Court Opinion

ID: 7001334
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 03:42:36.949714+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:09:56.150221
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Worthington delivered the opinion of the court. We find the evidence tending to show mental incapacity, introduced by the defense, when considered alone, amply sufficient to sustain the verdict. In such case the verdict of a jury will not be disturbed unless substantial error is shown in the rulings of the court. It is insisted that the court erred in refusing to admit in evidence the original three notes for which, on account of their non-payment on June 13, 1896, the note filed in the claim against the estate was given. The consideration of the note in issue was not denied, and, in addition, it was admitted by the defendant that the consideration for giving it was the three notes that matured June 13, 1896. This admission by defendant, in open court, gave appellants all the benefits that their introduction in evidence could have given. But they were not competent for another reason. Neither the execution nor the consideration of the note sued on was denied. The only defense was mental incapacity in Myron N. Hulse when he signed said note of June 13, 1896, as surety for Charles- B. Hulse and J. W. Stoughton. The new note so signed extended the time of payment of the debt for which the three notes were given, from June 13, 1896, when they were due, to May 1, 1898, when the new note became due. This extension of payment released the surety on the three notes, unless assented to by him. If he was incapable of transacting business, as claimed by the defense, he was incapable of assenting to this extension of payment. When it was admitted that the consideration of the new note was the original debt, as evidenced by the three notes, the admission of the three notes could throw no other light upon the mental capacity of Myron N. Hulse when he signed the new note. The suit was not upon the three notes, nor upon the original contract of suretyship. They were merged in the new note, at least to the extent of extending the original time of payment, and if this extension did not bind the surety, he was released from his original contract of suretyship. Appellants were not injured by the refusal to allow evidence of attorney’s fees, as no verdict for attorney’s fees could have been given, or would have stood, if general verdict for defense was rendered. It was not error to refuse instruction No. 1, asked by appellants. There was no claim that the burden of proving Hulse capable of transacting business rested upon appellants. The instructions given plainly stated that the burden of proving him incapable rested upon appellee. Hor was it error to refuse instruction Ho. 2. It required incapacity to be “ established with reasonable certainty.” It was sufficient if mental incapacity was proved by a preponderance of the evidence. While it is said in argument in Myatt v. Walker, 44 Ill. 486, that “ when unsoundness of mind is alleged as a ground for setting aside a deed, the fact must be established with reasonable certainty,” this statement is to be taken in connection with the facts in that case. We do not understand that in so saying the court intended to change the rule that requires only a preponderance of the evidence to establish a material fact in issue. Many cases bold that expressions calling for a greater degree of proof are erroneous. Herrick v. Gary, 83 Ill. 85; Ruff v. Jarrett, 94 Ill. 475; Rolfe v. Rich, 149 Ill. 436. The third instruction ivas properly refused. If the time of payment was extended by the note in controversy when the surety signing it was incapable, mentally, of assenting to the extension, he was released, and no recovery could be had upon his prior contract of suretyship. We find no substantial error in the modifications of instructions complained of, nor in the instructions given for appellee. J udgment affirmed.