The first point upon which plaintiff in error claims a reversal of the judgment is the alleged failure of the plaintiff in the court below to prove and establish its corporate existence on the trial, such corporate existence having been denied and put in issue by the answer.
The paper purporting to contain the articles of incorporation, as it appears in the bill of exceptions, is evidently a copy and not an original paper, and yet there is intrinsic evidence to be gathered from the bill of exceptions that the original paper was offered and admitted in evidence. It appears that at the commencement of the trial the plaintiff offered in evidence the records of the incorporation of the bank. “ The defendant objects to the introduction of this paper, for the reason that there is no foundation laid for it, and it is therefore incompetent.” The offer was tern
If the paper as now found in the bill of exceptions is the identical' paper that was offered and given in -evidence, the court erred in overruling defendant’s objection to its admission. If on the other hand, it was substituted in making up the bill of exceptions, for the one actually given in evidence, without a stipulation or leave of the court, then it evidences a degree of carelessness in practice which ought not to be indulged in. Further on in the bill of exceptions this circumstance is repeated. The defendant
The second point of contention in the brief is upon the admission in evidence of the cash book of defendant bank. The evidence applicable to that matter is as follows, J. M. Roberts, a witness on behalf of the plaintiff, being on his examination-in-chief, and having testified that he was the cashier of the plaintiff:
Q. I will ask you what book this is?
A. The ledger.
Q,. Is that account in your handwriting?
A. Yes, sir.
*******
Q,. What book is that you have?
A. Cash book.
Q,. Is that your original entry book? '
A. Yes, sir.
Q,. Please turn to it, on February 19, 1886, and state whether there appears upon that book any entry in favor of or against Lawrence Holland ?
A. Yes, sir. Both $69.33 debit and $150 credit.
Q. Turn to the 20th day of February, 1886. Do you you find any entry there for or against Lawrence Holland, the defendant ?
Q. Is that your book of original entries?
A. Yes, sir.
Q,. Does it show continuous transactions between you and the defendant and the bank and other parties?
A. Yes, sir.
Q,. "Was it kept by yourself?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. I wish you would read those.entries?
The defendant objects, as no foundation laid, and immaterial. Overruled.
A. L. Holland, there is a debit of $100. L. F. Holland, there is a debit of $34.20.
Q. Turn to the 22d of Februaiy, 1886. [The plaintiff offers in evidence the line on this page, 173, upon which appears the figures, 373, in red ink, being the second time-such figures appear upon said page.] State to the jury the-amount?
Court. It is against the defendant, is it?
A. Yes, sir, it is $13.70. All we have been reading-yet are debits.
This examination was continued at- great length, without further objection. Witness was cross-examined by defendant, re-examined by plaintiff, and re-cross-examined, by-defendant. I quote:
Q. Do you say that you kept the books there that you have testified to, here, yourself, that they are in your handwriting?
A. Not clear up to date.
Q. Up to the 19th of June were all the entries in your handwriting?
A. No, sir.
Q. In whose?
A. Part of them in Mr. Smith’s.
Q,. What-part of them?
A. I can’t tell without looking?
A. I testified up to the 18th of February, and after that some time.
Q,. How long after that time?
A. Somewhere in March, somewhere about the middle, I think.
Q. And the others are not in your handwriting?
A. Part are, and part are not.
* * * * * * *
Q,. There are about two-thirds of them that are not in your handwriting?
A. I can’t say as to the amount.
Q,. What would be your best judgment?
A. I usually call the checks over, and he writes them down.
Q,. About how many were in your handwriting?
A. I can’t say.
Q. Were those in your handwriting entered upon the book in the first instance?
A. Yes, sir.
****** *
Q,. Just look at these items and state whether that is in your handwriting, on page 248, in red ink, 367, cash book?
A. No, sir. That is in Mr. Smith’s.
Q,. Do you see entries there in your handwriting?
A. That day Mr. Smith wrote up all.
Q,. And you do not know whether that is correct or not?
A. Ido.
The plaintiff here rested its case.
Defendant moved to strike out that portion of the book that is not in the handwriting of the witness, on the ground that there is no foundation laid. Overruled.
The provision of the staiute governing the introduction of books of account in evidence is as follows:
Page 579“First. The books must show a continuous dealing with persons generally, or several items of charges at different times, against the other party, in the same book.
“Second. It must be shown, by the party’s oath, or otherwise, that they are his books of original entries.
“Third. It must be shown, in like manner, that the ■charges are made at or near the time of the transaction therein entered, unless satisfactory reasons appear for not making such proof.
“Fourth. The charges must also be verified by the party or the clerk who made the entries, to the- effect that they believed them just and true, or a sufficient reason must be given why the verification is not made.” Civil Code, Sec. 346.
It appears from the above testimony that the first, second, and third clauses of the above section of the statute governing the production of account books in evidence, were substantially complied with; but not so of the fourth clause. It appears that many of the entries of charges introduced were not in the handwriting of the witness, but in that of Mr. Smith. The latter was not produced as a witness, nor was there any reason given for not producing him. It would seem that he was a clerk, or teller, in the employment of the plaintiff" at the time of making these entries, and he will be presumed still to be, or at least to be within the reach of a subpoena, until the contrary is shown. I understand the meaning of the statute to be that in cases where the party himself made the .entries he shall verify them to the effect that he believes them just and true, and where the entries are made by a clerk who is still living and within the reach of a subpoena, he must be produced and the entries verified by him. Here the entries were not verified in the manner nór to the effect required by -statute by any one. This applies even to the entries made by the cashier, who was sworn as a witness. The testimony of the witness, as to the handwriting of Smith, was
Having come to the conclusion that there must be a new trial for error in the admission of the books of the plaintiff without their being verified according to the statute, the remaining assignments as applicable to the trial of the issues before the district court will not be considered.
The seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth errors assigned are based upon the proceedings before Hon. S. B. Pound, district judge, at chambers, on the motion of the defendant to discharge the attachment and in overruling said motion.
The seventeenth assignment, being the first under this head, is directed to the form of the affidavit for the order of attachment. Plaintiff in error in the brief says: “ There are three claims and causes of action set forth, and the affidavit does not state that each of these claims are just,” etc.
Section 199 of the civil code provides that, “An order of attachment shall be made by the clerk of the court * * * * when there is filed in his office an affidavit of the plaintiff, his agent, or attorney, showing: First, The nature of the plaintiff’s claim. Second, That it is just. Third, The amount which the affiant believes the plaintiff ought to recover. Fourth, The existence of some, one of the grounds for an attachment enumerated in the preceding section.”
The affidavit, after reciting the commencement of the action by the plaintiff against the defendant in the district court of Cass county, proceeds — “ to recover the sum of $7,474.17 now due and payable to the plaintiff from defendant upon one promissory note for $4,000, dated February 18, 1886, on which there is a balance now due of $2,474.17, signed by Lawrence Holland and made and delivered to the said plaintiff; also $2,000 money advanced to defendant at his instance and request by plaintiff; also
I think this affidavit a sufficient compliance with the statute. The word claim, as used by the affiant, clearly refers to the entire claim of seven thousand four hundred seventy-four dollars and seventeen cents, and although as a matter of description he afterwards separates the claim into several parts, it was not, in my opinion, necessary that he should declare his belief in the justness of each subdivision or item of the claim.
But the chief ground of contention, as against the action of the court at chambers in overruling defendant’s motion to quash the attachment, is the untruth of‘the affidavit upon which the order of attachment was issued. The allegations of the affidavit to which attention is thus directed are as follows : “ And that the defendant, Lawrence Holland, has absconded with intent to defraud his creditors. Affiant further says that he has left the country to avoid the service of a summons, and that he so conceals himself that a summons cannot be served upon him. Affiant further says that defendant has property or rights in action which he conceals, and that he is about to convert a part of his property into money for the purpose of placing it beyond the reach of his creditors,” etc. In support and resistance of the motion there were produced and read to the judge, at the hearing, forty-two affidavits, many of them quite lengthy, besides several voluminous official records and certificates. These papers are contained in one •of the bills of exceptions, where they are placed without regard to order or sequence. The time at my command is not sufficient to enable me to make that exhaustive examination and study of these papers which I would wish, or which doubtless was made by the judge (who decided the question) on the motion at chambers.
These facts are all sworn to, positively, and nearly all of them are uncontradicted. But it matters not if they were contradicted, for the purposes of a reviewing court. The question, as I understand it, is, had the trial judge evidence before him to justify him in making the decision which he made ? If he had, such decision must be sustained by this court, although such evidence was contradicted by other evidence in every particular, or explained away to such an extent as 'to lead us to the conclusion that were it presented to us as an original question, we would decide it differently, unless the preponderance of evidence against the decision is clear and manifest. Such was the holding of this court in the case of Mayer & Schurmann v. Zingre, 18 Neb., 458. But, on the contrary, while the defendant in his affidavit explains where he was during this time — that on Wednesday, the 16th, he started for Weeping Water expecting to get there that night, or next day; that he went by way of Omaha, where he had some business to look after; that while there he learned that “he could get to Chicago on cut rates, which was $3 for the trip, and having before this contemplated visiting Chicago and Detroit, with his wife, who was rather sickly and needed recreation, he wrote her at Weeping Water, from Omaha, that he would go on to Detroit -while
There was also evidence tending to prove the other grounds of attachment charged in the affidavit for attachment, but which it is deemed unnecessary to review.
The finding, ruling, and order of the district judge, at chambers, in overruling the motion and application of the defendant to quash, dissolve, and discharge the attachment, is affirmed. And the judgment of the district court is reversed, with costs in this court, the costs of the district court to abide the result of a new trial, and the cause remanded to the district court for further proceedings in accordance with law.
Judgment accordingly.