Olive v. . Olive

95 N.C. 485
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 95 N.C. 485 (Olive v. . Olive) 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
Olive v. . Olive, 95 N.C. 485 (N.C. 1886).

Opinion

*486 Smith, C. J.

This action was commenced in a justice’s •court, (and removed by defendant’s appeal to the Superior Coui't), to recover the sum of $148x8A, claimed to be due from the defendant.

The single issue submitted to the jury was: “Is the defendant indebted to the plaintiff; and if so, in what amount ?”

The answer returned was: One hundred dollars, with interest from 22d November, 1881.

Judgment being rendered against the defendant, he appealed.

To support their contention, the plaintiffs read in evidence a mortgage, in the usual form of crop liens, executed by one E. Ferrall, conveying the crops to be raised on the lands “ known as Kendrick Johnson’s land, now owned by Pennina Mills,” and proved that they furnished provisions to him to the amount of $150r&- under the deed, and that in the Pall of the same year, they took into their possession, of the crops raised by Ferral, 3,248 pounds of seed cotton. This cotton was subsequently seized under an attachment issued at defendant’s instance, and sold, and the proceeds paid over to him. The plaintiffs’ mortgage was dated and registered on the 17th dajr of January, 1881, while Rand & Barbee had a lien upon the entire crops of an earlier date, and the defendant said he claimed under a lien created b}r Pennina Mills. The plaintiff here rested, and defendant asked the Court to direct the jury to render a negative response to the issue. At the same time, the plaintiffs asked permission to re-open their case for the introduction of further testimony. This the Court allowed, and denied the defendant’s motion. To this ruling the first exception is taken.

I. The exception is untenable, and the action of the Court was but an exercise of that discretion reposed in him by law, in order to a fair trial and the attainment of the ends of administering justice. Pain v. Pain, 80 N. C., 322.

*487 The examination of witnesses may be allowed in the discretion of the presiding Judge at any stage of the trial in furtherance of justice. State v. Lee, 80 N. C., 483; State v. King, 84 N. C., 737.

The plaintiff thereupon put the defendant on the stand, and proved by him that he had received $100 of the proceeds of sale of that cotton, besides $25 from Rand & Bar-bee, the excess received by them over the amount due on their mortgage. On his cross-examination his counsel offered in evidence a mortgage dated March 24th, 1881, made by Pennina Mills and said Ferrall to him, and stated that he proposed to show that it covered the crops grown on the same land and now claimed by the plaintiffs.

The Court refused to receive the evidence at this stage of the case, as the plaintiffs had not closed, but that it would be admitted, and the witness recalled for that purpose, when the defendant put in his proofs.

II. The defendant’s second exception is to this action of the Court. We find no error in the refusal to allow this substantive evidence in defence, to be interjected in the course of the examination of the plaintiffs’ witnesses, and no just right was denied to him.

In practice, it is common to prove handwriting, and thus the execution of an instrument in writing by a subscribing witness, or witness acquainted with the handwriting, upon cross-examination, to the end that it may be read to the jury, or proved, at the proper time for its introduction as affirmative evidence of the party. And it is not in evidence until read or accepted, though by such preliminary examination put in condition to be read. But this is rather a convenience than right, since a controversy may spring up as to. the authenticity of the instrument, and at an inopportune time. There is no error in the course pursued by the Court, and no just cause of complaint afforded the appellant.

*488 III. The defendant then offered the record of a trial of an action brought before a justice of the peace by himself, against said Ferrall and Mills, in which it was adjudged that the $100 now claimed, be paid over to the defendant, and it was so received by him. The evidence was not received, as we understand, because offered before the plaintiffs’ testimony was concluded,' as was the other. But both the mortgage and record of the trial were subsequently received and heard by the jury, so that no detriment could come to the defendant from the l’uling of the Court, had it been, as we hold it was not, erroneous to exclude it when an opportunity offered.

IV. The next exception is to the refusal of the Court to allow the defendant’s counsel to recall him and examine him as the plaintiffs’ witness. We do not feel the force and pertinency of the proposition.

The defendant had been made a witness for the plaintiffs, and his credibility was not open to an attack of those intro ducing him. His testimony would come before the jury with the same claims to their confidence, whether called in the second examination the witness of one or the other party. It does not -appear he was recalled, and if he was, that any exigency occurred in which the discretion became important. As we cannot see what harm could come from calling the defendant his own or the plaintiffs’ witness, the exception is overruled.

V. The evidence in defence consisted in—

1. A mortgage made by Ferrall to Rand & Barbee on October 15th, 1880, covering the same crops on which $25 was advanced after October 17th, 1881, the mortgage being for advances to the amount of $400 to be made.

2. A mortgage on same crops made by Ferrall and Mills to himself, registered on March 24th, 1881, to secure advances to the amount of $100.

3. The proceedings before the justice of the peace to enforce the lien under the last mortgage, a judgment rendered for *489 that sum,t he seizure of the crops under process, its sale, and the payment on November 22, 1881, of $100 to the defendant in satisfaction .of his claim.

4. Proceedings in a justice’s court instituted by one Taylor Ellis', to enforce a laborer’s lien on said crops on October-17, 1881, under a contract made on the day of renting, previous in time to the plaintiffs’ lien, to satisfy which only part of the crops was required, and this debt was paid out of other moneys than that received by the defendant..

The defendant further offered testimony to show that at the trial of the defendant’s action under his mortgage, judgment was consented to by Pennina Mills, and that the plaintiffs were then present and preferred their present, claim, .which was disallowed. There' was other evidence tending to show that the land was rented by Ferrall, and the crop grown thereon was raised by him, and some evidence .tending to prove the renting to other persons than Ferrall, to-wit, the said Pennina Mills.

The defendant asked the Court, among other things, to charge:

“1.

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Bluebook (online)
95 N.C. 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olive-v-olive-nc-1886.