Ilyus v. Buch

Dissenting Opinion by

Morrison, J. :

I find myself unable to agree with the majority opinion in this case and will, therefore, endeavor to state the reasons moving me to dissent.

In discharging the rule to open the judgment the learned court below seems to have been controlled by the following considerations : (1) The bond was not produced and shown to the witnesses when their testimony was taken and this deprived the plaintiff of the right of calling witnesses and attempting to show that the signature thereto was genuine; (2) that the defendant was incompetent to testify for the reason that the other party to the thing in action was dead: Act of May 23, 1887, sec. 5, P. L. 158; (3) that the judgment should not be opened on the testimony of Katie Buch that the signature was a forgery, because, “ this testimony does not meet the requirements of the court in such cases, which is that in order to entitle the defendant to have a judgment opened, it is necessary for him or her to show by the testimony of two witnesses, or that of one witness and corroborating circumstances, the facts upon which the application is based.” I will briefly consider these reasons in their order.

It is true that the counsel for the defendant ought to have produced the bond, if he could, and that, unexplained, his failure to produce ifc tends to cast suspicion on the good faith of *48the defense. Also that in its absence, it will be difficult to try the question of its forgery fairly to either party. The court says he would refuse to open the judgment on this ground alone. But Mr. Davis testified in regard to the nonproduction of the bond and while his testimony may not be, in its character, and the manner of giving it, entirely satisfactory, yet I do not think, in the circumstances, that the court was justified in drawing so strong a presumption against the good faith of the defendant. Mr. Davis testified : “ I have not been able as yet to find that paper; I do not think I have it; did not know it was charged against me until to-day by the clerk.” This testimony does not show how much search Mr. Davis made for the bond, but it implies a search and if the other side desired a fuller statement it could have been brought out by cross-examination. Suppose the bond is honestly lost and the defendant and her counsel are unable to produce it, does it follow that a judgment entered on a forged bond must stand and be collected? I think not. If the judgment were opened and an issue framed, and at the trial the bond could not be produced, it would be a strong circumstance against the defendant when it appeared to have been last seen in the possession of her counsel, but sucli circumstance would not necessarily be conclusive. The defendant and her sister Katie both testified, positively, to having seen the bond and that the signature thereto is a forgery.

The majority opinion cites Ward v. Letzkus, 152 Pa. 818, in support of the position that Mr. Davis was the mere agent of his client and the neglect of one was the neglect of the other. I think there is a marked distinction between that case and the present one. That was a case where the appellant from the judgment of a justice put the filing of the transcript of appeal in the hands of his attorney who forgot to file it in time. The act of assembly fixed that time and the court had no power to extend it. The case was not as if the justice had refused to give a transcript. The attorney was the agent of the appellant and the latter could not claim immunity from his oversight. But where an attorney loses a paper, without fault on the part of the client, and there is no statutory obstruction, it does not seem logical nor just to deny the party the relief which' the allegation of forgery demands.

*49I am not prepared to agree with the learned court below that the defendant was incompetent to testify to anything relating to the judgment. I consider her competent to testify that she had seen the bond and that her name thereto was a forgery. This she did testify to pointedly.. It is conceded that she could not testify to what occurred between her and the decedent in his lifetime, but her judgment formed on an examination of the signature is nothing that occurred between her and the decedent. It is her independent judgment based on an inspection of the signature. In Toomey’s Est., Toomey’s Appeal, 150 Pa. 535, the court below expressly held to that effect; that it was in the nature, not of a matter oocurringin John Toomey’s lifetime, but of a fact, or state of facts, existing after his death. I think the reasoning of the learned court in that case is sound. On appeal the judgment of the court was affirmed, per curiam, but the Supreme Court did not explicitly pass upon that point. Upon sound legal principles and reason, it must be that if A forges an instrument against B purporting to show that the latter had borrowed money and given the obligation therefor, and A puts the writing in his safe and dies, and thereafter his legal representatives attempt to collect it, B can look at the instrument and testify that it is not his signature; that it is a forgery. The very nature of the transaction conclusively shows that A is not pretending to testify to anything that happened between himself and the decedent. I think the testimony of Maria Buch that the signature to the bond was not hers, but a forgery, was competent.

Was the court right in holding that in an alleged forgery case the judgment will not be opened except on the testimony of two witnesses, or of one witness and corroborating circumstances equivalent to another? I think not, and upon this question there is clear authority. In Schomaker, Appellant, v. Dean, 201 Pa. 439, Mr. Justice Fell (p. 441).said: “There is, however, no merit in the contention that the court erred in opening the judgment. ■ The defendant •in his petition alleged that he never signed nor delivered the note, nor authorized anyone to do so for him, and that his signature thereto was a forgery. The plaintiff in his answer averred that the note had been duly signed. This raised an issue on which the defendant was entitled to go to a jury.” *50See also Shannon v. Castner, 21 Pa. Superior Ct. 294, especially the opinion of Rice, P. J., on p. 320.

In the Schomaker case the court opened the judgment on the petition averring a forgery and an answer averring that the note was duly signed, without more. I think justice requires that when a person swears positively that his signature to a writing is a forgery, and he is only disputed by the writing itself, he is entitled to go to a jury.

In the present case the petition of Maria Buch avers that her name to the bond is a forgery, and her positive testimony is to the. same effect, and this is supplemented by the positive testimony of Katie Buch that the signature to the bond is not Maria’s but a forgery, and that the witness’ name and that of Moses Buch, as subscribing witnesses, are forgeries. Under this state of facts it seems to me clear that the learned court ought to have opened the judgment and permitted the question of whether the signature of the defendant to the bond was forged to have gone to a jury. Both sides in this contest seem guilty of serious laches and on that ground they stand about even.

The majority opinion cites Augustine v. Wolf, 215 Pa. 558, where it is said: “On application to open a judgment it is proper for the court below to weigh the evidence and to decide according to the preponderance thereof, and the appellate court will not reverse for the exercise of a sound discretion.

“The court to which an application is made to open a judgment may judge the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses, and is not bound, even when there is a conflict of testimony, to send the case to a jury. The whole proceeding resolves itself into the exercise of a sound, judicial discretion.” I fully recognize the above as the settled law on this question. But that ease, on its facts, differs widely from the one at bar. There the evidence was in conflict. Here, we have the defendant as soon as she learned of the judgment, and ever since, insisting that her name to the bond is a forgery. All of the testimony in the case supports that contention. The appellee offered no testimony whatever, and in refusing to open the judgment, judging from the testimony and the reasons given by the court below, I am forced to the conclusion that a sound judicial discretion was not exercised.

*51Considerable importance is given by counsel for appellee to the alleged fact that Maria Buck executed the bond in 1880 and paid interest thereon until April 1, 1892. But where is the evidence that she paid any interest on this bond ? There is not a'scintilla of competent evidence to that effect. Evidence is alleged to be found in the indorsements on the bond, made by Unteymoehl, of the payment of,interest for about twelve years. But this is only the ex parte statement of the holder of the alleged forged instrument. If there had been competent proof of the payment by the defendant of interest on this bond for twelve years, it would have been very stróng evidence that she executed and delivered it. ’But there is no such evidence. It is just possible that Untermoehl made the indorsements on the bond without receiving a cent of interest, for "the very purpose of manufacturing evidence of. the genuineness of the instrument.

T would reverse the order discharging the rule, open the judgment, and send the question of forgery to a jury.