Norton v. Smith

153 A. 886, 130 Me. 58, 1931 Me. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 13, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 153 A. 886 (Norton v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norton v. Smith, 153 A. 886, 130 Me. 58, 1931 Me. LEXIS 31 (Me. 1931).

Opinion

Sturgis, J.

Action of assumpsit- by the plaintiff as administrator c. t. a. of the estate of Alma E. Bradbury, late of Belfast, to recover a balance claimed to be due on a note given to the testatrix by the defendant. The plaintiff relies only on the last two counts of his declaration: (4) on a promissory note dated June 1, [59]*591925, for thirteen thousand five hundred dollars payable on demand with interest, and (5) on the same note alleged to have been lost.

The defendant pleads the general issue with a brief statement that on June 1,1925, for valuable consideration, he gave the testatrix a note for fifteen thousand dollars and subsequently, fifteen hundred dollars having been paid thereon, the testatrix discharged the note by intentionally destroying it.

The case is reported to the Law Court for determination of the legal rights of the parties upon so much of the evidence as is legally admissible. On report, as a general rule, nothing to the contrary appearing, all technical questions of pleading are deemed to be waived and the single question before the court is whether, upon all the evidence giving it the effect a jury ought to give it, the plaintiff is entitled to judgment. Power Co. v. Foundation Co., 129 Me., 81; Callinan v. Tetrault, 123 Me., 302; Pillsbury v. Brown, 82 Me., 450, 455. This rule applies to the case at bar, except as the stipulation of the parties obviates the necessity of certain findings of fact, and limits the issues.

The plaintiff, through his counsel, admitted that, under his pleadings, he relied solely on a note for fifteen thousand dollars given by the defendant to the testatrix during her lifetime, on which fifteen hundred dollars had been paid. He introduced the following stipulation and rested:

“It is stipulated and agreed that the plaintiff relies on the last two counts in the declaration and that the note declared on in said counts is due and payable in the sum of $13,500. ($1,500 having been paid thereon), unless in the lifetime of the said Alma E. Bradbury she forgave the said defendant said note and discharged the same by intentionally destroying it, and that the only issue is whether or not the said Alma E. Bradbury did, during her lifetime, forgive said note or discharge said note by intentionally destroying the same.”

It is well settled law that, if the holder of a promissory note intentionally destroys it, he thereby forgives and discharges the [60]*60debt evidenced by it and can not maintain an action based upon the instrument. In a suit upon a note the burden of proving its destruction and a discharge of the debt is upon the maker. Dist. of Columbia v. Cornell, 130 U. S., 655, 658; Sullivan v. Shea, 32 Cal. App., 369; Darland v. Taylor, 52 Iowa, 503; McDonald v. Loomis, 233 Mich., 174; Vanauken v. Hornbeck, 14 N. J. L., 178; Gardner v. Gardner, 22 Wend. (N. Y.), 525; Henson v. Henson, 151 Tenn., 137; Negotiable Instruments Act, R. S., Chap. 164, Sec. 119 (3) ; 8 C. J., 614; 3 R. C. L., 1270; 37 A. L. R., 1148.

The defendant called Mrs. Rosanna B. Odiorne of Augusta to the stand. This witness, unrelated to any of the parties and apparently disinterested, testified that, following an intimate acquaintance of eight or ten years, Mrs. Bradbury spent the month of March, 1926, with her in St. Petersburg, Florida, and, while there, told Mrs. Odiorne that she had loaned the defendant money to go into business, taken his note for it and later destroyed it. Omitting colloquy and objection, the material testimony of this witness is:

Q. And while she was visiting at your home did she have any discussion with you in regard to a note given by Henry Smith ?
A. Yes, she did.
Q. Will you state the conversation that she had in regard to the matter?
A. Mrs. Bradbury asked me first what I would think — •
Witness continuing — She asked me what I would think of her having Henry and Ellen Smith come into her home to live with her. They had planned it.
Q. All right, Mrs. Odiorne?
A. Shall I go on?
Q. Yes.
A. For a moment I did not answer Mrs. Bradbury because I thought it rather an unusual thing to do and I thought that anybody —
Q. I wouldn’t go into that. Just what she said to you.
A. You mean from there on?
[61]*61Q. Yes. What she said to you.
A. She had planned — Shall I say it ?
Q. Yes.
A. She had planned about the future of the house, the running of the house and that sort of thing, and how easy she hoped to make it for Mr. and Mrs. Smith; that when Mr. Smith went into business she had loaned him some money and she had his note for it. She said: “I could not have that hanging over those children.; so I said to Henry Smith, ‘Child, I never will need that and we will destroy it.’ We did destroy it and that ended it.”
Q. (The Court) Those last words, “That ended it,” were those words of Mrs. Bradbury or your words now?
A. Those were Mrs. Bradbury’s words.
Q. (The Court) She used the words “That ended it”?
A. “We destroyed it and that ended it.”
Q. In that discussion in regard to destroying the note, did she express to you her feeling in regard to Mr. and Mrs. Smith, giving that as a reason why she was doing it, or anything like that ?
A. She certainly did.
Q. What did she say in regard to Mr. and Mrs. Smith, either or both of them, in connection with her talk about destroying the note?
A. She s^id, “I love Ellen Smith as a sister. Henry Smith is the salt of the earth.”

An examination of the testimony of other witnesses, discloses that, when on June 8,1925, the defendant purchased a half interest in a local garage business conducted by the firm of Gordon & Rogers, he borrowed $15,000 from Mrs. Bradbury. She raised the money by selling Central Farm Loan bonds through the Merrill Trust Co. of Bangor, Maine, directing the proceeds to be sent to the defendant in the form of a check for $18,500 payable to M. L. Gordon and $1,500 in currency. The check was used to purchase a half interest in the garage business. The currency was deposited in the defendant’s bank account.

[62]*62Although the note here sued upon has never appeared among the assets of Mrs. Bradbury’s estate, the defendant admits giving the testatrix a note for $15,000 at the time she loaned him the money to purchase an interest in the garage business. His claim that payments amounting to $1,500 were made to the testatrix and the note reduced accordingly is not controverted, but admitted by the stipulation in the case. The plaintiff not waiving the bar of the statute, the defendant gave no further admissible testimony directly supporting his evidence. R. S., Chap. 96, Sec. 119.

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Bluebook (online)
153 A. 886, 130 Me. 58, 1931 Me. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norton-v-smith-me-1931.