Winter v. Bandel

30 Ark. 362
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 30 Ark. 362 (Winter v. Bandel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winter v. Bandel, 30 Ark. 362 (Ark. 1875).

Opinion

S. W. Williams, Sp. J.:

The appellees sued appellant in the Circuit Court of Ouachita county, to the February term, 1874. The complaint states that about the 8th day of January, 1874, they agreed to sell and deliver to defendant, Moses Winter, thirty-three head of horses and mules, of the value of thirty-nine hundred and sixty dollars, to be paid for by said defendant in promissory notes on solvent parties, less the sum of five hundred and thirty-two dollars in money paid plaintiffs by defendant, at the time said horses and mules were delivered to defendant; that said defendant, Moses Winter, then delivered to said plaintiffs promissory notes to the amount of thirty-three hundred and eighty-one dollars and seven cents,-which said promissory notes said Moses Winter falsely and fraudulently represented to plaintiffs to be good and on solvent parties, well knowing at the time that the same were worthless, and the makers thereof were insolvent, and the money on said notes cannot and could not be made by process of law. A list of the notes is exhibited, and the complaint further states that Winter well knew at the time that said promissory notes were worthless, and fraudulently and falsely represented to plaintiff that said notes were valuable, with the fraudulent intent to cheat and defraud plaintiffs; that by reason of the false and fraudulent representation of the solvency of the makers of said notes, respectively, the defendant induced the plaintiffs to deliver him said horses and mules, and execute to him a bill of sale therefor, and receive in payment for the same, said notes. The plaintiffs ascertained, after they had received said notes, upon the false and fraudulent representation of said defendant as aforesaid, that the same were of no yalue, and offered to return the same and receive back said horses and mules and place said defendant, Moses Winter, and the plaintiffs in the same condition they were in before said trade was made. But Winter refused to receive the notes and return the horses and mules. Damages laid at three thousand do Liars.

The list of notes attached to the complaint, embraced twenty-nine different names and thirty notes (two of them being on the same person). The notes range in amounts from fifteen dollars and seventy cents, the smallest, fa five hundred and fifty dollars and seven cents, tlie last being amount of note on Wesley Charles, of whom one witness says he is right pert, has a little more property than most niggers.

On this complaint summons was issued, on 29th of January, 1874, for the 16th of February following, and was served on the day of its date.

At the return term, on the 27th of February, 1874, the defendant made a motion for a continuance, for want of the testimony ■of one Atkins, by whom he stated that he expected to prove material facts for his defense, and stating in general terms that he had used due diligence. The court properly overruled this motion, for the facts constituting this diligence should be stated and let the court decide the question of diligence.

The defendant then filed a new motion on 6th March, in which he stated additional facts to be proven by some other witness, and which seem, in view of the issue made, to have been material ; he states that he had a subpoena issued, as soon as it was practicable to do so, for the witness in time for service ten days before the term, but for the departure of the witness for Texas, where defendant had been informed he had gone. '

The application for a continuance is addressed to the sound discretion of the court, and we will not interfere with this discretion except where it is grossly abused.

The last motion was presented, the record shows, on 6th March, more than a month after service near the Texas border, and how soon it was practicable to issue the subpoena is not stated, nor is the day stated, except the court might infer from the general statement, “in time to have been served ten days.” There is nothing from which the time of issuing the subpoena could be inferred; and the recent departure of the witness for Texas, and the apparent want of knowledge of that fact by the defendant below, and the absence of any excuse for failing to take steps to get the witnesses’ deposition from Texas; and that the same motion had been overruled a week before are all sufficient reasons for denying it; and the absence of any negative on the part of "Winter that this sudden disappearance of the witness was not by his procurement, Avould be an additional reason, .although we know that the last is not among the statutory reqAiirements, yet under circumstances of suspicion, the court has the discretionary power, in addition to the statutory causes, to require the party applying for a continuance to negative any suspicious fact or circumstance disclosed on the face of the affidavit; all these are reasons why we will not disturb the action of the court below, however much we may differ with that court in the exercise of its discretion.

There is another reason, the first motion to continue should have been overruled, and that was because, by the record, (where we must look for the ruling and order of the court,) it appeal's that the answer was not then filed, and was not until a week thereafter. The court should not continue a cause for an absent witness, before the issues, as to which his testimony is applicable, are made up; and the refusal to do so is certainly not an abuse of discretion.

We thus dispose of this question, which was made one of the grounds for motion for new trial and was properly saved by bill of exceptions.

On the 6th of March, defendant below filed his answer, which admits the sale of the horses and mules to him by plaintiffs below, with this difference, that he states that he paid three hundred dollars in money, thirty-six hundred and six dollars in notes and accounts.

This discrepancy is perhaps accounted for in the testimony, where it is shown that after the trade, a certain note was given back in exchange for some coats, and a livery stable bill was paid, which perhaps makes the $532 stated by plaintiffs below to have been paid in cash, while defendant below may perhaps claim the whole amount of notes originally delivered without regal’d to the return, only $3381.07 in notes are produced, or accounted for in the case.

Defendant below, in his answer, denies in detail all the charges of fraud, and denies that he represented the notes delivered to plaintiffs to be good and on solvent parties. But that plaintiffs, through their agent, Robert R. Sherman, chose and selected the notes from defendant’s claims, and took and received them on their own judgment and at their own risk, without any fraudulent representation on the part of defendant, that the same were on good and solvent parties, or as to their character or value, and plaintiffs thereupon gave defendant a bi'll of sale of the horses and mules,' which is exhibited.

It is a noticeable feature in this answer, that notwithstanding Winter received those horses of plaintiffs below, who were proven to be Missouri .horse drovers and perfect strangers in the country. Winter nowhere in this answer or in his testimony, pretends even, that these notes or any of them, were on solvent parties• he only denies the fraudulent representation.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Ark. 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winter-v-bandel-ark-1875.