Wilson Lumber & Milling Co. v. Atkinson

78 S.E. 212, 162 N.C. 298, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 350
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 22, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 78 S.E. 212 (Wilson Lumber & Milling Co. v. Atkinson) 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
Wilson Lumber & Milling Co. v. Atkinson, 78 S.E. 212, 162 N.C. 298, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 350 (N.C. 1913).

Opinion

Walker, J.,

after stating tbe case: We have stated so much of tbe pleadings and evidence as is necessary to present clearly one of tbe exceptions of tbe plaintiff, which we think was properly taken and should be sustained. Evidence of tbe general character of tbe defendant, J. P. Rabb, was introduced, tbe witnesses testifying that it was good. He bad testified himself, at great length, as a witness in bis own behalf, and bad denied circumstantially tbe charge of. fraud macle against him. It was competent to prove bis good character .so far as necessary to sustain bis credibility as a witness, but in bis charge to tbe jury tbe learned judge expressly permitted tbe jury to consider bis character as a substantial fact involved in tbe issue of fraud. This is tbe language of the particular instruction to which ex- *302 eeption was noted: “The defendant Rabb being charged with fraud, evidence of Ms good character should be considered by you as substantive.as well as corroborative evidence in passing on the issue of fraud.” This was error. It has been said “that a person did or did not do a certain act because his character would predispose him to do or not to do it, is an inference which, although sometimes logically probative, the English law of evidence, with some exceptions, absolutely rejects in civil cases.” 16 Cyc., 1263. The text-writer cites numerous cases in the notes to this passage in support of the proposition, and, among others, several decided by this Court. Jeffries v. Harris, 10 N. C., 105; McRae v. Lilly, 23 N. C., 89; Heilig v. Dumas, 65 N. C., 214; Marcom v. Adams, 122 N. C., 222.

In McRae v. Lilly, supra, Judge Gaston applied the rule- of exclusion to a case of seduction in these words: “It is also insisted that the judge erred in rejecting the testimony offered by the defendant to show that his general character was that of a modest and retiring man. We are satisfied that there was no error in rejecting the testimony proposed. In civil suits, the general rule is, that unless the character of the party be put directly in issue, by the nature of the proceeding, evidence of his character is not admissible. And no reason is seen why, in this case, there should be an exception to the general rule.” More directly to the point is the language of the Court in Heilig v. Dumas, siopru: “If such evidence is proper, then a person may screen himself from the punishment due to fraudulent conduct till his character becomes bad. Every man must be answerable for every improper act, and the character of every transaction must be ascertained by its own circumstances, and not by the character of the parties,” citing Thompson v. Bowie, 4 Wall. (U. S.), 470, and quoting from Fowler v. Insurance Co., 6 Cowen (N. Y.), 673.

The subject is treated exhaustively, with full citations, in Norris v. Stewart, 105 N. C., 455, where the defendant was charged with fraud, and testimony as to his good character was offered and rejected. The ruling was approved by this Court, Justice Shepherd saying: “As a general rule, evidence of good character is inadmissible, by way of defense, in civil actions in *303 which, a party is charged with a specific fraud, because the character of every transaction must be ascertained from its own circumstances and not from the character of .the parties. Such evidence is not admitted in civil actions unless the nature of the action involves the general character of the party or goes directly to affect it.” So, whatever the rule may be elsewhere, the law of this State has been settled by repeated decisions. We need not inquire, therefore, whether the reasons for the rule are sufficient to justify it.

The distinction between civil and criminal cases in this respect was clearly stated by the present Chief Justice in Marcom v. Adams, supra, approving the rule in civil eases as we have stated it. The court committed a positive error in giving the instruction excepted to, and a new trial must be granted, if it was prejudicial. The defendant, J, P. Rabb, contends that it was harmless, as upon a fair consideration of the facts which the evidence tends indisputably to establish, the defendant was. entitled to the verdict which was rendered by the jury. But we do not understand this to be the state of the evidence, and the plaintiff strenuously insists that, on the contrary, there is strong proof of fraud on- the part of Rabb and of a collusive arrangement between him and Atkinson, his codefendant, to cheat and defraud the plaintiff. We might, by a discussion of the testimony, demonstrate that there is evidence for the consideration of the jury upon the question of fraud. If the lumber on the yard at Morganton had been delivered and belonged to the plaintiff, it is strange that, if it had knowledge of the fact, the lumber should have been transferred to the trustee to pay a debt due by Rabb — in other words, that it should pay Rabb’s debt, due to it, with its own property. If the lumber did not belong to the plaintiff, not having been delivered, then Rabb has received credit on the books of the plaintiff to which he was not entitled, and, in either view, he would be indebted to the plaintiff, unless the latter is in some way estopped or concluded by the settlement. There is enough on the face of the agreement and in the conduct of the parties to show that the plaintiff did not understand that the lumber had been delivered, and, therefore, that the title had passed to it. It might fairly *304 be argued that if it did, it would not bave arranged to pay a debt due by Rabb to it, and there is evidence, as we look at the case, that Rabb knew that plaintiff was acting -upon the false assumption that the lumber was not its property, and yet dealt with the plaintiff in making the settlement, well knowing that plaintiff was acting in ignorance of the facts. The phraseology of the agreement is such as to indicate that plaintiff had some claim on the lumber, which was released, but was not the owner; either that, or it is so ambiguously worded that the jury might have drawn such an inference from it, in view of the other facts and circumstances. If by his conduct and the manner of dealing with the plaintiff in making the settlement, he induced the plaintiff to believe that the lumber belonged to him and not to the plaintiff, and took advantage of his own peculiar knowledge of the true situation, and plaintiff was misled, beguiled, and overreached in the transaction, the law will not permit the settlement to stand in the way of an equitable adjustment between the parties. As was said in Manter v. Truesdale, 57 Mo. App., at p. 443: “The general rule is that mere silence cannot be treated as a representation, but a party may put himself in a position where he is bound to speak. The Supreme Court, in the case of McAdams v. Cates, 24 Mo., 223, in discussing this subject, said: ‘Although many duties must be left -by law to the honor and conscience of individuals, the public morals require us to lay down and enforce such rules in relation tej the business affairs of men as will secure fair and honorable dealing, as far as this is practicable, consistently with the freedom of individual action and the interests of commerce.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 S.E. 212, 162 N.C. 298, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-lumber-milling-co-v-atkinson-nc-1913.