the execution thereof, and to the ledger and other memorandum and receipt, on the ground that they were incompetent, irrelevant, immaterial, plaintiff’s counsel stated to the court, in effect, that the pass book was offered to explain the original transaction, and the ledger to show that the sum in question had been carried into the current account; that they expected to show by Decker’s books, which they would offer in evidence, that he had given Gasquet credit for interest on that sum; and that these matters, considered in connection with others, would show that there had been a consummated negotiation, between the parties in respect thereto; but the court rejected the evidence offered, and allowed the plaintiff an exception.

It will be observed that the sum of the drafts specified in the receipts corresponds with the charge made on the pass book and in the ledger, and the dates also coincide. An inspection of the pass book shows that of the four debits the first was apparently made therein October 6, 1888, and the other three on the 1st day of January, 1890, 1891, and 1892. It is quite evident that these entries are not original, for when the charges therein noted are compared with the bill of particulars attached to the complaint it is found that many other items intervene, thus showing that they were not made in the usual course of the business, but are only the summaries copied from Gasquet’s ledger, relating to his account with the defendant. The entry in the pass book, though made by a person deceased, was evidently not made at or near the time of the transaction, nor was it against the interest of the person mailing it, and hence it was not admissible as primary evidence of the fact as stated: Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 767.

2. The deed, like the receipt, was offered only to corroborate the entry in the pass book, in which case it is doubtful whether the strict formality required by the statute (Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 761) should be observed, as when an instrument of that character is designed to prove title or to subserve a higher purpose; but, however that may be, the pass book which was the foundation for the introduction of the receipt, deed, and ledger in evidence [592]*592having failed, the latter must also fall with it, unless the evidence proposed to be offered by plaintiff’s counsel of what they expected to prove connected the pass book, receipt, deed, and ledger with the transaction, so as to charge the defendant with the sums stated as the foundation of the account. The answer denies, upon information and belief, that the sum of $5,448.51 was intended to be charged for merchandise and buildings received from Gasquet.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 P. 11, 41 Or. 587, 1902 Ore. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harmon-v-decker-or-1902.