McCulloch v. Smith

57 N.E. 143, 24 Ind. App. 536, 1900 Ind. App. LEXIS 233
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 24, 1900
DocketNo. 3,137
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 57 N.E. 143 (McCulloch v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCulloch v. Smith, 57 N.E. 143, 24 Ind. App. 536, 1900 Ind. App. LEXIS 233 (Ind. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Black, J.

The appellee’s statement of claim against the appellant, administrator de bonis non of the estate of James M. Hains, deceased, was based upon a non-negotiable promissory note of the decedent. While the copy of the note filed with the statement showed the signature of the maker thus: “J. M. Hains,” it was alleged in the statement of [537]*537claim that the “note was originally executed by said decedent by signing his full name thereon, but that the same has been mutilated and torn, so that the signature of said decedent does not now fully appear thereon, and that said torn portion is lost, and can not be found.”

In discussing the action of the court in overruling a demurrer to the complaint, it is said by counsel for the appellant that, in order to make a good complaint upon a mutilated instrument and entitle it to be received in evidence, it must appear that the mutilation was innocently done, and was the result of either accident or mistake.

Our statute relating to the settlement of the estates of decedents provides that no action shall be brought by complaint and summons against the executor or administrator of an estate for the recovery of any claim against the decedent, but the holder thereof, whether such claim be due or not, shall file “a succinct and definite statement thereof” in the office of .the clerk of the court in which the estate is pending; and, if any claim against the decedent be founded upon any written instrument alleged to have been executed by him, the original, or a complete copy thereof, shall be filed with the statement. §2465 Burns 1894, §2310 Horner 1897. The sufficiency of the statement of claim may be tested by demurrer. §2479 Burns 1894, §2324 Horner 1897.

It has been held often that the statement or complaint is sufficient if it apprise the defendant of the nature of the claim and the amount demanded, and show facts sufficient to bar another action for the same demand. Taggart v. Tevanny, 1 Ind. App. 339, and cases cited.

The statute does not require the claimant to set forth his claim by a regular complaint constructed in accordance with the ordinary rules of pleading, but the “succinct and definite statement” of his claim must contain all such facts as are necessary to show prima facie that the decedent’s estate is lawfully indebted to the claimant, or it will be [538]*538held bad on. demurrer for want of sufficient facts. Windell v. Hudson, 102 Ind. 521; Walker v. Heller, 104 Ind. 327; Thomas v. Merry, 113 Ind. 83. The statute requires such a statement of facts as will show a legal liability on the part of the estate, and as will, with reasonable certainty, indicate to the representative of the estate what he is called upon to meet. Culver v. Yandt, 112 Ind. 401. The requirement above noticed relating to the filing of the instrument executed by the decedent on which the claim is founded, or a complete copy thereof, with the statement of claim, is not less strict than the provision of the civil code that, when any pleading is founded on a written instrument, the original, or a copy thereof, must be filed with the pleading. §365 Burns 1894, §362 Horner 1897.

In Blasingame v. Blasingame, 24 Ind. 86, it was said that the statute requiring a copy of the instrument as a part of the complaint was intended, by a direct method, in all cases, to attain the end which, in suits at law upon sealed instruments, was formerly reached by profert and oyer, and to require an actual showing by the copy in court, instead of that nominal production of it which profert was said to accomplish; that in such suits it was not needed that profert be made when the instrument was lost; but the facts to excuse the profert must have been averred, and were traversable, and, if not proved, the suit failed.

In 1 Chit. Pl. 365, it is said: “The excuse for the omission of a profert being traversable must be stated according to the fact; as, either that The deed has been lost/ or ‘destroyed/ ‘by accident/ or That it is in the possession of the defendant’, and that Therefore the plaintiff cannot produce the same to the court.’ But in declaring upon a bill of exchange or other simple contract, no profert is to be made.” And on page 366, it is said that, where a profert or an excuse for it is necessary, “if the plaintiff make profert of and thereby profess to produce the deed, when he is not prepared to do so, and the defendant plead non est [539]*539factum, the plaintiff will be nonsuited on the trial as it will not be sufficient in such ease to prove that the deed was lost or destroyed, or in the defendant’s possession.”

In 2 Chit. Pl. 139, the forms of excuses of the profert are set forth as follows: “If the bond be lost — ‘and which said writing obligatory having been lost’ or, ‘and which said writing obligatory having been destroyed by accident’ or, ‘by the said defendant,’ the said plaintiff cannot produce the same to the said court here,” etc.

In 1 G-reenl. Ev. §5G6, it is said: “If by the unlawful act of a stranger, the instrument is mutilated or defaced, so that its identity is gone, the law regards the act, so far as the rights of the parties to the instrument are concerned, merely as an accidental destruction of primary evidence, compelling a resort to that which is secondary; and, in such case, the mutilated portion may be admitted as secondary evidence of so much of the original instrument. Thus, if it be a deed, and the party would plead it, it cannot be pleaded with a profert, but the want of profert must be excused by an allegation that the deed, meaning its legal identity as a deed, has been accidentally, and without fault of the party, destroyed.”

In Lee v. Alexander, 9 B. Mon. 25, there was in the complaint an averment that the date of the note sued on had been destroyed and mutilated without the knowledge,'privity, or consent of the plaintiff. It was said by the court: “If the mutilation or alteration is of such a character as to destroy its identity, so that the party cannot plead it-with a profert, the want of such profert may be excused by an allegation that its legal identity had been accidentally destroyed, without the fault of the party, and in such case secondary evidence may be introduced for the purpose of establishing the original tenor of the instrument, and to account for its alteration or mutilation.” It was also said: “Although the allegations in regard to the mutilation or alteration of the covenant are deemed substantially sufficient, yet they should properly have been made more specific.”

[540]*540In Piercy v. Piercy, 5 W. Va. 199, a bond was exhibited with a bill in equity, the bond being in a mutilated form, and no explanation being given as to how it became mutilated. The signature and seal had been torn off, and the name had been reinstated or pasted on near the middle of the paper at the bottom thereof. It was said by the court: “It lies upon the party seeking to enforce a bill or note to account for any alteration that appears on the face of the instrument. * * * The authorities are numerous that, if the bond is altered by the obligee in a material point, it thereby becomes void.”

At common law, a note partly destroyed might be declared on as entire, and proof might be received of the destroyed part. Duckwall v. Weaver, 2 Ohio 13. In that case, the declaration did not describe the note as mutilated and partly lost.

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Bluebook (online)
57 N.E. 143, 24 Ind. App. 536, 1900 Ind. App. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcculloch-v-smith-indctapp-1900.