Hayes v. Cheatham

74 Tenn. 1
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 74 Tenn. 1 (Hayes v. Cheatham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Cheatham, 74 Tenn. 1 (Tenn. 1880).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Joel A. Hayes and Adelicia Cheatham are brother and sister. Prior to the autumn of 1863, she was the wife of Col. A. S. Aciden, and the owner, with her children, of several valuable plantations on the [3]*3Mississippi river in the State of Louisiana, which were under the general management of her husband. He died during the summer of 1863, and in November, 1863, she left- Nashville, where she resided, and went to these plantations, taking with her Captain B. Dufield, for many years a captain on a steamboat in the Nashville and New Orleans trade, as an agent to assist in removing the crops of cotton then accumulated '-on the plantation. Her brother, Joel A. Hayes, joined ■her at Memphis, where he then resided, and went with her to the plantations. The crops were successfully ■removed during the winter, and she returned home •early in the succeeding summer. Her brother remained in general charge of the plantations until about June, 1866, the plantations having, however, been rented, in the autumn of 1865, to third persons, upon a lease ■for several years, commencing on the first of January, 1866. Her statement is, that he remained under an express agreement that he was to receive $1,000 a 'year and whatever he might be able to make on the plantations until they could be rented. His contention is, that there was no agreement as to his compensation, but he was to have whatever his services were ■reasonably worth. He concedes, however, that he never told his sister that he had an account against her for these services until she commenced this litigation by suing him. He further admits that in 1866 he got his sister to discount two notes for him of $1,000 ■each, and in 1867 he borrowed from her $10,000, for which he gave his receipt in writing, agreeing therein to execute his promissory note for the payment of the [4]*4money with interest. No note was ever executed, and the amount of indebtedness was afterwards reduced by some credits.

Adelicia intermarried with W. A. Cheatham, and, on the 17th of January, 1870, Cheatham and wife brought this action against Joel A. Hayes for the money loaned, the declaration containing the common counts. The defendant pleaded nil debit, payment and-set-off. He admits in his testimony the correctness of the plaintiff's account, and the contest is over the plea of set-off. That plea is, that the said Adelicia became tutrix in the State of Jjouisiana of her four minor children, and was as such entitled to the administration in that State of the succession of her late husband's estate, and, expecting to be -absent from the State, she, on the 15th of February, 1864, did contract with defendant and empower him to act as general agent and attorney in fact, as said tutrix and administratrix, agreeing to pay him reasonable compensation, and that he was entitled to the compensation of $23,623. There is also a general plea of set-off for work and labor done by the defendant for • the plaintiff to the amount specified. The plaintiff relied upon the defense of -payment to the general plea, and denied the contract upon which the special plea was based. The issues joined were submitted to a jury on the 25th of June, 1875, and after a full and fair trial and due deliberation, the jury brought in a verdict, on the 12th of July, 1875, finding the balance of plaintiff’s debt to be $8,031.02, and the defendant’s set-off to be $1,800, and the net amount due from [5]*5the 'defendant to the plaintiff to be $6,231.02, for which a judgment was rendered accordingly. The defendant moved for a new trial, which motion was overruled. He therefore filed a bill of exceptions, and afterwards, in March, 1876, brought the case up by-writ of error.

The evidence embodied in the bill of exceptions filled nearly five hundred pages of closely-written legal cap, and the counsel for the appellant has filed an argument, in writing, in which the facts are carefully and skillfully collated, with a view to show that the finding of the jury was not warranted. The great mass of the testimony relates to the services rendered by the plaintiff in error, both before and after the contract of the 15th of February, 1864, on which he relies. The evidence directly touching the contract between the brother and sister is in a narrow compass, and consists mainly of the testimony of the parties themselves. Each was examined as a witness, and as their respective statements did not accord, it fell within the peculiar province of the jury to decide between them. The jury found for the plaintiffs below, and there is not only no such preponderance of evidence against their finding as would justify the interference of the court, but the preponderance is decidedly in favor of the verdict; and, unless there is some fatal error in the proceedings, the judgment must stand.

The court charged the jury: “If you find for the plaintiff, her’s being a settled account, she is entitled by law to interest on the amount from the time it [6]*6was due to the present.” It is argued that this was error. The account as proven consisted on its debit side of the item of loaned money $10,000, and three small items of $11.75; and on the credit side, of sundry items, amounting to $4,084.76. The defendant-himself testified that the account was correct. The large item of debit was proved by an instrument in writing signed by the defendant, dated March 16, 1867,. and reading thus:

“Received of Adelicia Acklen $10,000, for the pay-, ment of which, with interest, I am hereafter to execute my promissory note according to agreement.”

No note was ever executed, but the defendant admitted the correctness of “the account.”

The circuit judge commenced his charge to the jury with these words: “The plaintiff sues the defendant for a balance of a loan of $10,000. It is conceded the loan was made, and it is also conceded that payment has been made of a part thereof, and that there-remains due to the plaintiff a balance of $-, with... interest from the date of the loan.”

It is clear from this language — used without objection, and without any request for a different instruction — that there was no contest over the extent of the-defendant’s liability, the only struggle being over the • defendant’s set-off.

By the Code, sec. 1945, it is provided that “All bills single, bonds, notes, bills of exchange, and liquidated and settled accounts, signed by the debtor, shall bear interest from the time they become due, unless. [7]*7it is expressed that interest is not to accrue until a specific time therein mentioned.”

A bill of exchange or promissory note is sufficient evidence of a loan between the original parties, and prima facie proof of the money counts: 2 Gr. Ev., sec. 112. An account for money loaned, thus sustained, may well be treated as a settled account signed by the debtor. Any writing admitting an indebtedness, and signed by the debtor, would be equally a liquidated or settled account within the statute, at any rate if, as in this instance, it stipulate expressly for the payment of interest. And a circuit judge cannot be put in error by objection, taken for the first time in this court, to an assumption in the charge, based upon the course of the party in the court below, and acquiesced in by that party at the time as correct.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Tenn. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-cheatham-tenn-1880.