Swiney v. Miller

253 Ill. App. 81, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 2
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 24, 1929
DocketGen. No. 8,213
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 253 Ill. App. 81 (Swiney v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swiney v. Miller, 253 Ill. App. 81, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 2 (Ill. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Niehaus

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this case a judgment by confession for $5,564.73 was entered on a promissory note for the appellant, J. F. Swiney, as legal holder of the promissory note, on June 17, 1927, in the city, court of Mattoon. After-wards on motion of the appellee, G. L. Miller, the judgment was opened and leave given the. appellee by the court to plead in defense. The appellee pleaded the general issue and- three special pleas; one denying the execution of the note; and another plea was filed by him that the note in question was without consideration and assigned after maturity to the appellant; and a third plea, that the note was without consideration and that the appellant had knowledge of that fact. The controversy in the case involves the issue raised under the second plea denying the execution of the judgment note in question. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the appellee. The appellant made a motion for a new trial which was denied by the court, and thereupon a judgment .was rendered on the verdict in favor of the appellee and against the appellant for costs, and this appeal is prosecuted from the judgment.

The principal error assigned is the denial of the motion for a new trial. An examination of the record discloses the fact that the defense made by the appellee to liability on the judgment note is that he did not sign the note in question; and that his signature thereon is a forgery. The contest concerning the genuineness of the appellee’s signature was very bitter and involved crimination and recrimination, as well as charges of forgery and fraud, and intimidation of parties and witnesses, perjury and subornation of perjury.

The judgment note was signed by Emil Wagner, who is the grandson of the appellee, and purports to have on it also the signature of the appellee. The appellee testified, on the trial, that he did not sign the note; and that he did not authorize any one to sign it for him; and that he had no knowledge his signature had been affixed to the note. The payee of the note, who had assigned the same to the appellant, testified that the note was made out in his place of business, namely, a garage in the City of Mattoon, and was there signed by Emil Wagner; and that Wagner, after signing it, took the note with him for the purpose of having his grandfather sign it: and that thereafter the note was returned to him by mail with the grandfather’s signature attached to the same. Appellant called a witness who testified that he went with the appellant when he drove out to the grandfather’s farm, and was present when the grandfather acknowledged that he had signed the note. The appellant also called a number of witnesses, mostly bank experts of handwriting, who testified from comparisons of the appellee’s purported signature on the note with certain checks and papers containing the genuine signature of the appellee, that in their opinion the signature of the appellee on the note was genuine. The appellee called a number of witnesses, business acquaintances of the appellee, who had more or less knowledge of the handwriting and signature of appellee, who gave their opinion that bhef purported signature on the judgment note was not genuine. There was also much other evidence adduced on the trial which had a tendency either to corroborate •or impeach the testimony of the appellee concerning the genuineness of the signature. There were also witnesses examined whose testimony corroborated the testimony of the payee of the note, E. T. Swiney, in reference to its execution by the appellee; and a number of witnesses were called who testified unfavorably and favorably to his general reputation for truth and veracity. Emil Wagner was called as a witness for the appellee, and was the main witness concerning the genuineness of the appellee’s signature. He testified as follows: “My name is Emil Wagner; I live at Tower- Hill; have lived there all my life, and am 25 years old. My father’s name is Clarence Wagner. I am a grandson of G-. L. Miller. I know E. T. Swiney. Looking at the paper handed me, marked ‘Plaintiff’s Exhibit A’ ” (which was the note in question) “I will state that I have seen it before. The signature there, the first signature on the top line, I signed that. Looking at the second signature below, that appears to be the name of Gk L. Miller: I will state that I wrote that name there. I had no authority from my grandfather. ’ ’ Emil Wagner was the main witness for the appellee to sustain his defense that he did not sign the note in question. After the trial, however, he made an affi: davit, used in support of the motion for new trial, concerning the same matter, which is as follows:

“Emil Wagner, first being duly sworn, on oath, says that he is the same Emil Wagner who testified as a witness upon the trial of the cause entitled J. F. Swiney v. Gr. L. Miller in the City Court of Mattoon, Illinois, and also the Emil Wagner who heretofore at the office of Bryan II. Tivnen, Mattoon, Illinois, made a sworn statement concerning the execution of the note in controversy in the above case.
“Affiant says that the note in controversy in the above entitled cause was signed by Gr. L. Miller, affiant’s grandfather, and .the signature of Gr. L. Mliler thereon was not forged by this affiant; that affiant so stated the facts to be in his prior sworn statement made as aforesaid, which statement was the statement presented to affiant upon the trial of the above case with his signature thereon and which statement affiant at that time denied having executed and denied his signature thereon.
“Affiant says that upon the trial of the case he testified that he had forged the name of Gr. L. Miller, his grandfather, to the note in question and also denied his prior sworn statement as aforesaid, for the reason that he was under coercion and fear of bodily harm on the part of his father, Clarence Wagner, and grandfather, GL L. Miller, and Ed Miller, his uncle, and other relatives and that his testimony upon the said trial in that behalf was not true but was the result of the fear of this affiant caused by the threats and coercion of the aforesaid parties.”

And in connection with the Wagner affidavit the appellant also offered the affidavits of Pugh Snell and J. H. Apple in support of his motion for new trial, which have a bearing upon the veracity of the testimony of the appellee. The affidavits of Snell and Apple are as follows:

“Pugh Snell, being first duly sworn, upon oath states that he is now and has been for more than twenty (20) years last past a resident of the County of Shelby and State of Illinois; that by occupation affiant is a farmer, aged about seventy (70) years;
“That affiant is acquainted with J. F. Swiney, the plaintiff in the above entitled cause, and is also acquainted with Gr. L. Miller and Emil Wagner, the said defendants;
“That on or about the first (1st) day of December, A. D. 1926j affiant was security upon a certain note of said Emil Wagner, and desired to get off of the said note and, if possible, to get the said Gr. L. Miller, the grandfather of said Emil Wagner, to sign the said note as surety, and accordingly on or about the first (1st) day of December, A. D. 1926, affiant, with J. H. Apple, who resides in the County of Shelby and State of Illinois, went to the home of the said Gr. L. Miller and asked the said Gr. L.

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Bluebook (online)
253 Ill. App. 81, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swiney-v-miller-illappct-1929.