Threadgill v. Commissioners of Anson County

21 S.E. 425, 116 N.C. 616
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 21 S.E. 425 (Threadgill v. Commissioners of Anson County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Threadgill v. Commissioners of Anson County, 21 S.E. 425, 116 N.C. 616 (N.C. 1895).

Opinion

Fueohes, J. :

This is an action brought by the- intestate of plaintiff upon a lot of coupons amounting as plaintiff alleges to $2,331, and interest thereon from the date of their maturity. On the trial below the plaintiff recovered and had judgment for the full amount claimed and interest thereon, from which judgment the defendants appealed to this Court, assigning quite a number of errors. Among the errors assigned by defendants are the following, which we briefly state as follows :

1. That the court erred in holding that plaintiff being in the possession of the coupons sued on, the presumption is that he is the owuer of the same, and that it devolved upon the defendant to rebut this presumption 'by a preponderance of evidence.

2. That the court erred in admitting in evidence exhibit “ H ” under the objection of defendant.

3. That the court erred in refusing to give defendant’s prayer for instruction that the coupons sued on were presumed to be paid by the lapse of time. And in disregard of this prayer, charging the jury that if they found from *618 the evidence that plaintiff’s intestate was the owner of the coupons at the commencement of this action, they should answer the second issue no,” which was the same as instructing the jury that they had not been paid.

It was in evidence and not denied that the coupons were taken from bonds issued by the County of Anson, prior to 1860, in payment of the subscription of that county to the Wilmington, Charlotte & Rutherford Railroad Company; that said coupons became due in 1862, 1868 and 1864, and that the bonds from which they were detached became due in 1880. It was admitted that Gr. B. Threadgill, intestate of plaintiff, was sheriff of Anson county from 1859 to 1868; and as such was ex officio tax-collector for the county. And there is evidence tending to show that, as such sheriff and tax-collector, he was authorized and instructed to take such coupons as those sued on in payment of taxes, and that he did receive such coupons in his official capacity in payment of taxes due to the county.

We recognize the rule as laid down by the court on the trial below as being the general rule, that the holder of negotiable paper is presumed to be the owner, and the burden is on the defendant to show by a preponderance of evidence'that he is not. But we are of the opinion that this rule does not apply in this case. It certainly cannot be that an agent — a fiduciary — of a principal, furnished with the means, of the principal to buy up claims against the principal, and uses such means in buying up the claims, should be allowed to say to his principal, “I’ve got the claims (the coupons) in my possession, and I am going to hold them as my OAvn unless you can £ prove by a prepon-derence of evidence ’ that they are not mine.” This rule would reverse the law of centuries, as applied to principal and agent. We understand the law to be just the reverse of that laid down by His Honor, that it is the duty of the *619 fiduciary, the agent (who is in possession of the facts), to show if he claims the coupons as his own, to the satisfaction of the court and jury that they are his. The burden of proof is upon him. Allen v. Bryant, 7 Iredell Eq., 276. It is doubtful whether Threadgill, the agent of the county, with the means of the county (the tax lists) in his hands, instructed to take up the coupons of the county, and, undertaking to do so, had the right to go into the market as a purchaser on his own account. Boyd v. Hawkins, 2 Dev. Eq., 207. But we will not multiply authorities on this point of the case.

But defendant’s counsel contended that if the court was in error iu holding and instructing the jury that the burden was on defendant to prove that plaintiff was not the owner of the coupons sued on, this error was corrected by the following, which is also a part of the charge of the court: “ In response to defendant’s first prayer the court charged that if the jury believed the plaintiff’s intestate was directed and authorized, as sheriff, by the proper county authorities to receive the coupons in payment of taxes and that he did so receive them it raises a probable ground of suspicion against plaintiff’s being the owner of the coupons ; and his being the holder of the coupons, the presumption that he is the owner is rebutted, and it devolves on plaintiff to rebut this suspicion by further evidence that he acquired the coupons bona fide. This the plaintiff claims he has done by showing when and from whom he got some of them, and that he owed none of the taxes for the years he received the coupons. Defendants excepted to refusal to give the first prayer of instruction and to the instructions given.”

We do not agree with the counsel of plaintiff. The court had just before that part of the charge quoted above, charged the jury in the most positive and decided terms that plaintiff’s possession of the coupons was a presump *620 tion that he was the owner of them and the burden was upon the defendants to show that he was not, as follows: “ That plaintiff having produced the coupons is presumed in law to be the owner thereof, and the burden of proof is on defendants to show that he.is not; and defendants must establish by a preponderance of testimony that plaintiff is not the owner of the coupons, and if defendants have not satisfied the jury by a preponderance of testimony that the coupons are not the property of plaintiff, they shall answer the first issue ‘Yes.’ Defendants excepted.” We do not think that so undecided an instruction as that relied upon by plaintiff could have the effect to correct the positive error contained in the charge last above quoted.

Indeed, we are of the opinion that that part of the Judge’s charge relied upon by plaintiff is erroneous. It is confused and undecided and does not charge the law as we understand it to be, as between principal and agent. It may be that plaintiff’s intestate acquired the coupons bona fide, but as the agent of defendants, aqd with proper explanation the charge might have been proper. But, as it is stated and left in the charge, we can not see that it was any benefit to the jury, and may have been misleading. But as it appears to us, the Court in this instruction invaded the province of the jury in the sentence following the words' “bona fide.” The Court does not say that plaintiff claims that he has shown you “when and from whom he got some of his coupons,” and that he has thereby rebutted “this suspicion,” which would have been perfectly legitimate. But the Judge says that the plaintiff claims to have rebutted this suspicion “by showing when and from whom he got some of them.” So the sentence thus stated is that plaintiff has shown you “when and from whom he got the coupons,” and claims that this rebuts the presumption. We do not think that this was correct.

*621 The nest exception we will consider is as to the admission of Exhibit “H” by plaintiff under the objection of defendant. The defendant during the course of the trial had introduced exhibit “A” which is as follows :

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.E. 425, 116 N.C. 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/threadgill-v-commissioners-of-anson-county-nc-1895.