Farrell v. Palmer
Before: Rhodes
Synopsis
Appeal from the District Court, Seventh Judicial District, Solano County,
This was an action, commenced September 30th, 1865, to recover judgment on a promissory note for three thousand dollars and interest, executed by the defendants, Philip Palmer, Philip H. Palmer, and Samuel G-. Palmer, to Thomas Dowell, the plaintiff’s intestate, dated May 17th, 1859, and made payable one year after date; also, to foreclose a mortgage upon certain lands situated in Solano County, of the same date, and between the same parties, given to secure the payment of said note. The other defendants were impleaded as parties having or claiming to h^ive some 'interests in the mortgaged lands, which, as was alleged in the complaint, were subsequent and subordinate to the lien of said mortgage.
The following is the averment of the complaint respecting an acknowledgment of and an express promise to pay said debt, to wit: 11 And the said plaintiff avers that afterwards, to wit: on or about the first day of November, A. D. 1863, while said note was due and unpaid, the said defendant Philip Palmer, in consideration of said indebtedness, did in writing, under his own hand, duly signed by him, admit the said indebtedness and said note, and expressly promised to pay the same according to the tenor thereof.”
The defendants, other than Philip Palmer, demurred to the complaint. Philip Palmer, by answer, pleaded the Statute of Limitations, and denied the averments of the complaint in respect to an acknowledgment of and an express promise to pay said debt.
The following are the material portions of the letters of the defendant Philip Palmer, which are referred to in the opinion of the Court as sustaining the alleged acknowledgment by him of said debt, and which were written by him from California to the plaintiff, in the State of Ohio, who at the time was the administrator of the estate of said Thomas Dowell, then deceased, to wit:
Letter dated March 10th, 1862:
“I will give the proceeds [of certain specified school warrants] to pay, so far as they go. * * * I will remit money, more or less, when Sam Stuart gets his power of attorney [from plaintiff.] * * * I hope in a few months the suit will bo decided, [a suit involving the title to the mortgaged land,] and should I succeed, I will sell a part of the land and pay, or give a mortgage to some other person, and have your mortgage released; as it is now, I cannot make any chango. I am anxious to pay, but circumstances beyond my control, which I have stated to you in previous letters—not at all because I do not intend or wish to pay. It would be a real pleasure to pay you promptly. * * * I feel under obligations to you for not putting costs on it, * * and it has been to your interest as well as mine. * * ”
By the Court, Rhodes, J. : The defendant annexed to the interrogatories proposed by the plaintiff and attached to the commission certain objections, but it does not appear that he brought them to the attention of the Court and had a ruling thereon at the trial. [192]There is, therefore, no ground for the specification that the Court erred in overruling those objections. But waiving this point, and looking at the objections themselves, it will be seen that those worthy of notice amount to an objection to the admission of parol evidence to prove the contents of written instruments. Some of the questions were subject to this objection, but they were productive of no injury to the defendant, for the witness produced all the letters of the defendant about which he testified except one, and that lie stated was lost or mislaid, and they were annexed to the deposition; and the finding of the acknowledgment of indebtedness was based on letters written after the one which was lost.
Those letters, excluding those proposing terms of compromise, and those written more than four years before the commencement of the suit, constitute a sufficient acknowlment of the debt, both within the meaning of the statute and the definition given in McCormick v. Brown, ante, 180.
The complaint alleges an express promise to pay the debt, but it was not necessary to prove it, because a promise is implied from the acknowledgment, which is also alleged, though not with technical accuracy.
The acknowledgment was made to the witness while acting as the administrator of the estate of the deceased, and was therefore valid, and inured to the benefit of the estate.
The debt to which the acknowledgment relates is sufficiently identified. The witness wrote to the defendant in regard to the note in suit, and the defendant in his letters refers to the debt as payable to the witness, as the administrator of Thomas Dowell, deceased, and speaks of the mortgage given by him to the deceased. The plaintiff having proved a debt to which the acknowledgment might apply, the onus was on the defendant to show another debt to which it referred. The Court was justified in finding that the acknowledgment related to the debt secured by the note and mortgage in suit. Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice Sanderson expressed no opinion. .
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