Lincoln v. Christian

94 Pa. Super. 145, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 25, 1928
DocketAppeal 39
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 94 Pa. Super. 145 (Lincoln v. Christian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lincoln v. Christian, 94 Pa. Super. 145, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1 (Pa. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

For the second time the plaintiff has recovered a verdict against the defendant for money which she alleges he borrowed from her in an individual capacity and upon his own credit, although the written evidence of indebtedness held by plaintiff and produced at the trial was the judgment note of the Booker T. Washington Hospital Association of Western Pennsylvania, of which both were members and officers. The note was in the sum of $1,000, payable to the order of plaintiff one day after its date, May 11, 1922. The case necessarily turned upon certain issues of fact which were clearly and impartially submitted to the jury in a charge concerning which no complaint is made and in the course of which the learned trial judge affirmed all of defendant’s points except his request for binding instructions. The present appeal is from the judgment entered upon the verdict after defendant’s motions for a new trial and for judgment n. o. v. had been denied. The action was commenced in 1923 and the first verdict rendered in May, 1925. The court in banc, being of opinion “that while the verdict could be sustained by the evidence of the plaintiff, herself, the weight of the evidence was with the defendant,” granted a new trial. The question of the preponderance of the evidence at the second trial, in so far as it was within the control of the court below, was disposed of adversely to defendant by the order refusing a new trial and that order has not been assigned for error.

The assignments are four in number. The first and third are based upon alleged erroneous rulings upon *147 evidence and the second and fourth upon the denial of defendant’s motion for judgment non obstante and the entering of judgment upon the verdict. It is impossible to reconcile the testimony of the plaintiff and her corroborating witnesses with the testimony of the defendant, which is also corroborated to some extent, and it is extremely difficult to avoid the conclusion that one or the other of the parties has committed willful and corrupt perjury in this case. As stated, both plaintiff and defendant were members and officers of an association formed under the name of the Booker T. Washington Hospital Association of Western Pennsylvania for the purpose of establishing a hospital for the negro race in the city of Pittsburgh. The association had an option to purchase the existing Pittsburgh Italian Hospital for $21,000' and was obliged to pay $5,000 of this amount by a specified' date. A campaign, of which the defendant was the manager, was conducted for the purpose of raising funds. The project failed and the $5,000 paid for the option was fo3ffeited. There was evidence that plaintiff became a member of the hospital association in January, 1922, and that defendant, a practicing physician, was one of the promoters of the proposition. It was admitted at the trial that plaintiff had on deposit, or at least under her control, the sum of $1,000 in the City Deposit Bank and that she withdrew this money and placed it in the hands of the defendant during the early part of 1922. The controversy was upon the question whether this money was loaned by her to the hospital association, to assist it in making the $5,000 payment, or to the defendant individually. Plaintiff testified positively that on March 22, 1922, she loaned the defendant at his request the sum of $500, for which he gave her his judgment note of that date, payable in ninety days; that on April 11, 1922, she loaned him an additional S3im of $500, surrendered the note of March 22nd, and took from him his judg *148 ment note for $1,000, dated that day and payable in ninety days; that on June 24, 1922, the defendant requested her to bring the note for $1,000 to his office; that up to that time she had been paid $105 on account of the note — which payments had been endorsed on the back thereof — and she thought the defendant was about to make another payment. Her testimony with respect to the occurrences at defendant’s office reads: “Q. When you handed him the note, did he pay you any money, or make any endorsement on the back? A. No, sir. Q. What did he do? A. He didn’t pay me any money, he tore the note up, and gave me another note [the note of the association, dated May 11, 1922]....... Q. What did you say Avhen you received it and looked at it? A. He made the statement that his personal note was no good, that everything he had belonged to his wife, and therefore that note was no good; 'so to insure me my money he gave me that note. Q. Did you accept it? A. I told him I didn’t loan the money to the association — ...... Q. What did you say after you looked at the note? A. I told him the association didn’t owe me anything, that it was his personal debt. Q. Why did you keep the note? A. It was the only thing I had to show that I never had the money.* ....... Q. That you ever had it to give? A. Yes, sir.” The defendant unequivocally denied each of these statements.

With regard to the payments aggregating $105, plaintiff testified that some of them had been paid in cash and that she had been given checks of the hospital association for others. The note of the asso.ciation, referred to in the testimony we have quoted and admitted in evidence, has the corporate seal affixed and is signed by Nellie R. Graves, as president, and Laventia Wilson, as secretary. On the back are notations indicating that $60 had been paid on May 12th, $25 on May 24th, and $20 on June 20, 1922, and Mrs. Naomi Lightfoot, a. stenographer and the 'secretary of *149 the hospital association, testified that the notations of the first and second payments were in the handwriting of plaintiff and of the third in that of the witness, and that all these payments were made to the plaintiff out of the funds of the association. Plaintiff denied, in rebuttal, that she made any of the notations. One of the obvious difficulties presented to the jury for solution was the presence of these notations on the back of the note showing payments in amounts which plaintiff admitted she had received but all made prior to, June 24, 1922, the date upon which she testified the note first came into her possession; but this question was for the jury under all the conflicting testimony and was resolved by it in favor of the plaintiff. The most important question raised by the assignments is whether the court erred in denying defendant’s motion for judgment in his favor n. o. v. The motion was based upon defendant’s point for binding instructions and the inquiry is whether such instructions should have been given (Caldwell v. Continental Trust Co., 291 Pa. 35). Counsel for appellant seem to contend that the trial judge should have found that the overwhelming weight of the evidence was in favor of the defendant, and, upon this ground, directed a verdict in his favor, in their brief they say: “It is very evident that the court erred in submitting to the jury a fact which did not exist, viz., whether the plaintiff loaned money to the appellant individually or whether she loaned her money to the corporation” and then argue that the note in evidence clearly shows that she loaned the money to the hospital association. There were no documents requiring construction and the argument in behalf of defendant overlooks the established principles clearly restated by Mr. Justice Milling in the recent case of Hardy v. Millers Mutual Fire Insurance Association, 293 Pa.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 Pa. Super. 145, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lincoln-v-christian-pasuperct-1928.