Turrell v. Morgan

By the Court

ElaNdeau, J.

The only question presented by'this case is, whether a party can offer a note in evidence without at the same time putting in evidence all the endorsements that may be upon the back of it. The note offered by the Plaintiff was an ordinary promissory note payable to the older of William H. Shelly. On the back of it appeared the name of said Shelley, and above his name appeared the following indorsements: -

“ Paid on the within May 19, 1855, twenty-five dollars.”
“ October 20, ’55, paid six months interest on the within, sixty dollars, $60.00.”
“ May 4, 1856, paid on the within sixty dollars, $60.”
“ October 20, 1857, paid on the within sixty dollars, $60.”
“ May 20,1858, paid on the within sixty dollars, $60.”

. When the Plaintiff put the note in evidence he made no reference to any of the endorsements except the name of Wm. H. Shelley, which he read' in evidence. After the Plaintiff had rested his case, the Defendant insisted that the endorsements were all in evidence, and claimed the right-to have the payments so proved applied to the principal sum of said note, except so much of each respectively as was necessary to pay what interest was due on said'note up to the time of the endorsement, at the rate of seven per cent, per annum, &e. The Plaintiff insisted that the endorsements were not in evidence, and offered to have the case opened so that the Defendant might introduce the same, and any other competent testimony *372with reference to payments on said note. The Defendant, however, did not avail himself of the proposition, and the referee found that they were not in evidence, and disregarded them in his finding, allowing no payments save what were admitted in the pleadings.

The Defendant’s counsel insists that when an endorsement is made on a note, it becomes part of it, and they are inseparable. It seems to us that this doctrine, if we should admit it to be true in the main, must be qualified by at least one fact, and that is, that the endorsement must appear to be the act of the party to be changed. Now under our rule of evidence,which differs diametrically from that of any other country that we are aware of, if an endorsement of a payment purported to be signed by a party who had a right to receive it, as for instance the payee or holder of the note, then such endorsement would be prima facie evidence of the facts contained in it until the person by whom it purported to have been signed, denied it under oath, (Comp. Stab. 685, seo. 80); and it may be that such an endorsement would be inseparable from the note under the peculiar rule of evidence above referred to; but in this case the endorsements are not signed at all, and nothing appears as to whose hand writing they are in, nor by whom they were placed there, nor whether the payee or holder gave any consent whatever to their being placed upon the note. It is true a party may always make evidence against himself, and never in his own favor, but when a written admission of a party is sought to be used against him, such as a receipt for the payment of money, (and this is the character of these endorsements), it must of course first appear that he made or authorized it. Now if these en-doi’sements must, as the Defendant insists, be read with the note, they prove nothing against the Plaintiff, as non constat, but that they were written on the note by the Defendant himself, or some equally unauthoi-ized person.

But we do not think the endorsements necessarily form part of the note. In Roseboom vs. Billmgton, 17 John. 182, a bond was offered in evidence with an endoi-sement of a payment upon it, made in the hand writing of the payee. Without the aid of this payment the bond would have been satis-*373fled by the operation of the statute of limitations. There was no other evidence of the fact of the payment having been made besides the endorsement in the hand writing of the payee. It was held, that alone, the endorsement would not prove the fact of payment, and that it would be necessary to accompany it with proof that it was made at the time of its date, or that when made its operation would have been against the interest of the party making it, and with such proof it would be good evidence for the consideration of the jury. Suppose in that case, as in the one at bar, nothing had appeared as to who placed the endorsement on the bond, would it have established a payment for any purpose ? We think not. See also Brown vs. Hunger, 16 Vt. 13.

We think that endorsements on the back of written instruments, are independent writings in the nature of receipts or written declarations,- and that they can be read in evidence only after proof made that they are - signed by the party sought to be charged, or have received his assent in some binding form.

The counsel for the Defendant calls our attention to a case recently decided in Illinois, and which will appear in the 25th volume of Illinois Reports, where it was Iheld “ that when a note is given in evidence, the endorsements on the back are also in evidence, and that it is error for the jury to disregard them.” The only report of the decision that the counsel has seen is in a legal newspaper, and in the above words. There may have been, and probably were, features in the case that made the endorsements evidence, which do not appear in the meagre report we have of it. At any rate, we could not hold against our own convictions upon such doubtful authority. And what strengthens the presumption that the whole of that case does not appear, is the fact that the learned and industrious counsel has been unable to find any other that holds the same rule, while there are several that weigh heavily against it, besides those above cited.

The Plaintiff seeks a modification of that part of the decree which directs the time of redemption, and right of possession during that time, to be governed by the law in force at the date of the decree, and asks that it be controlled by the *374law in force at the date of the mortgage. ■ This point was fully considered in the case of Stone vs. Bassett, 4 Minn. R., 298, and also in the case of Heyward vs. Judd ib. 483. The sale having been made by order of the Court sitting as a court of equity, and not under the power of sale contained in the mortgage, the time of redemption and the right of possession during that period must be controlled by the law in force at the time the decree was made.

The judgment must be affirmed.