Madden v. Spaulding

110 A. 220, 94 Vt. 290, 1920 Vt. LEXIS 205
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 22, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 110 A. 220 (Madden v. Spaulding) 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
Madden v. Spaulding, 110 A. 220, 94 Vt. 290, 1920 Vt. LEXIS 205 (Vt. 1920).

Opinion

Watson, C. J.

No claim is made upon the exceptions taken during the trial. The ease presented in this Court rests solely on defendant’s petition for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence (1) relative to the quantity of stretchers made by Clarence E. Pinney and had by the plaintiff, and (2) as to missing page 127 of plaintiff’s account’book, marked Plaintiff’s Ex. 4, and the fraud and deceit practiced by him in keeping that page out, and in testifying that pages 158 and 198 contain a true account of all the dicker between him and Pinney.

The case was brought to recover the balance claimed by plaintiff to be due from defendant on an account covering more than twenty years, and consisting of many items of both debit and credit. At the beginning of the trial, such concessions were made on both sides as resulted in confining the evidence to a very few items, concerning which there was dispute.

The principal contention in the case was, whether the defendant was entitled to credit for the sum of $1,039.12, named in a paper marked Defendant’s Ex. F, reading as follows:

“West Bridgewater, Vt. 190
“F. G-. Spaulding:
“I have looked over with C. E. Pinney and if thare not a mistake thare is credited to you 1,039 12/100.
(Signed) “J. N. Madden.”

[292]*292This paper was delivered by Pinney to the defendant on May 9, 1904. Defendant claimed at the trial, and his evidence tended to show, that it was drawn np by the plaintiff and given to Pinney, so the latter might deliver it to the defendant for the purpose of showing the amount of credit given him on account by the plaintiff for stretchers received from Pinney, who was then owing defendant and paying him in stretchers delivered to the plaintiff, by whom they were to be credited to defendant, all parties treating the paper as cash. Defendant introduced evidence to the effect that for several years, ending in 1904, he furnished stock for Pinney to make into chair stretchers, and the plaintiff had all the finished product by purchase from Pinney.

The plaintiff admitted giving the paper to Pinney, but denied that it was for the purpose claimed by the defendant. Plaintiff asserted, and his evidence tended to show, that he paid Pinney (in account) for all the stretchers received of him; and that he made the paper at Pinney’s request for him to take to the defendant, as showing the number of stretchers Pinney had made, in settling with the defendant for the stock furnished by him.

[1] The affidavits of Ernest Pinney, Frank Lombard, Edmund Hadley and Lewis Hadley, are attached to the petition as containing newly discovered evidence tending to show that the affiants delivered stretcher logs at Clarence E. Pinney’s mill prior to May 9, 1904, which, when manufactured, would produce stretcher rounds equal to the rounds appearing on pages 158 and 198 of Ex. 4, (which pages contain plaintiff’s, account with Pinney,) and, in addition thereto, an amount which would require a further credit of. at least $1,039.12, the sum stated in Ex. F, it appearing that the plaintiff had all the rounds made at the Pinney mill. It is stated in the petition that the information that these affiants drew in most of the stretcher logs delivered at that mill, and that they had records thereof as kept at the time, first came to the defendant on or about May 5, 1919, and not earlier. The petition is dated May 13, 1919, and is subscribed and sworn to by the defendant as petitioner. But the oath of the defendant in this regard does not give his statement much credence when it is seen by the affidavit of Ernest Pinney of Bridgewater, that the logs he delivered at the Pinney mill in 1901, 1902, and 1903, though sold by him to Clarence Pinney, [293]*293were paid for by the defendant; and by the affidavit of Frank Lombard of Sherburne, that the logs therein mentioned were sold to Clarence Pinney and delivered at his mill in the same three years, but the defendant, under some arrangement between him and Pinney, paid the affiant, and the affiant and one Hill, for putting them in. In such circumstances, the facts stated in these - two affidavits do not in any legal sense constitute newly discovered evidence, and can form no basis for a new trial. Moreover, both affiants were witnesses at the trial and gave testimony; but their attention was not called to the matters mentioned in the affidavits.

Edmund S. Hadley and Lewis Hadley, both of Sherburne, make a joint affidavit in which they state that during the year 1902 they sold to Clarence E. Pinney, and delivered at his mill, thirty cords and sixty-five feet of hardwood stretcher logs other than ash, and have their original book showing this fact; that the first time in recent years they have given this information to any one was on May 6, 1919, when they told Frank W. Spaulding of Bridgewater, who is a son of the defendant. It appearing from defendant’s evidence that in the year 1902, he furnished the logs to Clarence E. Pinney out of which the latter manufactured stretchers, and from the affidavits of Ernest Pinney and Lombard that the defendant paid them, severally, for the logs sold and delivered to Clarence E. Pinney during the three years 1901, 1902, and 1903, and it being nowhere shown that defendant did not, in the same manner, have to do with the Hadley logs delivered at that mill, and further in view of the fact that the defendant’s denial of information that logs were so delivered at Pinney’s mill by Ernest Pinney, by Lombard, and by the Hadleys, is by a single sentence applicable alike to them all, we are not satisfied that he did not have similar knowledge of the logs delivered by the Hadleys as he did of those delivered by the other affiants. In this respect, the three affidavits must be treated alike, as forming no proper basis,'as newly discovered evidence, for a new trial. Rawleigh Co. v. Pierce, Hazen & Huntley, 92 Vt. 44, 102 Atl. 96.

Affiant Colton testifies only as to the number of stretchers a cord of stretcher timber of average quality would produce. Evidence of this nature has a bearing, but no claim is made for it as newly discovered.

[294]*294In his brief defendant says no one conld anticipate that the plaintiff would repudiate paper, Ex. F, in any such manner, and that, at the trial, it was a surprise to the defendant. The meaning of this is not clear, it appearing from the transcript that before this suit was brought, and a year or more before the trial, in looking over their accounts and trying to settle the matter between them, the plaintiff denied owing anything by virtue of that paper, and also refused to allow anything as credit to the defendant. And in discussing before the court the matter of a delay suggested by plaintiff’s attorney to give time to investigate further relative to the purpose of giving this particular paper, defendant’s counsel, opposing such suggestion, stated that ever since defendant’s answer was filed, plaintiff’s attorneys had had notice of defendant’s claim ‘ and have had ample opportunity to prepare their claim as we have our defence. They have had their books and we have had ours, and there is nothing in the nature of a surprise that I can ascertain. ’ ’ Again, in the same discussion, defendant’s counsel said the plaintiff went up to see defendant in December, 1916, and the paper was shown to him; that plaintiff said he signed it, but “that he.had paid this money to this man Pinney, and they dropped all matters simply because Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 A. 220, 94 Vt. 290, 1920 Vt. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madden-v-spaulding-vt-1920.