Horicon v. Estate of Langlois

66 A.2d 16, 115 Vt. 470, 1949 Vt. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 3, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 66 A.2d 16 (Horicon v. Estate of Langlois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horicon v. Estate of Langlois, 66 A.2d 16, 115 Vt. 470, 1949 Vt. LEXIS 85 (Vt. 1949).

Opinion

Moulton, C. J.

The plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant estate upon a witnessed promissory note for $941.38, dated July 31, 1936, payable to him one year after date, which was secured by a chattel mortgage duly recorded, covering twenty-two cows, five yearlings, seven calves, one stallion, one black mare and sixty tons of hay. The decedent died at an advanced age, on June 13, 1942. He was unable to read or to write, at least more than his name. The commissioners on his estate, to whom the plaintiff presented the note, disallowed the claim and an appeal was taken to the county court. The defendant pleaded the general issue and payment. Trial was had by jury with verdict for the defendant and the cause comes here on the plaintiff’s exceptions.

The plaintiff introduced in evidence the note and the testimony of a witness showing its execution by the decedent. He also introduced the original chattel mortgage which was in the possession of the defendant and it was produced in court upon the plaintiff’s demand. This instrument bore an unrecorded acknowledgment of discharge and satisfaction signed by the plaintiff, dated August 20, 1936. He also introduced a certified copy of warranty deed from the decedent to the plaintiff, of the same date as the note and chattel mortgage conveying certain land in the town of Alburgh. After this, the plaintiff rested, and the defendant moved for a directed verdict, which was overruled subject to exception. The defendant thereupon introduced no evidence and rested, after which the plaintiff was permitted to introduce the testimony of several witnesses to the effect that on various occasions the plaintiff had made repeated demands upon decedent to pay the note, and that the latter had said that he did not have the money to do so, that he owed others besides the plaintiff and that he could not pay unless he sold some cows. One witness testified that the decedent paid *473 the sum of $30 which the plaintiff indorsed upon the note, dated August 20, 1938. Also the plaintiff introduced a certified copy of the chattel mortgage, taken from the town clerk’s records, which did not contain the discharge and satisfaction of August 20, 1936, as on the original, but another discharge and satisfaction signed by the plaintiff and witnessed, dated February 26, 1941, and duly recorded as of that day. As to this, one of the plaintiff’s witnesses testified that the discharge and satisfaction was executed and caused to be recorded by the plaintiff as an “accommodation” to the decedent and at the latter’s request.

The defendant excepted to the reception of the above testimony on the ground that it was not rebuttal, the plaintiff having rested and no evidence having been introduced for the defense, and argues that the motion for a directed verdict should be granted, and the evidence claimed to have been erroneously admitted, disregarded. It is not argued that the evidence was otherwise incompetent.

It was within the discretion of the trial court to permit the plaintiff to withdraw his rest and to introduce further evidence and the ruling is reviewable only if an abuse of discretion is made ■to appear. Mott v. Bourgeois, 109 Vt 514, 519, 1 A2d 704; Perkins v. Vermont Hydro-Electric Corporation, 106 Vt 367, 407, 177 A 631; Paska v. Saunders, 103 Vt 204, 214, 153 A 451. No claim is made that the defendant was taken by surprise, and there was no request for time in which to meet the evidence as in Phelps v. Utley, 92 Vt 40, 43, 101 A 1011. No abuse of discretion is shown. It is conceded in the defendant’s brief that if the testimony was properly in the case, the issue of payment was for the jury.

Two exceptions briefed by the plaintiff may be considered together. They were taken to the exclusion of the testimony of Raymond Brayton, tax collector of the town of Alburgh, that the decedent’s taxes for the years 1935, 1936 and 1937 were unpaid, and the exclusion of the testimony of William Lockwood, President of the Howard National Bank and Trust Company of Burlington, that a debt owed by the decedent to the Roland Phelps Estate, of which the bank was the executor, incurred prior to 1936, had not been paid. This evidence was offered as tending to show that the decedent was insolvent and could not have paid the note in suit.

A person’s financial condition may be relevant, under some circumstances, upon the question whether a claimed contract *474 calling for the disbursement of money has in fact been entered into by him. Kimball v. Locke, 31 Vt 683, 684-5; Frost v. Admr. of Frost, 33 Vt 639, 649; Beckley v. Jarvis, 55 Vt 348, 349; Blaisdell et al Admrs. v. Davis, 72 Vt 295, 306-7, 48 A 14. Here the making of the contract, i.e. the note, is not contradicted. The issue is whether it has been paid. The defendant relies upon the holding in First National Bank of Xenia v. Stewart, 114 US 224, 5 S Ct 845, 849, 29 L ed 101, 104, that proof of the insolvency of a debtor is not competent to show non-payment of a particular debt, since “it is common for both solvent and insolvent men to pay some of their debts and to leave some unpaid.” But the better rule, as we think, is stated by the late Professor Wigmore (1 Wigmore on Evidence, para. 89), that the fact that a man is destitute of property or other resources is relevant to show the improbability that he has paid a given debt. However, this statement is qualified later on in the same treatise (Vol. 1, para. 224) as follows: “Nevertheless, a line is to be drawn; for the mere failure, (for example) to pay a specific debt may be open to so many other explanations than a total lack of means . . . that it would have no appreciable probative value. There is room for much variety of circumstance in such evidence, and the discretion of the trial court should control.” Adopting this principle and applying the maxim that a ruling lying in the discretion of the court will, the contrary not appearing by the record, be presumed to have been made in the exercise of such discretion (Lancour v. Herald and Globe Association, 112 Vt 471, 474, 28 A2d 396; Parkhurst v. Healy’s Estate, 97 Vt 295, 296, 122 A 895), we do not find error in the exclusion of the evidence. The failure of the decedent to pay his taxes for the designated years or a debt to the bank as executor, would have little or no probative effect upon the question of the payment of a secured obligation, there being no evidence that the security had been dissipated at any time up to the date of the recorded discharge and satisfaction of the chattel mortgage. The above exceptions are not sustained.

An exception was taken to an order striking from the record the testimony of one of plaintiff’s witnesses that the decedent had said that “he was in a bad enough fix.” The testimony was of such slight and inconclusive character that it does not appear that prejudice resulted to the plaintiff from the ruling. Taylor v. Henderson, 112 Vt 107, 119, 22 A2d 318.

*475

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Crestmark v. Laplante
Vermont Superior Court, 2025
State v. Roy H. Kuhlmann
2022 VT 28 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2022)
Hollingsworth & Vose Co. v. Connor
764 A.2d 318 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2000)
Federal Land Bank of Baltimore, Inc. v. Esham
406 A.2d 928 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1979)
Berry v. Whitney
217 A.2d 41 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1966)
Hyman Reiver and Company v. Rose
147 A.2d 500 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1958)
Smith v. Brasseur
125 A.2d 815 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1956)
Cameron v. Bailey
86 A.2d 643 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1952)
Burke v. N. P. Clough, Inc.
78 A.2d 483 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1951)
Richardson v. Persons
77 A.2d 842 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1951)
Tolin v. Hasbrook
77 A.2d 914 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1951)
Wilson v. Dyer
75 A.2d 677 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 A.2d 16, 115 Vt. 470, 1949 Vt. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horicon-v-estate-of-langlois-vt-1949.