Hatton v. Jones

78 Ind. 466
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1881
DocketNo. 8701
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 78 Ind. 466 (Hatton v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatton v. Jones, 78 Ind. 466 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Franklin, C.

This action was originally brought in the name of Eliza H. Hatton as plaintiff. After the action was commenced, she died testate; her death was suggested of record, and the name of the executor of her will, Lemuel C. Hatton, was substituted as the plaintiff in the case.

The action was brought upon a promissory note alleged' to have been executed by the appellee, John K. Jones, to said Eliza H. Hatton, for $1,000, dated May 1st, 1876, and due two years after the date thereof. To the complaint, the appellee filed an answer in seven paragraphs. The fifth, on motion, was stricken out; the first was a denial; second, payment; third, fourth and sixth, non est factum sworn to; seventh, want of consideration. Reply by a general denial. Trial by jury. Verdiet for appellee. Motion for a new trial overruled, and an exception reserved. Judgment upon the verdict for appellee.

The following errors have been assigned in this court:

“1st. The court erred in sustaining the defendant’s motion to suppress the deposition of Eliza H. Hatton.
“2d. The court erred in overruling the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, and in refusing to grant a new trial.
“3d. The court erred in rendering the judgment in said cause.”

The ruling, upon a motion to suppress depositions, may be properly alleged as a reason for a new trial, but can not be stated as a proper specification in the assignment of errors. The Jeffersonville, etc., R. R. Co. v. Riley, 39 Ind. 568; Mercer v. Patterson, 41 Ind. 440; Patterson v. Lord, 47 Ind. 203.

The third specification in the assignment of errors is too general to present any question for consideration.

This leaves, as the only question to be considered, the overruling of the motion for a new trial.

The facts in the case as gathered from the record are substantially as follows:

[468]*468William C. Jones is the father of the appellee, Lee Jones, Rebecca Masters and the said Eliza H. Hatton; that before the date of said note, the appellee and his said brother Lee were each indebted to their father in a considerable sum for land sold to them by their father, and for which indebtedness the latter held the notes of his said sons; that said father contemplated assisting his said children or equalizing a portion of his property amongst them, and for this purpose, and at his request, his son Lee signed a note, payable to Mrs. Hat-ton, for $1,000, and the appellee, John K. Jones, signed a note payable to Mrs. Masters for a like amount, for which they were to have credits on their said respective notes held by their father, which notes were delivered to the father, who held them, without ever delivering them to his daughters, for the purpose, as the testimony tends strongly to show, though 'there is some conflict upon’ that question, of investing the amount in real estate for the use and benefit of his said daughters and their children, without letting his sons-in-law have the control of the money; that he afterward informed the daughters of what he had done; that, shortly after this arrangement, Mrs. Masters purchased some real estate, and desired her portion of the money to pay for it. Appellee, John XL, was not then in a condition to conveniently pay it. But Lee could pay off his note, which was payable to Mrs. Hatton. The father suggested that Lee pay off his note, and that the money go to Mrs. Masters, and that John give anew note to Mrs. Hatton in the place of the one that he had given to Mrs. Masters. Lee paid the money, the father sent it to Mrs. Masters, and John K. signed the new note to Mrs. Hat-ton, payable two years after date. The father surrendered the note payable to Mrs. Masters, and took possession of the note payable to Mrs. Hatton. After the new note was due, some time in June, 1878, Mrs. Hatton, while living in a part of the house with her father, in the absence of her father and mother, went into the apartment of the house occupied by them, and from a jar in his cupboard, in which he kept his [469]*469papers, without his knowledge or consent took said note, and has since retained the possession thereof until it was placed in the hands of an attorney for collection. That shortly after missing the note, on being approached upon the subject by the father, she acknowledged the taking of the note, and on being requested by the father and mother to réturn the note, she refused to do so, and caused this suit to be commenced on the same.

The controversy between the parties is as to whether the note was so delivered as to vest the property therein in Mrs. Hatton.

The first reason in the motion for a new trial, is the suppressing of the seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth, twenty-third and twenty-eighth questions and answers in the deposition of Mrs. Hatton.

These questions and answers had reference to certain payments claimed by appellant to have been made upon the note; $20 at one time given to Eliza by her mother, and which her mother told her could be credited upon the interest of the note; $25 paid by her father to Dr. Butler, on her doctor’s bill, which her father said could be credited on the note, and a store bill which |ier father paid at one time, amount not. given. The father had not placed any of these credits on the note, and testified that he did not direct Mrs. Hatton to place any of them on it. These questions and answers are insisted upon as being admissible because they tended to prove that the father recognized Mrs. Hatton as owning the note, and her right to control the proceeds. "We do not think that they tended to prove that the note had been delivered to Mrs. Hat-ton, or that the father had surrendered his right to the possession of the note, or the control of the payment, and to manage the appropriation of the proceeds of its payment. There was no pretence that appellee made any payments on the note to Mrs. Hatton. The suppression of these questions and answers, if an error, was a harmless one, but we do not think it was error.

[470]*470The motion to suppress as to the sixth and twenty-second questions and answers was. not ruled upon at the time of the motion, but reserved to be ruled on at the trial. And the second reason for a new trial was the refusal of the court to allow the plaintiff to read in evidence to the jury these two questions and* answers.

The sixth question was this: Upon being shown a copy of the note, she was asked to state all she knew about its execution. Her answer was, detailing a conversation with her father after the execution of the first note and before the execution of the second and the one in suit. This answer was hearsay evidence, and not responsive to the question.

The twenty-second question was in relation to what other payments were made, if any. Her answer was, giving a conversation with the father about the same dry-goods bill as in the questions and answers suppressed, and in relation to crediting the amount on the note. The father was not a party to the suit, and conversations with him, unless they were at the time and as a part of the transaction, were not admissible as evidence, unless for the purpose of impeachment, upon the proper foundation being laid; nothing of which was attempted to be done in this case.

The third reason stated in the motion for a new trial was alleged error in the court in permitting the defendant by his counsel to-ask "William C.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Ind. 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatton-v-jones-ind-1881.