Tourtelotte v. Brown

4 Colo. App. 377
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 4 Colo. App. 377 (Tourtelotte v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tourtelotte v. Brown, 4 Colo. App. 377 (Colo. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Reed, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

A brief statement in regard to the subject-matter of the controversy and relation of the interested parties will suffice to explain this case. In July, 1887, Mrs. Francina Hawkins [379]*379was an aged widow of over 70 years, possessed of considerable property, — the amount is not shown. Her heirs were her daughters Maggie A., wife of Nathan S. Hurd, and Nancy the wife of H. A. E. Pickard, both of mature age. There was also one A. E. Mausfield, whom, though he does not appear to have been legally adopted, was raised by the Hawkins from an infant, and was recognized as, or claimed to be, one of the family. Sometime prior to the date given, Pickard and family removed to Denver. The old lady conveyed to her daughter, the wife of Pickard, a residence in West Denver of the admitted value of some $7,000, and also furnished the family money, more or less, as the exigencies of the occasions required.

Mrs. Hurd and her husband, who had received nothing from the mother, felt aggrieved at the apparent partiality of the mother, and, fearing an inequitable division of the estate in the interest of the Pickards, attempted to counteract it.

As claimed by Hurd, the old lady was by him invited to his house, the error of her ways pointed out, and the necessity of doing equal justice impressed upon her; and she, recognizing the justice of the claim and not wishing to offend the Pickards, executed the note in question to equalize affairs between her daughters. The execution and existence of the note remained a secret until after Mrs. Hawkins’ death, when it was presented for allowance against the estate, out of which has grown the present litigation. The Pickard family and Mansfield resisted the claim, as it would materially affect their interests in the distribution of the estate, and asserted the note to be a forgery. Like all other controversies of this kind, where quite an amount of money is involved, the contest degenerated into a personal one, developing great intensity and acrimony. That this should be the case with Hurd is naturally to be expected, for although the crime of forgery is not, by the proceedings, directly charged upon him, and no criminal conviction could follow, all the testimony tends to show that, if forgery, it vras perpetrated by him, and he is morally, if not legally convicted of the crime.

[380]*380At the opening of the trial to the jurj' the following stipulation was made and entered of record: “ And thereupon counsel for the respective parties agreed that counsel for the respondent might read from the cross-examination of the witness Hurd as given upon a former trial of the cause and as contained in the bill of exceptions made up from a former trial of this cause, wherein the same party was claimant, said cross-examination to be read subject to objections by counsel for the claimant, the same as if the witness Hurd was upon the stand and being orally cross-examined, said cross-examination as read to be considered so far as the same should be admitted as the cross-examination of the witness at this trial, the same as though given at this time in response to oral cross-examination.”

The following are the errors assigned requiring examination : “ 1st. That the verdict of the jury is contrary to law.
“ 2d. That the verdict is not supported by the requisite testimony or any testimony corresponding with the allegations and confined to the point in issue.
“ 4th. That incompetent and prejudicial evidence was admitted at the trial.
“ 5th. That the court erred in failing to give plaintiff’s instruction number two, as follows: ‘ The court instructs the jury, defendant has read to you as evidence a portion of the testimony given by Nathan S. Hurd upon the trial of this case. You are to take what he says regarding the drawing of the note and the circumstances surrounding the giving of it as the facts on which you are to act, unless there is other evidence which countervails them and shows they are other and different from what Mr. Hurd stated them to be; that when a person produces a witness in his behalf he represents such witness as a truthful and creditable person, entitled to be believed. And the fact that Mr. Hurd may feel less friendly to the party who calls him than to the other side, does not change the'rule of the law.’
“ 6th. That the court erred in giving the last instruction to the effect that the jury had a right to consider the eon-[381]*381duct and deportment of a witness upon the stand and their apparent bias or prejudice, because there was no evidence to predicate this instruction upon.
“ 7th. That the court erred in admitting the testimony of witness Stopes, and that the subsequent striking out of this testimony did not cure the error.” .

The second error assigned raises the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to support the finding of the jury. It is ably argued that it is insufficient. Ordinarily, it is the well settled rule of courts of last resort that questions of fact found by a jury when supported bjr competent testimony will not be disturbed, even though in the opinion of the court the preponderance seems to be the other way; this is the rule in civil cases, but in this there are peculiar circumstances, though in the nature of a civil suit; it is, at least, quasi .criminal and imposes upon the one person who was interested, and the only one who had the opportunity, all the results of the crime of forgery save the penalty.

The case is also complicated by the peculiar stipulation in <■ regard to evidence made by counsel. Why, with only one issue to be tried, viz., the genuineness of the signature, with all the witnesses in court or easily accessible, such a stipulation became necessary, and counsel allowed to read such parts as they might select from testimony taken at the former trial where two or three important issues were tried, is hard to determine. That it opened wide the door for the admission of irrelevant and impertinent evidence and consequent errors, will at once become apparent.

Under the circumstances the form of the verdict is peculiar. “ We the jury find the issues herein joined for the defendant.” There was but one issue. The form of the verdict suggests a very grave question, whether or not the jury were misled by the introduction and reading of the evidence taken on the former trial and considered it a duty to determine all the issues involved in the former case. The form of the verdict and the use' of the plural, “ issues,” would seem to indicate that more than one issue had been consid[382]*382ered and determined, — the language is very suggestive of the misapprehension. By the first instruction the jury were instructed that there was but one question to be determined, viz., the genuineness of the signature; this instruction seems to have been entirely disregarded.

To sustain the genuineness of the signature Nathan S. Hurd was called and testified as follows:

Q. Mr. Hurd, what is your full name? A. Nathan S. Hurd. Q. What position do you occupy under the state government? A. I am deputy superintendent of insurance, in charge of the insurance department of the state. Q. Did jmu know Franeina Hawkins in her lifetime? A. I did. Q.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re the Marriage of Krejci
2013 COA 6 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2013)
Page v. Clark
592 P.2d 792 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1979)
Denver Urban Renewal Authority v. Hayutin
583 P.2d 296 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1978)
Olinger Mutual Benefit Association v. Christy
342 P.2d 1000 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1959)
Huber v. Boyle
56 P.2d 1333 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1936)
Prudential Insurance Co. of America v. Cline
98 Colo. 275 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1936)
Robbins v. Nelsen
202 P. 707 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1921)
Mathews v. Mathews
194 P. 358 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1920)
Duffy v. Blake
157 P. 480 (Washington Supreme Court, 1916)
Crisp v. State Bank
155 N.W. 78 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1915)
Tourtelotte v. Brown
18 Colo. App. 335 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Colo. App. 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tourtelotte-v-brown-coloctapp-1894.