Ordway v. Cluskey

149 A. 386, 129 Me. 13, 1930 Me. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 3, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 149 A. 386 (Ordway v. Cluskey) 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
Ordway v. Cluskey, 149 A. 386, 129 Me. 13, 1930 Me. LEXIS 10 (Me. 1930).

Opinion

Farrington, J.

The case comes up on general motion after verdict for the plaintiff, and also on special motion for a new trial on the ground of alleged perjury of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff in a suit previously brought had recovered a judgment against the defendant for the sum of thirty-nine hundred sixty-seven dollars and fifty cents ($3,967.50). That case was carried to the Law Court on defendant’s motion, and, while it was there pending, the parties arranged a settlement. The plaintiff’s claim and testimony was that the defendant agreed to give her three thousand dollars ($3,000.00) and an automobile; that on June 1, 1928, in reliance on his promise that he would keep his agreement, she signed and delivered to him a release “from all debts, demands and causes of action” which she had against him; and that she had never received anything except the automobile.

The defendant admitted an arrangement for settlement but [15]*15testified that he agreed to give the plaintiff three thousand dollars ($3,000.00), denying any promise of an automobile, although he admitted buying the car and turning it over to the plaintiff and paying for registration and license in her name. That she used the car as her own and later turned it in toward the purchase price of another car is undisputed. He further testified that he had given her two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) at the time of the signing and delivery to him of the release and that at the same time he gave to the plaintiff a note payable on December 1, 1928, for one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), this being the balance of the amount promised, and that the note had been paid in full and returned to him.

The plaintiff sued on the agreement, with the usual money counts, and recovered a judgment of three thousand sixty dollars ($3,060.00).

In presenting her case, a daughter was the only witness beside the plaintiff herself, the latter testifying that she had received a Pontiac car costing eight hundred fifty dollars ($850.00), but that she had received no part of the three thousand dollars ($3,000.00).

The daughter testified that after the purchase of the Pontiac car, on July 6, 1928, she heard the defendant say that he would pay the plaintiff the three thousand dollars ($3,000.00) later on, and that, since June 1, 1928, she had several times heard the defendant and her mother talk about this settlement. She also testified that she had never seen nor heard of any note, and that at one time, when her mother asked the defendant for money, the defendant said she would never get a cent as she had nothing to show that he owed her anything. She testified that this was about December 17, 1928, and that this was the last time she heard financial matters discussed between the two.

The defendant had five witnesses besides himself, four of whom gave no testimony as to any payments of money by the defendant to the plaintiff. One witness testified that just before Christmas, 1928, she was present when the defendant said to the plaintiff, “I am going to pay you to-night,”; that the defendant “had quite a lot of money in his pocket; he laid it down on the table and got a [16]*16receipt or some kind of paper,” and that then he said, “they was all settled.”

The defendant argues the improbability of the plaintiff’s testimony, and that the jury must have been influenced in her favor by sympathy for her or by prejudice against the defendant.

It is a truth, so fundamental and well recognized as to need no further comment, that the testimony of many witnesses may, in the judgment of the jury as the trier of fact, be outweighed by that of one or a few.

After a most careful examination of all the evidence in the printed case bearing on the general motion, we are unable to see any error that would warrant this Court in disturbing the verdict, and the general motion must, therefore, be overruled.

The case in question was tried at the May Term, 1929, of the Penobscot County Superior Court, the verdict being rendered on the ninth day of the Term.

The defendant filed no motion for further continuance of the case, but, in addition to the general motion which has been considered, on the twentieth day of the Term, he filed a special motion for a new trial on the ground that at the trial the plaintiff, with wilful intent to deceive court and jury, was guilty of perjury in giving testimony material to the issue.

This was marked “Law” under the statutory provisions relating thereto. All due notices to parties were ordered on the motion, and the evidence was taken on December 12, 1929, before a duly appointed commissioner. No question is raised as to the supporting affidavits required, and there is no contention that the motion is not properly before this court.

In approaching its consideration, it is important to note that at the March Term, 1929, the term of entry of the writ in the instant case, the defendant pleaded the general issue with a brief statement alleging full payment on his part. The plaintiff was allowed to amend the writ and at the same, March, Term, the defendant filed a motion for continuance, chiefly on the ground that the necessary evidence in proof of the defendant’s plea was in persons living in distant parts of the county who could not, with due diligence, be produced at the March Term, but that those [17]*17persons with others possessing “corroborating” evidence would be available at. the time to which the case might, be continued.

This motion, sworn to March 12, 1929, was filed on the seventh day of the March Term and the case, on the payment of costs, was continued to the May Term and was then duly tried.

One of the witnesses, Katherine Bragg, whose testimony was taken on the motion now under consideration, was in Bangor in March, 1928, when the case was originally assigned for hearing and before it was continued, and talked about her testimony with the defendant’s attorneys. A careful reading of that testimony, and of the other testimony on the special motion, convinces the Court that she not only could have been found and could have testified at the trial of the case in May, but also that all four of the witnesses relied on could have been produced and that their testimony could have been made available at the trial.

Roderick L. Phenney testified minutely as to what he saw and heard at the Gregory House, but on cross examination stated that some time in August, 1929, the defendant came to his home in Dexter and asked him if he remembered anything about the time he asked him to take defendant to Millinocket, referring to the time he was at the Gregory House, and Phenney said that he replied, “I told him, yes, that I remembered it faintly.”

Mrs. Phenney (who testified that she was quite deaf and that she acquired her deafness in “War time,” and who admitted that the attorney, who stood within a few feet of her in cross examination at the trial when she had reason to be alert as to what was being said, was obliged to speak “quite” loud in order for her to hear), testified in detail as to the conversation between the plaintiff and the defendant which took place more than a year previously.

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Bluebook (online)
149 A. 386, 129 Me. 13, 1930 Me. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ordway-v-cluskey-me-1930.