Whitacre v. Culver

9 Minn. 295
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 9 Minn. 295 (Whitacre v. Culver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitacre v. Culver, 9 Minn. 295 (Mich. 1864).

Opinion

By the Court

Emmett, C. J.

This case was before this Court at the December Term, 1861, when a new trial was granted the defendant. It again came up in a little different shape at the January Term, 1863, and was again sent back, at the instance of the defendant, for new trial. It is now here once more, but with the facts as found materially differing from those upon which the former decisions were made.

Each party seems to have amended his pleadings since the former trials, and the issues as now presented by the pleadings arise substantially as follows:

The plaintiff declares on a promissory note given by the defendant to one A. M. Fridley, and by him assigned to the plaintiff, as collateral security for a note given by Fridley to the plaintiff. The complaint then, anticipating the defence, sets up facts intended to estop the defendant from denying his indebtedness on the note. The defendant, while admitting the making of the note, alleges in his answer that it was not given in consideration of any indebtedness to said Fridley, but solely for his accommodation, (averring that Fridley was at the time and ever since indebted to [299]*299bim, the said Plaintiff,) and that said note had long been due at the time of the transfer thereof to the Plaintiff. The reply of the Plaintiff denies that there was nothing due from the Defendant to Fridley, at the giving of the note; or that said Fridley was then indebted to the Defendant, and avers that said note was given for the balance thenfoundtobe due from theDefendantto Fridley upon the accounts then existing between them. The reply also contains further and minute allegations of facts and circumstances to estop the Defendant from availing himself of the defence set up in the answer;. but in the view we have taken of the questions presented to us, these allegations and their denials have no controlling influence, and therefore need not be particularized.

In addition to a general verdict, the jury was required to find, specially, first, whether anything was due to Fridley at the time the note, given him by the Defendant, matured; and second, whether, under the evidence in the case, and the law as given by the Court, the Defendant was estopped from denying his" liability ■on the note. And as to these, the Court instructed the jury, “ that if they found for the Plaintiff on the first of the above propositions, or interrogatories, (that is, if there was no mistake, in the giving of said note, as to the state of the accounts between the Defendant and Fridley, and no change had occurred when the Plaintiff took the note; in other words, should the jury believe that the Defendant was mistaken' in his testimony,) they should find in his [Plaintiff’s] favor for the whole amount of the note and interest claimed by the Plaintiff.” “And that if they found for the Defendant thereon, but found for the Plaintiff on the second proposition, or interrogatory, they should find for the Plaintiff for the amount of the note and interest, after deducting the amount of $450.00, or thereabouts, referred to in the alleged representations of the Defendant.”

The Court also, amongst other matters, charged at some length upon the question of estoppel as applicable to this case; and further instructed the jury, that the assignment of the claim by the Defendant, did not affect the right to recover in this action. To each of these instructions the Defendant excepted.

[300]*300The jury returned a general verdict for the Plaintiff, for the full amount of the note, and found in the affirmative on both the propositions or interrogatories which had been especially submitted. The Defendant then moved the Court for a new trial, failing in which, he appealed to this Court from the order denying said motion.

The first point urged by the Defendant here is, that the Court below erred in its charge and ruling upon the question of estop-pel. But whether this point, even if well taken, can now avail the Defendant here, will wholly depend upon the force of his second and third points, which we propose first to examine.

They are thus stated:

“ 2. The charge of the Court below, as to the consideration of thenote, was erroneous, and calculated to mislead the jury, whereby the jury were given to understand that the note in question was given upon a settlement of accounts, and that it was incumbent upon the Defendant to show that there was a mistake in such settlement to make out a defence, whereas the evidence did not show any settlement of accounts, but, on the contrary, that the accounts of Fridley and the Defendant were never settled, and the note was accommodation paper, to be taken up by Frid-ley.”
“ 3. The Court also erred in charging the jury that if they found in favor of the Plaintiff, upon the proposition submitted to them, to wit, “ Was there anything due upon the note given by the Defendant, at the time of the maturity thereof? ’ they should find the whole amount of the note.”

So far as the evidence is referred to in the second, or any other of Defendant’s points, we may remark that the jury, by'their general verdict for the Plaintiff, have found every issue against the Defendant, and this is conclusive upon him, (except upon the point that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence, which is not a point in this case,) unless the jury were improperly influenced so to find by the charge of the Court; or the general verdict is inconsistent with the facts specially found. The only j>ortion of the judge’s charge to which the second point of the De[301]*301fendant can, by any possibility refer, is that wherein the jury were instructed according to the Plaintiff’s ‘ first request,’ “ That if the note of the Defendant was given upon settlement of accounts with Fridley, for the balance then fixed upon as due from Mm to Fridley, and there has been nothing paid on it since, the Plaintiff is entitled to a verdict, unless it is made to appear that there was a mistake in that settlement; and if the Defendant seeks to avoid the liability, on the ground of such mistake, he should make the facts clearly appear.”

The general principle stated in this charge is, in our opinion, correct, and we see nothing in the language with which it is clothed, calculated to lead the jury to believe that the note had been given on a settlement of accounts, or intimating that such was the opiinion of the judge. The whole is stated hypothetically, and the jury were left to determine for themselves whether the note was so given.

In regard to the Defendant’s third point above stated, we think, that in view of the issue presented by the pleadings the judge was right in his statement of the law on that point; even without the qualifications which the record shows him to have added. The answer sets up facts showing not a partial failure or partial want of consideration merely, but a total want of consideration for the note. The plea is to the whole claim or none. But, even supposing a partial want or partial failure of consideration to have been proved on the trial, it could have availed nothing under the existing state of the pleadings; nor, under th'e intimation given by this Court in Walters et al. vs. Armstrong, 5th Minn R., 448, could it even be pleaded with effect without a statutory provision authorizing it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Minn. 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitacre-v-culver-minn-1864.