Court Opinion

ID: 7094249
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:09:11.832682+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:11.609473
License: Public Domain

Dillon, Ch. J.
1. Judgment: collateral agreement to restrain. — Conceding that an anterior, independent, collateral agreement, resting in parol, such as ^ie plaintiff makes the basis of his suit, can be shown to affect the subsequent judgment ancl con(;roi the right of the parties thereunder, it is requisite that the agreement should be clearly and satisfactorily established in point of fact.
*394We agree with tbe statement in tbe printed argument of the appellant’s attorney, that “ the real question in this case is one of fact, and is simply this: hás the plaintiff established by a reasonably clear and fair preponderance of evidence the contract of settlement set up by him, viz., that Mason was to take the property mortgaged in full satisfaction of the $ebt due from Burton to him, and that Burton was not to defend the foreclosure suit brought by Mason against him ? ”
All of the testimony in the record bearing upon this' question has been examined, and the result is, that this court agrees in opinion with his honor below, that the plaintiff has failed satisfactorily to establish the existence of the alleged contract.
■ Respecting this contract, each party was his own main witness. The plaintiff affirmed and defendant denied it. The circumstances surrounding the transactions between the parties, the probabilities of the case, as well as the weight of corroborating evidence is with the defendant rather than the plaintiff.
To strengthen his case and to overcome the positive denial and testimony of the defendant, the plaintiff relies largely upon the evidence of Everett. This consists of an alleged admission by the defendant some years after he obtained his decree, and also some years prior to the time when Everett testified. When Everett was first examined, he denied that he knew or recollected of the admission. Subsequently he testified to it, but his statement is .so vague and confused, that, aside from other circumstances which might be mentioned, it is entitled to but little weight. It is more than overcome by the contemporary memorandum of the defendant, and his explicit testimony. Defendant’s memory as to some matters of recent occurrence may be somewhat impaired by age, as maintained by the plaintiff’s counsel, but his recollection *395of his transactions with the plaintiff seem to he more distinct, better defined than the plaintiff’s, and his testimony characterized with equal candor, and entitled to, at least, equal credit.
2. costs: discretion. The onus is on the plaintiff, and his case must fail because he has not the weight of the evidence with him. We see no reason to disturb the order of the court as to the costs, as the plaintiff obtained relief in part, and as under the admissions in the defendant’s answer, he was entitled to a credit on the decree as of April, 1858, for $159.67.
The District Court should have ordered this amount to be credited on the decree; and such an order will now be made in this court. In ail other respects the decree below is affirmed.
We do not find it necessary to give any opinion respecting the constitutionality of chapter 79, Laws 1862, which the District Court held to be invalid so far as it undertook to give to the clerk of the District Court power to issue execution on judgments rendered in the city court.
Affirmed.