Kagel v. Totten

Yellott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The foundation of this action is a promissory note for $150.00 dated 20th of November, 1879, and payable six *451months after date to H. K. White & Co. or hearer. It was made payable at The Union National Bank of Westminster, Maryland.

At the trial of the cause in the Court below, there was an adduction of evidence on the part of the plaintiff tending to prove that the signature was genuine; a competent witness testifying that he had frequently seen the defendant write, and from the knowledge of his chirogaphy thus acquired, believed that his name signed to the note was in his own hand-writing. There was a subsequent admission by this witness, that he had not seen the defendant write during a period of several years. The testimony of the plaintiff revealed the facts that his occupation was that of a broker and dealer in negotiable paper, and that on the 29th of November, 1879, he had purchased the note in question from one Spears in Piedmont, West Virginia, for the sum of $112.50 ; said Spears being a travelling agent, employed by H. K. White & Co. to sell their paper; and the plaintiff buying a large amount of said paper put in circulation through the medium of this agency. The plaintiff was not acquainted with the signatures of the makers of said notes, and made no inquiry with reference to the consideration for which they were given; nor had he any knowledge of the relations subsisting between the defendant and H. K. White & Co., when the note in question was purchased, hut acquired such knowledge at a period subsequent to its maturity.

The defendant, in testifying, declared that he had never given the note to H. K. White and Company; nor had ever seen the paper before its production in Court. At this point his testimony was interrupted by his counsel, who, with commendable candor, admitted that the signature was genuine. In the sequence of the testimony there was a disclosure of the fact that, on the 20th of November, 1879, a total stranger, introducing himself as J. H. Miller, came to the residence of the defendant and, after some *452conversation, urged him to undertake an agency for the sale of certain washing machines, manufactured by H. K. White and Company, in St. Louis, Missouri. The defendant at first declined on the ground that being an illiterate man his deficiency in educational advantages would prove a serious obstacle to the proper transaction of the business. He finally yielded to importunities, and a contract of agency was signed in duplicate; Miller producing his own ink, and on the table, which he had covered with other-papers, holding down the sheets on which the defendant was placing his signature. One of the duplicates was left, with the defendant and the other retained by Miller.

The defendant proceeding with his testimony stated that he “signed no other papers besides these two contracts on that day or at any other time; no other paper was offered on that day to him to be signed by him; and he never signed such a paper as this note at all and never saw it before seeing it in Court; did not sign any paper or put his name to any paper on which were written and printed the words and figures that appear on the paper sued on; never was asked to do it; and never made or delivered a note to H.r K. White and Company. He signed his name but twice on that day and thinks there were other papers under the contracts when they were signed, but is not positive. Did not sign the property certificate-produced in evidence though the name thereto looks like-his hand-writing.”

This testimony is corroborated in all its material parts by that of Mary Kagel, the wife of the defendant, who was. present during the whole transaction.

The testimony being closed the plaintiff offered one and the defendant eight prayers for instructions. The Court, rejected the prayers of the defendant and granted theplantiff’s prayer as follows:

“The defendant has given no legally sufficient proof, from which the jury can find, in this case, that the note *453sued on was obtained from tbe defendant in any manner •sufficient to relieve him from the payment thereof to the plaintiff in this action, with interest from its maturity.”

' To the granting of this instruction, and the rejection of his prayers the defendant has excepted and thus brings the legal questions involved into this Court for adjudication.

The prayer of the plaintiff is based upon the hypothesis that the establishment of the proof referred to would be a mere work of supererogation on the part of the jury, its legal insufficiency being already apparent to the Court. The prayer necessarily assumes the truth of all the facts -offered in evidence by the defendant, and declares them to be inadequate to form the foundation for a successful defence to the action. It removes the ground from under the defendant’s feet and leaves him nothing to stand upon in the Court. Undoubtedly it is within the province of fhe Court, when the legal sufficiency of the whole evidence offered by either party to a cause is the question upon which its adjudication is invoked by a prayer for instructions presented by tbe opposite party,- to determine that question, but the whole evidence referred to being thus brought under review the Court can only declare it to be insufficient upon the assumption of its entire verity ; it being the constitutional right of every litigant to have the facts in evidence on which he relies found by a jury, unless they are removed from controversy by an admission ■of their truth. A prayer like this is in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. It is a concession of facts and a denial of their legal sufficiency. The information conveyed to the jury is that all the facts offered in evidence by the party, against whom the instruction is operative, •are incontrovertibly true, but are wholly insufficient to form a legal basis for a verdict in his favor.

A concession of the truth of all the evidence of the one party leads in logical sequence to an absolute denial of the truth of every antagonistic fact offered in evidence by the *454opposite party; that which conflicts with what is true being necessarily false. In this connection another controlling principle is brought under consideration. As in conformity with the legal axiom, recognized and acted' upon since the first institution of the trial by jury, ad questiones juris respondent judices, ad questiones facti respondent juratores, the Court is the exclusive judge of' the legal sufficiency of the evidence, and the jury of its weight and sufficiency as proof in support of either side of an issue, if there is any evidence from which a conclusion can he properly deduced, tending to establish the foundation for a verdict, the Court transcends its assigned limits,, when by its instruction it informs the jury that there has. been a total failure of proof on the part of the litigant offering such evidence, and that they must find for his-adversary in the cause. It is within the province of the jury, not only to determine upon the weight of the evidence as proof, but also upon the question of credibility. Having the witnesses under their observation, and closely scrutinizing their demeanor in testifying, they may, properly, reject the whole mass of testimony offered on the one side as utterly worthless, and give exclusive credit to-a few facts adduced in evidence on the- other. This line of demarcation between the province of the Court and the jury has been clearly drawn by a multitude of decisions. The citation of a few of the leading cases is all that is necessary. Cole vs. Hebb, 7 G. & J., 20; Clarke vs. Dederich, 31 Md., 148.

An application of these principles leads to important conclusions in the determination of this cause. The prayer of the plaintiff having been granted upon the assumption that the defendant’s evidence is true, and all the- conflicting evidence of the plaintiff false, the defendant, never signed the note upon which suit has been brought and a recovery sought in this action. This fact might not have been found by an intelligent jury irreconcilable with *455the candid concession of his counsel. It is wholly impossible for Courts to know what theories may grow out of a mass of evidence, when juries have it before them in the privacy of consultation. Ho matter how the signature was obtained, by the granting of the plaintiff’s prayer, it is admitted to be true that the paper sued on was never signed by the defendant, and not being his promissory note for the payment of money, it cannot be made, by the plaintiff, the foundation for a successful action.

(Decided 1st March, 1883.)

There was error, not only in the granting of the plaintiff’s prayer, hut in the rejection of the defendant’s fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth prayers, which are in consonance with the principles enunciated in the recent case of Totten vs. Bucy, in 57 Md., 446; which case so closely resembles the one now under consideration, that the failure of identity is barely perceptible.

The judgment appealed from will he reversed and a new trial awarded.

Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered.