State v. Brainard

25 Iowa 572
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 26, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 25 Iowa 572 (State v. Brainard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Brainard, 25 Iowa 572 (iowa 1868).

Opinions

Dillon, Ch. J.

The record presents, in some respects, a most remarkable cause. The only evidence against the [573]*573defendant, save that of certain experts, was given by his two uncles and Ms own father. One of these uncles resides in "Wisconsin, the other in Massachusetts, and the father in Ohio. By some or all of these the prosecution was instituted, and all of them appeared voluntarily to testify against the defendant.

What motive led the father, on his own motion and without any compulsion, to come' from Ohio to Iowa to aid in the copviction of his son, does not appear in the record, and seems difficult to conjecture. Certain it is, that the testimony of the father was the strongest against the defendant of any produced at the trial.

It is essential to an understanding of the case, that some of the facts presented by the record, and the substance of the testimony be briefly stated.

The defendant was indicted for uttering and publishing the forged signature of his uncle, Austin Brainard.

It is undisputed that Austin and the defendant, then quite a young man, first came to Iowa, in the summer of 1856, to buy property. Austin was quite advanced in years, unmarried, and possessed of some means. He seems to have been attached to the defendant, and was anxious to aid him, and to establish him in business. The defendant was without money of his own. Lands were entered and other property purchased in Mitchell county, and in some others, in which it seems that the "defendant had, or was to have, by understanding with his uncle, some interest. The defendant remained in Iowa and had charge of the property purchased, but the uncle returned. This was in 1856. The next year (1857) the uncle again came to Iowa, remained a short time, and returned. The evidence does not show that he ever again visited Iowa; but it does show that he kept up a constant correspondence with the defendant, who had charge of the business in Iowa, until his death in September, 1862.

[574]*574In 1863, Martin Brainard, as administrator of the estate of Austin Brainard, brought a suit in Iowa against the defendant on four promissory notes dated in 1856, 1858 and 1861. The defendant, in his answer, pleaded, by way of set-off, certain notes purporting to be made by Austin B. to him — one for $179 (the one involved in the present appeal), one for $325, dated in June, 1857, and one for $550, dated in July, 1857. On the trial of the civil suit these notes were offered in evidence to support the set-off; but whether admitted, or, if admitted, whether they were allowed by the jury, is nowhere shown by the record. Soon after the civil cause was disposed of, the present indictment was found.

On the trial of the indictment, the State proved by the . clerk of the District Court, that, on the trial of the civil action before referred to, the defendant produced and offered in evidence the note mentioned in the indictment, as a set-off to the plaintiff’s claim against him.

The next witness produced by the State was Martin Brainard, uncle to defendant, and administrator of Austin B.’s estate.

He testified, that he was a brother of Austin, was familiar with his handwriting, had corresponded with him from 1825 till 1855, when he came to live with witness, and had since often seen him write. He said: “ I can’t tell who wrote the signature to the $179 note; I don’t think it was Austin’s; I think the body was written by the defendant; I never knew Austin to give a note but what he wrote the body of it.” As to the other two notes offered in evidence in the civil cause, he also testified that “ he did not believe them to be genuine signatures of Austin ; there is a flourish in the signatures which I never saw in the genuine.” This is the substance of all his testimony in chief as to the genuineness of the notes. On cross-examination, he gives his reasons in detail, based [575]*575upon the form of particular letters in the signatures, why he knows or thinks the notes to be forged.

And yet, after this detailed statement of his reasons for believing the signatures in question not to be genuine, the signature to the note was shown him, the body being covered up, and he pronounced it to be genuine. And in like manner he pronounced to be genuine the other two notes, which he had previously testified to be, in his opinon, forgeries.

The State then produced three witnesses as experts, who, from comparison with standard signatures, testified their opinion to be, that the disputed signatures were not the genuine signatures of Austin; and yet these witnesses, on cross-examination, gave their opinion that certain other signatures were not those of Austin B., which were clearly and undeniably shown to be so.

The State next produced as a witness Almond Brainard, an uncle of the defendant, a lawyer by profession, residing in Massachusetts, who testified to his knowledge of Austin’s handwriting, and gave his opinion,'based upon this knowledge and the form of the several letters of his signature, that the disputed notes were not signed by Austin. And yet this witness testifies that a certain signature of Austin’s was not genuine, which was incontestably shown to be in his proper handwriting.

The next and last witness for the State, was the aged father of the defendant. He gave no opinion to the jury, as to the signatures; but detailed a conversation which the defendant had with him soon after Austin’s death, in which he proposed that they should get hold of Austin’s property.

The father refused to be a party to any such scheme. The defendant insisted that his uncle Austin had given him deeds and notes, and that he could hold the property. The father’s testimony continues: “ He showed me some [576]*576notes that he got of his nncle Austin. I pronounced the notes, at the time I saw them, forged notes. He said, there was uncle’s name, and how could they be forged notes ?” Before he went away, he came to me and said, Father, I can’t bear to see you feel so badly, and I have made up my mind to present those claims to the administrator, and if they are allowed they will be very thankfully received, but if they do not allow them I will give them up, and will not go into law about it. Defendant told me Austin had given him these notes, and a deed to the land.”

This was the State’s case, and it is to be noted that no witness produced by the State gave any direct or positive evidence of the alleged forgery of the uncle’s signature, but each of them, unless we except the father, simply gave evidence of his opinion as to the genuiness or otherwise, of the various signatures.

The defendant then produced three witnesses, who testified as experts, and gave their opinion to the jury that the disputed signatures to the notes were genuine.

Judge Parish, who had known Austin from childhood, had corresponded with him, and done business for him, gave a similar opinion, saying, “ I have no more doubt that the signatures to the notes are genuine, than I have of my own.” The only other evidence, except certain letters offered by the defendant, was the deposition of Chandler Severance of Ohio. It appears that this witness was with Austin and the defendant when they came to Iowa in 1856, to purchase lands.

The eighth interrogatory to this witness, was this: “ Do you know of Austin B. giving to the defendant any note or notes for the payment of money ? If so, state the amounts, and how you obtained your knowledge.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Iowa 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brainard-iowa-1868.