Court Opinion

ID: 7095939
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:10:59.706528+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:14.961987
License: Public Domain

Beck, J.
— I. The objections urged in the argument before us, relate to the rulings of the Circuit Court upon instructions to the jury, and the admission of evidence. Other matters assigned as errors are not pressed by counsel, and therefore demand no attention from us..
*2851. receipt : parol evidence admissible to explain: promissorynote. *284There was evidence tending to show that plaintiff as one of *285a committee of a church, had executed to defendant and another, a promissory note intending to bind the church „ 1 -i-iv , , tor an amount due upon a building contract, , , Upon a settlement between plaintiff and deiendant, the latter executed a receipt acknowledging payment upon this note of the sum found due from him to the former when the receipt was given. The note was not in defendant’s possession, but was held by the other payee and was then due. Plaintiff claims, and introduced evidence tending to establish, that defendant agreed, in case the proper credit was not made upon the note by the party holding it, he would pay the amount thereof to plaintiff; in other words that the receipt was given under an agreement, that plaintiff’s claim was not to be discharged unless the amount thereof was credited upon the note. This was a point of contest in the case, and plaintiff’s claim as to the facts was contradicted by defendant’s, evidence.
There was no credit made upon the note, and it was finally paid by the church. Upon this branch of the case the court directed the jury, in effect, that if they found the evidence, established such a contract as plaintiff claimed was made when the note was executed, he was entitled to a verdict for the amount of the account, which could not be regarded as paid by the transaction. This instruction defendant insists is incorrect on the ground that the receipt operated as payment upon the note pro tanto, which discharged plaintiff’s claim. But the receipt is not an instrument of such character that it may not be explained, and the true nature of the transaction may not be considered. If there was an agreement that defendant should procure the credit to be made on the note, and that the transaction between the parties should be considered as payment on that condition, a failure to cause the credit to be indorsed would certainly justify plaintiff in regarding the transaction as not amounting to a payment on the note. Now this is the effect of the instruction. It is therefore correct.
*2862; Evidence: tho^ourt” o£ xn-aotiee. *285II. The defendant testified that some time after the receipt was given, plaintiff informed him the credit had not been *286indorsed upon the note, and that he would look to defend-an^ ^01’ Pay* Plaintiff, who had before given evidence, was recalled, and testified that defendant Uad. stated in his evidence before the justice such a conversation was had shortly after the receipt was executed. This was all of plaintiff’s testimony upon his re-examination. Counsel for defendant proposed to cross-examine him, but was not permitted by the court. This ruling is the ground of. an objection here. The conflict between the evidence of plaintiff as to defendant’s admission at the former trial, and defendant’s own statement of the fact, if in truth there is a conflict, is so trifling that the court was justified in refusing to devote any more time to the matter. The rights of neither party could have been affected differently, whether the conversation was “'shortly after” or “some time after” the note was given. And plaintiff’s evidence could not have been received to impeach defendant, for the proper-foundation had not been laid. The court correctly exercised its discretion in cutting off a controversy involving a matter of no importance to either party.
No other objections are made to the judgment; it is
Affirmed.