Kidder v. . McIlhenny

81 N.C. 123
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 81 N.C. 123 (Kidder v. . McIlhenny) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kidder v. . McIlhenny, 81 N.C. 123 (N.C. 1879).

Opinion

Smith, O. J.

This case has been elaborately argued, and numerous points eliminated from 'the record and pressed upon our attention, which in the view we take, need not be considered in its final disposition.

The action is to recover judgment upon a promissory note of the defendant, and to foreclose a mortgage of land given for its security. The feme defendant claims the land under an execution sale upon a judgment recovered by a creditor of her husband, the other defendant, and both in "their separate answers allege that when the note was executed by the husband he was not indebted to the plaintiff, and hence the deed, being voluntary and without consideration, was void as to his creditors. It does not appear that the debt, for which the sale under execution was made, existed at the date of the mortgage, or before the year 1876, eight years thereafter. The answers further allege that the original note was surrendered and a new one given in its place, ante-dated so as to correspond in terms with the first, except in its recital of a consideration of money loaned ; and that thereby the secured debt was discharged, leaving but a naked legal title in the mortgagee which, as an un *129 mixed trust, passed to the purchaser under execution by virtue of the act of 1812. Bat. Rev., ch. 44, § 4.

The defendants also rely upon a written contract' of the plaintiff with the defendant McIlhenny, the substance of which both answers undertake to set out, for the cultivation of the defendant’s farm for the common benefit of each, and that their entire crop was destroyed by excessive rains, and all their labor and expenditures in its cultivation lost.

The plaintiff replies to this, that upon a full and final settlement of their joint farming operations, McIlhenny fell in. debt to him for that and other matters, in the sum for which at that date the original note was given, and that the second note was executed as a renewal and with the express understanding that it was to occupy the place of a secured debt in the mortgage.

From these conflicting allegations there were several issues extracted, and without objection from either party, submitted to the jury, and the jury find them all in favor of' the plaintiff. These findings establish the following facts : The parties did come to a settlement in 1868, and the first note was then executed for the balance ascertained to be due-with the mortgage to secure it. The second note was executed in place of the first, and as a substitute for it, and the plaintiff’s statement of the partnership contract for the year 1868 is correct, and the defendant’s version of the matter is not true.

The only ruling of the court on the trial of the issues, to-which an exception 'was taken, as appears from the statement of the case, was the admission of the letter-press copy of the partnership contract of 1867, as evidence, on the ground that the original was the best evidence and no notice had been given the defendant to produce it on trial. The plaintiff swore on the trial that when the original contract was entered into, he struck off and kept a letter-press copy of the instrument and left the original with the defendant *130 and he had never seen it since.. The defendant in his answer, setting out its substance from memory, and duly verified, declares that he does not have the original contract and never had it in possession since its execution. He had issued a notice to plaintiff to produce the original, but the notice was not served. To the sufficiency of this exception several answers are naturally suggested.

1. The evidence was not important to the plaintiff’s case.. His action was on the substituted note and the admission of its execution devolved on the defendants the onus of proving matters of defence against the obligation. The settlement was the basis of the execution of the note, not the nature of the dealings and transactions of which it was the consummation. It was indifferent to the plaintiff to en-quire into the provisions of the absent instrument, and its ■existence was not essential to the parol proof that was offer•>ed of full and final adjustment, and that the note represents what was admitted to be due.

■ 2. If the defendant did not have the contract as he alleges, why should a notice requiring him to produce, what he did not have and could not control, be given ?

3. If, as .argued,, the proof of search was not .sufficient to ¡show the loss,, why was not that objection then made, instead of the objection that no notice had been given the de-ffendant.? Had it been, we cannot say that .abundant proof ..of the search may not have been furnished. The defendant was content with the plaintiff’s general declaration that he ■did not have possession, and it was not an error of which he ■can complain. The fact is positively and unequivocally .sworn to by the plaintiff that he did not then have, nor had .ever had the lost instrument in his possession since the press copy was taken, and that it then passed into the >de.fendant’s hands.

The general rule is that when an objection might have '.been removed if made in apt time, and it is afterwards made, *131 it will not be entertained. Thus where a copy of a bill annexed to a deposition is proved and it did not appear why the original was not produced, and objection was made to the evidence because it was secondary, at the reading of the deposition on the trial, it was disallowed, because not made when the deposition was given, nor by a preliminary motion to suppress, and the court remarks that “ had the objection been taken before trial, either at the examination of the witness or on a motion to suppress, to the proof of the copy, without producing the original or showing its loss, the opposite party would undoubtedly have secured the production of the original, if in existence, or if it be lost or destroyed, been prepared to account for its absence.” York Company v. Central R. R., 3 Wall., 107.

So here, bad the defendant then made his objection to the sufficiency of the preliminary enquir}^ as to the search,that defect might then perhaps have been supplied by á further and fuller examination, and it is unreasonable for him to acquiesce and to put his objection on a want of notice to himself, and then be permitted to assign for the first time, in this court, a ground for his objection of a nature wholly different. The defendant expressed then no dissatisfaction as to the proof of loss, and he cannot be heard to do so now. Bridgers v. Bridgers, 69 N. C., 451. But what harm can come to the defendant from the admission of the press copy of the contract ? It has no bearing upon a substantial issue. The existence of an original in no way affects the plaintiff's right of action, and .its stipulation and terms, inasmuch .as they are immerged in the final settlement, do not impair the defence. It is plain, then, that the admission or rejection of the evidence is wholly immaterial and furnishes no ground of exception.

4. It was insisted for the defendant that the issues do not dispose of the matters in controversy upon the pleadings and that there should have been, and should now be, a *132

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.C. 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kidder-v-mcilhenny-nc-1879.