Jones v. Orton

26 N.W. 172, 65 Wis. 9, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 109
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 N.W. 172 (Jones v. Orton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Orton, 26 N.W. 172, 65 Wis. 9, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 109 (Wis. 1885).

Opinion

LyoN, J.

The account presented by John M. Chandler against the estate oí Gabriel Mills consists of thirty-five items or charges, of which twenty-two were disallowed by the circuit court. Of the thirteen charges allowed, seven., amounting to $6,500, were admitted, on the trial, by counsel for the defendant, to be proper charges against the estate. Those disallowed, and those admitted to be correct, require no consideration on this appeal. The six accounts which the court allowed against the objection of the defendant, are as follows:

1. July 18, 1870. Interest paid on accommodation note. $35 00
2. July, 1874. Cash paid W. Wearne at request of Crawford, Mills & Co. 145 00
3. July, 1875. Cash paid W. Wearne at request of Crawford, Mills & Co.■... 145 00
4. April 28, 1875. Goods and lumber furnished Crawford, Mills & Co., as per bill..... 791 58
5. July 8, 1875. Goods furnished-Gabriel Mills, as per bill. 209 70
6. December 25, 1875. Goods furnished J. Crawford’s estate, as per bill.1. 409 78

These several items will be considered in the order stated.

1. Sometime in 1870 Chandler & York borrowed $2,000 from a bank for the accommodation of Crawford, Mills & Co., and gave the note of the firm therefor. Chandler & York afterwards paid their note, including $35 interest, which constitutes the first item allowed. In September of that year, Crawford, Mills & Go. paid the principal of the loan, $2,000, to Chandler & York, but did not pay the $35 of interest.

This item does not seem to have been charged up in the books of Chandler & York. It was a single, isolated transaction, which occurred nearly ten years before the death of Gabriel Mills. We find no proof of a valid subsequent [13]*13promise to pay it. The charge should have been disallowed, for the reason that the statute of limitations ran against it before Mills died.

2. The second and third charges allowed by the circuit court, which are for cash paid Wearne, arise out of a land transaction between John M. Chandler and Crawford, Mills & Co. In 1862, Chandler, then being the executor of the estate of one McCoy, under a will which authorized him to sell the real estate of which his testator died seized (Chandler's Appeal, 34 Wis. 505), sold and conveyed to Crawford, Mills & Co. certain lands, part and parcel of such estate. There was an outstanding mortgage on the land to one Wearne, given to secure the payment of $1,450, with ten per cent, interest thereon. Crawford, Mills & Co. paid the agreed price for the land, less this $1,450. It was the understanding between the parties to the conveyance that the grantees should pay to Chandler the amount of the mortgage debt, but they failed to do so.. At their request Chandler paid Wearne the interest on such debt annually, from 1863 to 1875, inclusive.

The unpaid $1,450, and thirteen annhal payments of interest thereon at ten per cent, are charged in Chandler’s account against the estate of Gabriel. Mills. He alleges that he has accounted therefor and paid the same to the beneficiaries under the will of McCoy, and hence that the claim belongs to him. The circuit court disallowed the claim for $1,450, and the claims for ail payments of interest down to and including the payment made in 1873, on the ground that they were all barred by the statute of limitations. The rulings thus far were undoubtedly correct. But we are satisfied that the claims for interest paid in 1874 and 1875 should also have been disallowed.- The principal debt having ceased to exist, the claim for interest accruing upon it thereafter cannot be maintained. The interest is only an [14]*14incident of tbe debt, and must necessarily fall with. it. These two charges should have been disallowed.

3. The remaining three charges allowed by the circuit court, and challenged by the defendant, are for goods sold by Chandler & York to Crawford, Mills & Co., to Mills, and to the widow and heirs of Jefferson Crawford, who, after his death in 1868, became partners in the latter firm. , The books of Chandler & York containing these accounts were received in evidence. The entries therein were made by the partners and by one John Chandler, who was their clerk and book-keeper. . Those three persons testified to the facts required by the statute (R. S. sec. 4186) to entitle the books to be received in evidence. The cross-examination of these persons disclosed some errors, alterations, and discrepancies in the books, but nothing showing any intentional falsification of them. It appears that in many of the entries only the articles sold had been charged, without any price affixed thereto. These entries were mostly made by the partners. They were posted on the ledger by John Chandler, who then affixed a price to the articles sold. His testimony is to the effect that he affixed the regular market price in such cases.

It is claimed that books of original entry are not admissible under the statute, unless the price is affixed to each article charged therein. We think this too narrow a rule. No good reason is perceived why such books, properly verified, may not be presumptive proof of the delivery of articles charged, although no price is therein specified. In such cases the party producing them would be required to give other proof of values. .Counsel for plaintiff has fairly demonstrated, on principle and by authority, that account books so kept are receivable in evidence. Although these books might have been better kept, the circuit judge was satisfied that the facts were proved which made them com[15]*15petent evidence. Upon the testimony before ns, we cannot say this was error. We assume that the judge corrected any errors in the accounts which were disclosed on the trial.

> Interest was allowed upon these accounts from 1815. There is testimony to the effect that the parties were accustomed to charge interest on balances of account at the end of each year, and interest was allowed on the account of Crawford, Mills & Co. against Chandler & York, in like manner. We conclude that the three . accounts for goods sold were properly allowed at the sums charged, with interest.

4. With the exception of one item, the credits to which, the estate of Gabriel Mills was entitled in the accounting ‘were agreed upon by the parties, and allowed. These credits' aggregate over $1,500, besides interest thereon. The controverted item (which was disallowed) grew out of a purchase by Chandler & York of mineral lands adjoining the lands of Crawford, Mills & Co., at the request and for the alleged benefit of the latter firm. Crawford, Mills & Co. advanced $5,100 to make the first payment for the land and to pay expenses of the purchase. The defendant claims that the purchase wras the joint adventure of the two firms, and the charge in question is for one half of the above sum, and interest thereon.

The finding of the circuit court on • this charge is very long, and gives all the details of the transactions connected with this purchase. All the material facts found therein are, we think, fairly proved by the testimony. It appears therefrom that Crawford, Mills & Co. were negotiating for, a sale of their mineral lands to certain Pittsburg parties, and believed that the sale would be consummated at a large price.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 N.W. 172, 65 Wis. 9, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-orton-wis-1885.