Van Vleet v. Sledge

45 F. 743, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 2275
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee
DecidedAugust 9, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 45 F. 743 (Van Vleet v. Sledge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Vleet v. Sledge, 45 F. 743, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 2275 (circtwdtn 1890).

Opinion

Jackson, J.

The conclusions reached by the court on the questions ¡(resented in these causes, after a careful examination of the ¡(leadings and proof, which it is not deemed necessary to sot out and review in detail, are the following, viz.:

1. The exceptions of cross-complainants to the answer of witness A. N. McCollum to the fourteenth and fifteenth direct interrogatories and to the answer of witness W. M. Sledge to direct interrogatory 7, so Jar as they undertake to give the conversations or statements of A.. N. McKay and W. Al. Sledge, Sr., as to the contract or agreement under which the Rogers notes wore indorsed by Sledge, McKay & Co. to K. R. Sledge & Sous, should be and are sustained, because said answers were only hearsay testimony, and incompetent. To the extent indicated, said answers are excluded as evidence. The exceptions of said complainants to the competency of the answers of wituess J. W. Fulmer to the seventh, ninth, tenth, and thirteenth direct interrogatories are sustained so far as Ihey attempt or undertake to vary or explain the written contract embodied in the indorsement made by Sledge, McKay & Co. upon the Rogers notes, transferred to N. E. Pledge & Sons. Parol evidence being incompetent to vary or explain said contract, said answers should be excluded for that purpose. But, so Jar as said answers have any bearing upon the question of reforming the contract of the parties sought to be effected by the amended bill, the statements of the witness are competent, and are allowed to stand as evidence upon that question. The exceptions of cross-complainant to the competency of said witness Fulmer’s answers to the twenty-third and twenty-fourth direct interrogatorios are sustained. The entry made by said witness upon the books of Sledge, McKay & Co., charging K. R. Sledge & Sons with the Rogers notes, with the accompanying memorandum, that “all said notes transferred to them in part payment of their account, and indorsed by us, waiving protest,” was not ambiguous. Witness was not at liberty to construe it, nor was it competent for him to explain what was meant by the word “payment,” or to give his understanding that, when a creditor accepted a note of a third ¡(arty in absolute payment, he has no right to look to the Indorser of such note. These answers are incompetent, and should bo excluded.

2. The amended bill to reform the contract between Sledge, McKay & Co. and N. R. Sledge & Sims, under which the Rogers notes were transferred by the former to the latter, cannot be sustained, because the evidence is insufficient to warrant such relief, and because complainants and McKay, the surviving partner of Sledge, McKay & Co., to whose rights they have succeeded, have unreasonably delayed their application to reform said contract, and should now be repelled on the ground of. [746]*746“labhes,” if the proof was even more satisfactory than it is that the indorsement of the notes, and the entry upon the books of Sledge, McKay & Co., did not embody or express the real contract and agreement of the parties. The casual conversations which E. A. Spottswood and W. M. Sledge detail as having occurred with cross-complainant N. R. Sledge are entitled to but little consideration as evidence on which to reform a written contract; but, so far as they have any weight, they are fully counter-balanced by the testimony of N. R. Sledge and N. Norfleet,— the latter being a disinterested witness, — whose evidence tends to show that A. N. McKay in his life-time, and shortly before his death, recognized the liability of Sledge, McKay & Co. upon their indorsement of the Rogers notes, or that said firm was liable to the surviving partners of N. R. Sledge & Sons on said notes. The alleged statements of N. R. Sledge, as given by Spottswood and W. M. Sledge, being fully offset by the testimony of N. R. Sledge and Norfleet, the case for the reformation of the contract under which the notes were transferred depends upon the evidence of J. W. Fulmer, which is insufficient for that purpose. Equity will reform written instruments, so that they shall conform to the precise intent of the parties to them, when a material mistake is shown by proofs that are full, clear, and decisive, free from doubt and uncertainty, and such as to entirely satisfy the conscience of the court. Fulmer’s testimony falls far short of this standard. After stating that the Rogers notes were transferred in part payment of the large debt which Sledge, McKay & Co. owed to N. R. Sledge & Sons, he is asked if there was any agreement or understanding as to the liability that Sledge, McKay & Co. came under by virtue of their indorsement of said notes, to which he replies:

“Only this liability: that the property for which the notes were given was in litigation at the time, and, in case Sledge, McKay & Co. failed to gain the litigation, then, and in that event, they were liable on their indorsement, but otherwise were not liable.”

He says, further, that N. R. Sledge and A. N. McKay both stated the “proposition” to him together, and authorized him to make the entry and complete the transaction; that they directed him to enter upon the books of Sledge, McKay & Co. the entire transaction and agreement, which, however, he did not do; that it was not customary to enter contracts on the books in making journal entries further than to state the object of the entry; and that he had no object in leaving out the special agreement in the entry which he made of the transaction. Now, by-reference to Fulmer’s answer to the twenty-third and twenty-fourth direct interrogatories, it will be seen that his understanding at the time was that, as the notes were taken in absolute payment, N. R. Sledge & Sons could look only to the makers thereof, and not to the indorsers. Entertaining this idea, he supposed that Sledge, McKay & Co. incurred no liability by their indorsement of said notes, inasmuch as they were accepted by N. R. Sledge & Sons in part payment of their debt; and, as something may have been said about the indorsers guarantying the •title to the land, which was a material part of the security for the pay[747]*747ment of the notes, it is more than likely that Fulmer has confused’ the latter with his idea or understanding that their indorsement of the notes imposed no liability upon Sledge, McKay & Co., because the notes were taken by N. It. Sledge & Sons in absolute payment of part of their debt. Having this idea as to the effect of the indorsement, it was quite natural for Fulmer to suppose, from something that may have been said about the title to the land, that the liability of Sledge, McKay & Co. was limited to a guaranty of that title. According to Fulmer’s understanding at the time of the transaction, and of the effect of the entry made by him on the books of Sledge, McKay & Co., the latter’s indorsement of the notes imposed no liability upon them, and yet he now says that the parties agreed and directed him to make an entry to the effect that said indorsement should impose a liability upon the indorsers only in the event tlio title failed. This must have struck him as something remarkable, if it occurred in that way; but, instead of making the entry of any such agreement, he neglected to do so, for the reason that it was not customary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 F. 743, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 2275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-vleet-v-sledge-circtwdtn-1890.