{
  "id": 11274174,
  "name": "NANNIE BUXLY v. J. C. BUXTON, Adm'r",
  "name_abbreviation": "Buxly v. Buxton",
  "decision_date": "1885-02",
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  "provenance": {
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    "parties": [
      "NANNIE BUXLY v. J. C. BUXTON, Adm\u2019r."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "SMITH, C. J.\nThe action is upon a note under seal, for the payment of money, alleged in the complaint to have been executed by the intestate of the defendant, and denied in the answer of the latter. The pleadings are both verified, and the only issue submitted to the jury was, \u201c Is the bond sued ou the act and deed of J. N. Shelton, the defendant\u2019s intestate?\u201d To which the response was in the affirmative.\nUpon the trial, the plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show the signature to the note to be in the hand-writing of the intestate, in the opinion of the witnesses, while other witnesses testified that the intestate admitted his execution of the instrument, and said that he would pay it. The defendant introduced a large number of witnesses who swore that they were well acquainted with the intestate\u2019s signature, aud that, in their opinion, that on the note was spurious and not his.\nThe defendant, examined on his own behalf, testified to two conversations with the plaintiff, one of which took place when the note was presented to him for payment, some eight months after the intestate\u2019s death, and the other some two or three months later, when the note was a second time presented and payment demanded. In the first conversation the defendant denied that the signature ivas that of his intestate, and that the plaintiff in answer to an inquiry where she got the money for which the note was given, said that she made it by sewing for the girls at the Greensboro college. In reply to a similar inquiry at the next presentation of the note, the plaintiff stated that it was sent to her by her uncle from the west, in a registered letter.\nThe plaintiff was in court and heard this testimony, but was not examined, nor did she offer any evidence to show the source from which she obtained the money constituting the consideration of the note.\nThere was evidence that the plaintiff had always resided in the county, and both pro and con as to her needy circumstances.\nIn the argument of defendant\u2019s counsel he insisted that the plaintiff had the power of proving by her uncle\u2019s deposition, if such was the fact, that the money was furnished by him to her, and could have summoned the postmaster to prove his delivery of a registered letter, and that she having failed to make this proof when the answer denied the genuineness of the note, it was to be presumed that the denial was true, and this circumstance was to be weighed by the jury against her.\nThe Court charged the jury that there was no presumption of law to be argued against the plaintiff\u2019s statements of the source from which the money was derived, and that they were false, because she had not produced her uncle or the postmaster; that this was a circumstance, and it did not appear that either was living, or who or where they were. To this instruction the defendant excepted.\nBesides other instructions, to which no exception was taken, the Court charged further: \u201c The evidence of the intestate\u2019s admission when viewing the instrument, that it was the note he gave to the plaintiff, if accepted by the jury as true, is entitled to greater weight than the expression of opinion by witnesses or experts as to the genuineness or falsity of the handwriting. An opinion as to a man\u2019s handwriting ought to be received by the jury Avitli caution.\u201d To these directions exceptions Avere also taken.\nThe verdict being returned and judgment rendered for the plaintiff, the defendant appealed.\nThe exceptions appealing in the record are confined to the charge addressed to the jury, and not upon assigned errors in law in the rulings, and a supposed disregard of the act of 1796, Avhieh forbids the Judge to express \u201c an opinion Avhether a fact is fully or sufficiently proven.\u201d The Code, \u00a7413.\n(1.) There ivas no error committed in .telling the jury, that the failure to produce the eAddence of the postmaster and the plaintiff\u2019s uncle, to corroborate her last account of the manner in which she came in possession of the money loaned, raised a presumption against the truth of her statement, ivas not a correct proposition in law, and that the omission Avas but a circumstance to be considered with other proofs offered, in arriving at a conclusion as to the truth or falsehood of her declaration. Nor was it wrong to remind them of the absence of evidence that the witnesses were living, or who, or where they were. There is no such rule of law to be declared to the jury, and the corroborative evidence has but a remote, if any, bearing upon the issue as to the execution of the note by the intestate. Whether the money was obtained from the one or the other source, or whether any money was loaned to form the consideration of the former\u2019, has at most but a slight tendency towards proving the fabrication of the instrument sued on. Being under seal, it imports or rather dispenses with proof of a consideration, unless when some equitable relief is sought.\n\u25a0The plaintiff was not herself examined, and hence no discrediting effect upon her evidence is imparted by the alleged false statement. The significance allowed to this omission, in leaving it for the consideration of the jury, furnishes no cause of complaint to the defendant and he could not ask more.\nNor can there be error in saying there was no evidence of a fact, when there was none, that constitutes an important element among those from which the unfavorable presumption is proposed to be deduced.\n(2.) The exception to the instruction that an opinion as to one\u2019s hand-writing ought to be received with caution, and that direct-evidence that the intestate, when he saw the note, admitted its execution and his liability to pay it, if accepted as true, was entitled to greater weight than such opinions when expressed, is equally untenable.\nThis is not a case of recognition of a person or thing seen and remembered, but of an exemplar or ideal, impressed upon the mind to which the disputed hand-writing is compared, and from its conformity to which as a standard is inferred its genuineness or falsity. The identity of the hand-writing, as proceeding from one and the same source is thus determined in the opinion of the witness, and this opinion becomes evidence to aid the jury in coming to a conclusion as to the controverted fact. It is, therefore, obvious upon general reason and founded upon common experience, that opinions thus formed are more uncertain, and should be more carefully considered and acted upon than positive testimony from a credible witness, who saw and knows the fact of the execution of the note, or which is of equivalent force, the direct admission of the maker or obligor. There could, therefore, be no harm in making the observation in regard to these classes of evidence and their relation to the controversy, in accordance with which the jury ought to act, and, it may be assumed, would act in the absence of the suggestion.\nThe reference to the treatises of Taylor and Wharton on the law of evidence only show that the opinions of experts or those who have acquired knowledge of a particular individual's handwriting, and are allowed to testify, as held in Pope v. Askew, 1 Ired., 16, are primary or original evidence, and as such to be regarded by the jury. But the value of the opinions, as proof of the matter about which they are formed, must be left to the jury to estimate. Their force and effect are not dependent, as is direct and positive testimony, upon the means of knowledge and the credibility of the witnesses alone, but upon the correctness of their deductions from an examination of the writing. In thus being subjected to further contingencies, opinions, however honestly entertained, furnish less reliable basis for reaching a correct result, than direct testimony to the fact, derived from equally credible witnesses who have personal knowledge. An apt illustration is supplied in the present case. Witnesses for the plaintiff express opinions that the signature is genuine, while a large number for the defendant say that it is spurious. These are discrepant conclusions, reached by persons who have examined the writing, and may be honestly entertained without imputing falsehood to either class, and they show the propriety and fitness of the suggestion of caution in accepting it as a proof of the ultimate fact, and its gre\u00e1ter uncertainty in comparison with the other form of evidence. There are cases in our reports affording support by analogy to the remark contained in the charge.\nIn State v. Ellington, 7 Ired., 61, where the mother and sister testified on behalf of the prisoner, and the charge was \u201cthat it was the province of the jury to say whether the witnesses have testified truly, notwithstanding their relation to the prisoner, or had yielded to that human infirmity to which we are all liable, and had testified falsely in favor of their son and brother,\u201d Euffin, C. J., said, \u201cNor was there error in telling the jury that their (the witnesses) relation to the prisoner affected their credit. That is a proposition of law and reason!\u201d\nSo in State v. Nash, 8 Ired., 35, the charge that \u201cthe law regarded with suspicion the testimony of near relations when testifying for each, other,\u201d was sustained.\nThe same observation in reference to the testimony of fellow-servants of the accused was upheld as free from objection in State v. Nat, 6 Jones, 114.\nIn Wiseman v. Cornish, 8 Jones, 218, where the refusal to so charge was assigned for error, the late Chief Justice said: \u201c There being no rule of law in regard to the matter, it must be left to the discretion of the Judge.\u201d\nThe same rule is acted on in regard to the credit to which the evidence of an accomplice is entitled.\nIn Rex v. Jones, 2 Campbell, 132, Lord Ellenborough remarked : \u201cJudges in their discretion will advise a jury not to believe an accomplice unless he is confirmed, or only so far as he is confirmed, but if he is believed, his testimony is unquestionably sufficient to establish the facts he deposes.\u201d\nQuoting these words in State v. Haney, 2 D. & B., 390, Gas-ton, J., adds: \u201cWe are not aware of any judicial decision in our country at variance with the rule brought hither by our ancestors.\u201d\nIn State v. Hardin, Ibid., 407, Ruffin, C. J., in reference to such evidence uses this language: \u201c It is, however, dangerous to act exclusively on such evidence, and, therefore, the Court may properly caution the jury and point out the grounds for requiring evidence confirmatory of some substantial parts of it.\u201d\nThese are sufficient- to show that observations of the kind under review, are not obnoxious to the objection that they are unauthorized by law, and may be made in aid of the jury in arriving at their verdict.\nThe appellant\u2019s chief objection to these expressions of the Judge is, that- they intimate an opinion upon the facts, and invade the province of the jury.\nWe look in vain for any proof of the imputed intimation. The opinions of experts come from both parties, and what was said is alike applicable to them all. The suggestion of the Avant of evidence that certain witnesses were alive and their testimony could have been obtained, was certainly not improper when deductions are to be drawn from a mere omission to produce the testimony. The absence of this proof is a fact in the case which ought not to be over looked in qualifying the general proposition, nor was there error in calling attention to it.\nThe trial throughout seems to have been conducted with entire impartiality and fairness, with no indication of an opinion whether any part is or is not \u201c fully or sufficiently proven,\u201d or of any leaning or bias for or against either party. The jury having rendered their verdict, we see no cause for setting it aside, and tire judgment must be affirmed.\nNo error. Affirmed.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "SMITH, C. J."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "No counsel for the plaintiff'.",
      "Messrs. Watson & Glenn and lieade, Busbee cb Busbee, for the defendant."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "NANNIE BUXLY v. J. C. BUXTON, Adm\u2019r.\nBond \u2014 Consideration\u2014Judge\u2019s Charge \u2014 Opde, Beetion 413\u2014 Weight of JEvidenee \u2014 Bead.-\n1. The execution o\u00ed the bond sued on being denied by the defendant administrator, he introduced evidence of conflicting declarations made by the plaintiff to him when the bond was presented for payment, as to the sources from which she obtained the money which was the consideration of the bond, \u25a0plaintiff failed to introduce evidence to corroborate either of these declarations, or to show from what source the money was procured by her; Held, that this furnished no presumption in favor of the defendant that his intestate had never executed the bond. It was only a circumstance to be considered by the jury with the other evidence in the case.\n2. Held further, that it was not error for the Judge to remind the jury \u2014 such being the fact \u2014 that there was no evidence before them that the parties who might be called as witnesses, to corroborate the declarations of the plaintiff, were alive at the time of the trial.\n8. It is not a violation of the Act of 1796, (The- Code, sec. 413), for-the Judge to tell the jury that the evidence that the intestate had seen the bond, and admitted that the had executed it, if believed by the jury to be true, is entitled to more weight than the opinions of experts as to the genuineness of the signature, and that such opinions should be received with caution.\n4. A seal imports, or rather dispenses with proof of consideration, except when equitable relief is sought.\n(Pope v. Askew, 1 Ired., 16; State v. Ellington, 7 Ired., 61; State v. Nash, 8 Ired., 33; State v. Nat, 6 Jones, 114; Wiseman v. Cornish, 8 Jones, 218 ; State v. Haney, 8 Dev. & Bat., 390; State v. Hardin, Ibid, 407, cited and approved).\nCivil, ACTION tried before Gilmer, Judge, and a jury, at Spring Term, 1884, of Davidson Superior Court.\nThe facts appear in the opinion.\nThere was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed.\nNo counsel for the plaintiff'.\nMessrs. Watson & Glenn and lieade, Busbee cb Busbee, for the defendant."
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