Stillwell v. Patton

108 Mo. 352
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 108 Mo. 352 (Stillwell v. Patton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stillwell v. Patton, 108 Mo. 352 (Mo. 1891).

Opinion

Black, J.

In May, 1886, Richard Stillwell, as administrator of the estate of Amos Stillwell, presented to the probate court of Marion county the following note, for allowance against the estate of William Hubbard:

“$3,944. Hannibal, Mo., December 8, 1881.
“ Three years after date I promise to pay to the order of Mary Adeline Hubbard the sum of $3,944, for value received, negotiable and payable without defalcation or discount, and with interest from date at the rate of ten per cent, per annum. William Hubbabd.”

[357]*357The note had been indorsed by Mary Adeline Hubbard, the payee, and her husband, George Hubbard, ■and delivered to Amos Stillwell as security for a note ■amounting to $1,200, held by Stillwell against George Hubbard. At the time the. note was presented for allowance, there was a credit indorsed thereon, under •date of November 10, 1882, for four notes, two for $200 each, and two for $250 each.

The defenses interposed are that William Hubbard ■did not sign the note, that it is a forgery ; and that the note is worthless in the hands of Stillwell because of material alterations'. There was one trial in the probate •court and two in the circuit court, all resulting in verdicts for plaintiff.

From the evidence it appears George Hubbard, the husband of the payee of the note, wás a son of William Hubbard, the alleged maker. The father and son had some dealings which it is claimed led to the execution of this note, but the nature and extent of these dealings are not disclosed by the evidence as it is recited in the abstracts. Nor does it appear at what date the note was assigned and delivered to Stillwell. William Hubbard saw the note while it was in the hands of ‘Stillwell, and there is much evidence to the effect that he said he signed it, and again that he did not sign it. To some persons he said he did not deny the signature, but if he signed the note the fact had slipped his memory, and that he did not owe George the amount specified in it. The controversy resulted in a criminal prosecution against George, or at least an investigation •by the grand jury. There was much evidence on both sides as to whether William Hubbard signed the note, and that particular issue was submitted to the jury on instructions about which there is and can be no complaint. The complaints are that the court erred in admitting evidence produced by the plaintiff, in excluding evidence offered by defendant, and in giving and refusing instructions on the subject of material alteration.

[358]*3581. The note, it will be seen, bears date December 8, 1881. William Hubbard married his second wife in 1883, and died in 1884. ' This second wife was the widow of Hubner.- She was called as a witness by the plaintiff and testified that she and Hubner, her first husband, had business transactions with William Hubbard, and in this way she saw Hubbard sign papers and became acquainted with his signature before she married him. Being shown the note in question she said the signature of William Hubbard thereto was genuine. To all this evidence defendant objected, because she could not testify against the interest of her husband’s estate, and because incompetent by reason of her marriage with Hubbard, which objections were overruled.

At common law husband and wife could not testify for or against each other, save in a few excepted cases. This principle of exclusion was founded partly on identity of interest in the event of the suit and partly on grounds of public policy. By our statute interest in the suit or subject of the litigation is no longer a disqualification. The statute specifies cases in which a married woman may testify in a proceeding prosecuted by or against her husband, but concludes with the provision, that she may not, while the marriage relation exists or thereafter, testify to admissions or conversations of her husband made to her or third parties. The object of this provision was to preserve the common-law rule as to admissions and conversations of the husband. It was not designed to go further in the way of exclusion than did the common law. Speaking of this matter Green-leaf says the rule is analogous to that which excludes confidential communications made by a client to his attorney. “Accordingly, the wife, after the death of the husband, has been held competent to prove the facts coming to her knowledge from other sources and not by means of her situation as a wife, notwithstanding they related to the transactions of her husband.” 1 GreenL Ev., sec. 338.

[359]*359The widow, it was held in Scroggins v. Holland, 16 Mo. 419, is a competent witness to testify in the interest of her deceased husband’s estate ; and in Stein v. Weidman's Adm'r, 20 Mo. 18, it was said: “In the opinion of this court the widow of a decedent may be a witness for or against the administrator or executor of the estate of her deceased husband, whether solvent or insolvent, as to all such facts as the policy of the law does not require to be kept sacred and secret between husband and wife during marriage.” See, also, Sherwood's Adm'r v. Hill, 25 Mo. 391; Spradling v. Conway, 51 Mo. 51; Moore v. Moore, 51 Mo. 118. Here the witness did not undertake to relate or speak of admissions of or conversations with her husband. Besides this she testified as to the handwriting of her husband from information which she received before the marriage.' As she did not undertake to disclose admissions of her husband, or communications made by him to her or to third persons, her evidence was properly received, under the authorities before cited.

On redirect examination she again gave it as her opinion that her husband signed the note, and then said: “Here is one, just like it (jxroducing a note); I have more in my possession.” The defendant then moved to strike out the quoted words of the witness, but the court overruled the motion. The question’ here presented is wholly unlike that decided in Rose v. Bank, 91 Mo. 399. Here the papers spoken of by the witness were not introduced into the case for the purpose of making a standard of comparison. Indeed, they were not produced in' evidence at all. She had been examined and cross-examined as to her knowledge of the handwriting of Hubbard, and her reference to these papers amounted’to nothing more than a further statement as to the means by which she acquired the information to enable her to testify. The objection is without any merit whatever, and the court did not err in overruling the motion to strike out the evidence.

[360]*3602. The trial court, it is next insisted, erred in allowing the note to be read in evidence without evidence explaining the erasures and interlineations. It does not follow from the simple fact that there are erasures, or interlineations on the face of a note that the party suing on it must show that they were made at or before its execution.

Though ■ there are alterations apparent upon the face of the instrument, yet unless there is something suspicious about them it will be presumed that they were made contemporaneous with the execution of the instrument. When an alteration appears suspicious, as if in a different ink or handwriting, then it must be explained by the party producing and -relying upon the instrument. Whether there is anything suspicious on the face of the instrument is, in the first instance, a preliminary question for the court to determine by inspection. These principles of law were asserted in clear terms in Paramore v.

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Bluebook (online)
108 Mo. 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stillwell-v-patton-mo-1891.