Prescott v. Johnson

DuPONT, J.,

dissenting.

Concurring as I do in so much of the opinion delivered in this case as states the effect to be given to the established copy of a lost paper, I am nevertheless constrained to dissent' from the judgment of affirmation as well as-from the grounds upon which that judgment is placed. In-order that my views may be fully comprehended and properly understood, I commence with the third exception embraced in the assignment of errors, which complains that the Court erred in giving the instructions asked by defendant’s counsel. These instructions are as fellows:

“ 1st. If the plaintiff (Reason Prescott) has not the possession of the notes, nor either of them, by reason of any interest he has in them- or either of them, and his name has only been used as plaintiff, this does not make him a holder or assignee. It is not as agent, but as holder or assignee, that the plaintiff must show his right to maintain suit.

*399i‘2d.J$'you find from the evidence that said promissory notes, or either of them, were transferred after they became due, and that the said boy Isaac was, at the time of the sale, the property of Aldridge Braddock and has since been recovered by the said Aldridge Braddock, that therefore the consideration has wholly failed and the plaintiff is not entitled to recover said notes or such one as you may find was transferred after it became due.

“ 3d. The consideration of a note transferred before due can be enquired into when circumstances of suspicion appear. If you find that the said Beason Prescott, at the time of receiving said notes, or either of them, had knowledge that the said boy Isaac was claimed as the property of the said Aldridge Braddock by said Braddock, and that 'said claim was afterwards perfected, and that therefore there was a want of consideration, then the plaintiff is not 'entitled to recover.”

In considering the propriety of these instructions, which ■ have been made the subject of exception, I remark, that whatever diversity of opinion may exist as to the right of the maker of a note made payable to “bearer” to call in question the title or ownership of one who sues as bearer in ordinary cases, in this case the right cannot be questioned. Here the only material 'difference set up against the recovery upon these notes was, that the eonsideratioh for which they were given had totally failed. This defence would not avail, nor was it admissible against the present plaintiff if he had received a bona fide transfer of the notes before they became due. If, however, it should be shown that the property in the notes was still in the payee and •original holder, and that the name of the plaintiff suing was used only as a sham and a blind, it is clear that the fact so shown to exist might be made available to the de*400fendant against the nominal plaintiff without 'further enquiry with respect to the time (whether before or after due) when the alleged transfer may have been stated to have been made. In this view of the case, I have no hesitancy in sustaining the first instruction asked for on the part of the defendant; and had the instructions stopped at that point, I should as unhesitatingly have sustained the judgment rendered upon the verdict of the jury in the Court below. But such was not the case. The Court proceeded to give the 2d and 3d instructions asked for by the defendant, the giving of which, in my opinion, was a most fatal error.

I am well aware that it is not every erroneous instruction that will vitiate a verdict, but where the instruction is of such a character as to be manifestly calculated to mislead the jury, either from being irrelevant to the issue or unsupported by any evidence in the cause, such instruction has been universally held to constitute error sufficient to call for a reversal. Now, as to these instructions, it will scarcely be pretended that the record affords one tittle of evidence with regard to a failure of the consideration, and it is only necessary to refer to the position of the case before the jury to be convinced that the instructions were well calculated to mislead them as to the true issue to be tried by them.

The material defence relied upon by the defendant was, the failure of consideration, and it was set forth in the pleas by the allegation that he had been ousted of the property for which the notes were given by one asserting a paramount title to the same. The only witness to this point was William C. Trowbridge, whose testimony was adduced in the form of a deposition. In his responses to the 9th and 10th interrogatories' is contained all that bore upon that point. The answers, it is true, were quite full, *401but, unfortunately for the case of the defendant, all that he said upon that subject was merely “hearsay,” and was very properly ruled out by the Court. With the exclusion of this testimony, the pleas which set up the' defence stood wholly unsupported by one particle of evidence. If with these pleas before them, which circumstantially set forth the mode and manner of the alleged failure, the hearsay testimony of Trowbridge discussed in their presence and hearing, and then the rulings of the Court to the very point, the jury were not likely to be misled as to the particular matter that they should legally decide upon, I am at a loss to conceive of a case in which an erroneous ruling of the Judge would be likely to mislead them.

It is assumed, however, by the majority, that the pleas setting up a “failure of consideration” having been verified by the oath of the defendant, it was incumbent upon the plaintiff, under the provisions of the statute, to negative the alleged failure by proof on his part. In other words, that the oath of the defendant changed the onus, and that it was for the plaintiff to prove that the consideration had not failed. It is proper to remark here, that the notes disclosed on their face the consideration for which they had been given, being for the “boy Isaac.”

I had thought that the ruling in Hagler vs. Mercer (Flo. Reports) had put that question at rest. It was distinctly ruled in that case that the statute went no further in its effect than to require of the plaintiff, when the plea should be verified by the oath of the defendant, to disclose and set out the consideration, and that the failure, if any, must be established by affirmative proof brought forward by the defendant. It is now said that the ruling is of no authority, as the point ruled did not arise in the case. With the utmost respect for the opinions of my Associates as to the ruling in that case, I am constrained to differ with them, *402and to hold that the particular point which arose in that case legitimately involved the construction and interpretation of the statute, and that it could not have been properly considered without such construction and interpretation. But I hold, moreover, that that ruling upon the effect and operation of the statute was eminently proper, and that the distinction therein taken between the want and failure of consideration was correct.

Apply the present views of the Court to the pdeadings in this case and the correctness of the ruling in Hagler vs. Mercer will be clear and obvious. The copy of the notes attached to the declaration fully diselose on their faces the consideration. They were given for the purchase of the “ boy Isaac.” The plea alleges a fail/ure in consequence .of the “boy Isaac” having been recovered from the defendant in an action at law prosecuted in Macon, Georgia, by Aldridge Braddock. Now, suppose that, in confoi'mity with the present views of the Court, the plaintiff had proceeded to show that at and for a long time previous to the sale to the defendant he had been in peaceable possession of the boy — suppose that he had proceeded further to show that he had bought him in good faith from a third party, and had exhibited his paper title from said party, and so ad infinitum, would all this have been sufficient to negative the particular allegation in the plea, viz: that “ the boy Isaac had been recovered in Macon, Georgia, by Aldridge Braddock?” No, he must go on farther and prove that the allegation was false, by showing either that there never was such an individual as the one named, or that there was no such locality as Macon, Georgia, or that there was no Court holden in that locality, or that there never was any such suit instituted upon which a recovery could have been had. Suppose, again, that instead of the allegation of a failure of title, it had been that the boy was *403affected at the time of the sale with a particular disease, of which he had afterwards died, how would the plaintiff go about negativing the fact of the disease and the other fact of the death by that particular disease, the property in the meantime having passed throngh a dozen hands, probably, and removed hundreds of miles from him? If the statute is to have the operation now contended for, the sooner it is known the better, in order that the mind of the Legislature may be called to the subject.

The case of White vs. Camp (4 Flo. Reps.) is referred to in the opinion as supporting the present views of the Court. The single question in that case was as between what parties the consideration could be impeached, and it was ruled that the statute was intended to apply only to the original parties or those standing in that light, according to the principles of the common law. At the time that this decision was made the bench was occupied by Judges Hawkins, Douglass and Baltzell, (the present Chief Justice,) and it is worthy to be noted that Judge Douglass was particular in stating that he considered the opinion of Judge Hawkins, whoj delivered the opinion of the Court, not to extend beyond that particular point. It is also worthy of note, that Judge Baltzell, who dissented from the judgment pronounced in that case, utterly repudiated the idea that the statute had the effect to change the bur-then of proof (as it stood at common law) in any case whatsoever. How, then, can it be said that the ruling in White vs. Camp supports the views of the Court, as it is contended in the opinion delivered in this case ?

It was insisted, in this connection, by the counsel for the defendant, that there being three issues before the jury, and their finding being general, if the law and evidence on either issue is sufficient to sustain it, the general finding will be held to be good. I am not disposed to contest *404(as a general proposition) the doctrine contended for, but, in this case, it will be noted that the failure of the consideration was the gravamen or gist of the defence, and constituted the material issue to be tried. It was not enough to found a verdict upon, that the jury should arrive at the conclusion that the notes had been transferred after they were due, or that the alleged assignment was attended with suspicious circumstances. That constituted no bar to the recovery — it only opened the way for letting in the defence of the failure of the consideration, which, as before stated, was unsupported by a particle of evidence.

In this connection, the counsel for the defendant further insisted, that as there was a plea which put in issue the plaintiff’s ownership of the notes, and as there was some evidence applicable to that issue, the verdict, though general, might be taken to apply to that issue. • This view of the subject struck me at first with some force, and were I now confident that it was the right of the maker of the note, payable to bearer, to contest the holder’s title to the same, it might relieve me of some of the difficulty that I feel in sustaining -the judgment in this case. But I am not satisfied upon that point, nor would I be understood as indicating an opinion one way or the other. It is at least a mooted question and one that has engaged the attention of the Courts.

From what has been said, it may be seen that I base my dissent exclusively upon the ground that the two instructions before referred to, being responsive to the material issue in the case and entirely unsupported by any evidence, they were eminently calculated to distract the mind of the jury and to lead them to the consideration of a matter which they had no legal right to consider. It is of the last importance to parties litigant that everything calculated to confuse or mystify should be carefully ex-*405eluded from the case submitted for their determination, and the naked point in issue be clearly presented to their minds; and when the appellate tribunal discovers that a different course has been pursued, it is its high prerogative and bounden duty to apply the proper corrective.