Palmer v. Logan

4 Ill. 56
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 4 Ill. 56 (Palmer v. Logan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmer v. Logan, 4 Ill. 56 (Ill. 1841).

Opinion

Scates, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action commenced by the appellant, by foreign attachment, against the appellee, in the Morgan Circuit Court, for the recovery of the amount of two several promissory notes. The original affidavit states, “ That Richard A. Logan is justly indebted to him (appellant) in the sum of nineteen hundred and eighty-seven dollars, for property sold said Logan, by said Palmer, which property is situated in Pittsfield, Pike county, Illinois, and for which two promissory notes were given by said Logan to said Palmer, in January, 1837, one due twelve months after date, and the other two years after date ; which said notes were destroyed, or are in the possession of the said Logan, without ever having been paid. Said Logan is a resident of the State of Kentucky, and not of the State of Illinois, and is possessed of property in said county of Morgan.” Whereupon an attachment issued, upon said Palmer’s entering into bond, with security, in the penalty of $3974, to the said Logan. At the March term of said Court, the appellant filed his declaration, counting upon said two lost promissory notes, as described in the affidavit, and also upon the sale of town lots in Pittsfield, of the value of two thousand dollars, before then sold and delivered to the defendant. He also filed, at the same time, a written notification to defendant, “ to produce, on the tidal of this cause, two promissory notes, executed to Erastus W. Palmer, dated about the seventeenth day of January, A. D. 1837, for nine hundred and fifty dollars each, one due one year after date, the other due two years' after date ; also to produce a deed, dated the same day, from said Palmer to said Logan, for certain town, lots in the town of Pittsfield, Pike, county, Illinois. The said Palmer wishes to use them as evidence.” At the same time he filed an account, the items of which were composed of the said two notes, with interest, and an item for the sale of said town lots; this last at $2000, and making aggregately the sum of $4089. There was also proof of notice, by publication, filed. The defendant filed a plea in abatement of the pendency of another suit for the same cause of action, without an affidavit, and upon which, it appears, no order was taken. He afterwards filed a special demurrer to the declaration, which being confessed, leave was given to amend, and to the amended declaration a plea of non assumpsit was filed. Issue was joined, a jury came, and not being able to agree, were discharged, by consent. The amended narration counts specially upon each promissory note, as above, and avers it to be lost. It also contains an indebitatus count for town lots in Pittsfield, sold and delivered to defendant, and also a general count for money had and received, lent and advanced, laid out and expended, for goods, wares, and merchandise, sold and delivered; and also for divers lands and towns lots, sold to defendant. Plea non assumpsit, and issue. A jury was called, and after hearing the testimony, on motion of defendant, the Court ordered a nonsuit, and rendered a judgment for costs, from which the plaintiff appealed to this Court.

It appears, by the bill of exceptions, that after the jury were empannelled, the appellant offered to read in evidence the affidavit of said appellant, in which he stated, “ that the said notes in the plaintiff’s declaration mentioned and described, and upon which this suit is brought, were duly made, executed, and delivered to this affiant, as is therein alleged, and that the same are now unpaid, and in no way satisfied or discharged. Affiant further saith, that the said notes have been since lost, or destroyed, without the consent or knowledge of this affiant, and that he is not able to find or obtain the same, so as to produce them on the trial of this cause. Affiant further saith, that he is informed, and verily believes, that said notes were fraudulently obtained by the said Logan, and destroyed by him, or they still remain in his possession.” And then offered to prove, by one B. R. Houghton, a witness produced and sworn, the contents of said notes, to which the defendant objected, and the Court sustained the objection, to which the appellant excepted.

He then offered to read in evidence another affidavit of the plaintiff below, which stated, “ that the notes sued on in this case are lost and destroyed. Said Palmer further says, that said notes, or either of them, are not in the possession or power of him, the said Palmer, but that the same notes are lost, and out of his possession, and he has no knowledge of their existence, except the statements of said Logan, where they are, but believes them destroyed,” and again offered secondary evidence of their execution, and of the contents of said notes, which said testimony was again objected to, and excluded by the Comí. The plaintiff then offered to be sworn to prove the loss of the notes, for the purpose of introducing secondary evidence of their execution and contents, which was refused by the Court. The plaintiff then asked the witness, Houghton, whether he did not know of defendant, Logan’s, purchasing land in Pike county, of plaintiff, Palmer, to which defendant also objected, and which was excluded by the Court; to all which the plaintiff excepted.

The plaintiff assigns five causes of error :

First. The Court erred in refusing to permit the plaintiff to prove the contents of the notes mentioned in the first count, upon his making the first affidavit mentioned in the record ;

Second. The Court erred in refusing to permit the plaintiff to prove the contents and execution of the note sued on, upon his filing the second affidavit mentioned in the record ;

Third. The Court erred in refusing to hear the statements of the plaintiff, under oath, to prove the loss of the notes, with a view of letting in proof to the jury of the execution, delivery, and consideration of said notes, and of their loss ;

Fourth. The Court erred in refusing to permit the plaintiff to give evidence, under the money counts, and in deciding that he was estopped from doing so by his affidavit for the attachment, and his affidavit of the loss of the notes, &c.; and,

Fifth. The Court erred in each and every decision, order, and judgment made in tire case.

The first error assigned questions the decision of the Court in excluding the affidavit of plaintiff from being read in evidence, as a foundation for the introduction of secondary evidence of the contents of the notes sued on.

Where the evidence of the destruction of the instrument is not conclusive, the party must show that diligent search has been made in those places where it would be most likely to be found, if in existence.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ill. 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-logan-ill-1841.