Hoffman v. Kissinger

1 Watts & Serg. 277
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Watts & Serg. 277 (Hoffman v. Kissinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoffman v. Kissinger, 1 Watts & Serg. 277 (Pa. 1841).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

The first error assigned is an exception to the opinion of the court, rejecting the affirmative answer of Charles E. Boyer, a witness on behalf of the plaintiff in error, who was the defendant below, to the fourth interrogatory annexed to the commission awarded by the court, for the purpose of taking his testimony, to Henry Brown, Esq., of the state of Illinois. The interrogatory is in the following words: Was John Kissinger (the plaintiff below) in the habit of endorsing notes for your father (Jacob K. Boyer) at the banks in Reading, or to other persons?” The object of the testimony of Charles E. Boyer was to show that the note, upon which this action is brought, was drawn by the defendant below, for the accommodation of Jacob K. Boyer, payable to the plaintiff there, who was to endorse it for the like purpose, so that Jacob K. Boyer might be enabled to raise money upon it, by getting it discounted at some of the Reading banks. Now, had there been any evidence given, tending to show that the note had been drawn for such purpose, it may possibly be that the answer of the witness would have been admissible, as corroborative evidence, so far as it went, to show that the plaintiff below had been in the practice of endorsing notes for the accommodation of Jacob K. Boyer, to enable him to raise money in the manner above stated. The only evidence given on the subject was, that the same witness, in his answer to the second interrogatory, testified that he was present, and heard a conversa[278]*278tion, in August 1833, between the plaintiff and defendant, and the deponent’s father, about making or endorsing a note for the deponent’s father, in his lifetime, in order to enable him to raise money to buy goods in Philadelphia; that it was agreed that the avails of said note should be left with the deponent, to be remitted by him to his father in Philadelphia; but he saw no such note, nor did he know that any such was ever made; at all events, he never received any money to be remitted as mentioned. The note in suit bears date about the time at which the witness says he heard the conversation; and that is the strongest, if not the only resemblance which it bears to the subject of the conversation, testified to by the witness. Jacob K. Boyer’s name is not on it, which most probably would have been the case, if it had been drawn for the purpose of which the witness speaks. Neither did it appear from any evidence that it had been offered at any of the banks in Reading for the purpose of getting it discounted; so that there really was no circumstance in evidence, tending to show that it was given by the defendant below to the plaintiff, for the purpose of raising money for the accommodation of Jacob K. Boyer. And it is incomprehensible how the fact, if proved, that the plaintiff below had been in the practice of endorsing notes for the accommodation of Jacob K. Boyer, to enable him to raise money by getting them discounted at "the banks in Reading, could of itself afford the slightest presumption that the note in suit was drawn and delivered for such purpose. It might possibly, if it had been proved to the jury, have misled them. We therefore think the answer was properly rejected.

The second error is a bill of exception to the opinion of the court, admitting the testimony of Henry Rhoads on behalf of the plaintiff below, after an objection to it by the defendant. The plaintiff offered to prove by Henry Rhoads a settlement made between the plaintiff below and Jacob K. Boyer, in which the note in suit was credited to Jacob K. Boyer, and that still there was a balance coming from Boyer to Kissinger. This was objected to by the defendant, but the court admitted the evidence. This evidence was undoubtedly admissible, because it went to explain the testimony of Jacob Geehr, a witness, and the father-in-law of the defendant below. Mr Geehr testified, that shortly after the commencement of this suit, he met with Kissinger, the plaintiff, when, “ he asked him at what time the money was advanced by him to Mr Hoffman, for which this suit was brought; that Kissinger answered that he never, advanced any on the note in suit. That witness then asked Kissinger how Hoffman got in debt to him, and he said it originated from Jacob K. Boyer, it came in that way. He either did not, or would not explain, but said he lost so much with Boyer, or else he never would have sued.” The evidence of Mr Geehr was given, as it was alleged, to show that no consideration passed from Kissinger to [279]*279Hoffman for the note, and thence to have it inferred that it was given for the accommodation of Jacob K. Boyer. If Jacob K. Boyer obtained the note in suit from Mr Hoffman, making it payable to Kissinger, it was a sufficient consideration to make it binding on Mr Hoffman, that Jacob K. Boyer was indebted to Kissinger, and that the note was procured by Boyer of Hoffman, for the purpose of satisfying so much of the debt owing by Boyer to Kissinger. This state of the case is certainly consistent with all that Kissinger said to Mr Geehr; but if Kissinger had not offered to show the indebtedness, of Boyer to him, then it would have been said, and possibly the jury might have believed it, that Kissinger had got the note without giving a consideration, or any thing to any one for it. Whether Mr Hoffman was indebted to Boyer or not, and gave the note to Boyer, in consideration of getting a credit from Boyer for the amount of it, is not a matter that Kissinger was bound to know, or could be presumed to have a knowledge of; and therefore was not bound to show it on the trial. But it would seem that the bare offer to give the evidence objected to, was all that Kissinger had the benefit of; for the court, after permitting Rhoads, the witness, to prove the paper containing the settlement between Kissinger and Boyer, which was reduced to writing between them, refused to let the settlement be read in evidence; so that no harm was done, even supposing it to have been inadmissible, on account of Mr Hoffman’s not having been present when it was made.

The third error assigned, is an exception to the opinion of the court below, admitting the deposition of Charles E. Boyer, taken by the plaintiff below, under a rule of court, before, a justice of the peace, in the same county where the cause was tried, some time after the witness’s testimony had been taken by the defendant below, under the commission mentioned above, in which the plaintiff did not join or file cross-interrogatories. The objection made to reading the deposition is, that it was not competent for the plaintiff below, after having declined to annex cross-interrogatories to the defendant’s commission, to take the testimony of the same witness again, either under a commission or under a rule of court, without the special order of the court. In support of this proposition, the cases of Hook v. Hackney, (16 Serg. & Rawle 385) and M’Kinney v. Dows, (3 Watts 250) have been cited. The first of these cases, however, rather goes to show that a second commission may be taken by the defendant, to examine the same witness examined by the plaintiff under the first commission; but that the defendant can not claim- the privilege of a cross-examination under it, by giving to his interrogatories a leading form, without leave of the court. And the second only decides that a party, who has neglected to file cross-interrogatories to a commission taken out by the adverse party, can not afterwards, without leave of the court, take out a second [280]

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Watts & Serg. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-kissinger-pa-1841.