Judges: Cochrane
Filed Date: 11/16/1921
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/27/2024
Nina F. Irving died October 31, 1918, leaving a last will and testament and codicil thereto whereby she appointed her son, Frederick C. Irving, the executor thereof. Andrew Irving was her husband. At the time of her death the St. Lawrence Trust Company owned two promissory notes both dated August 1,1918, one for $5,000 made by Eastern Quebec Land and Lumber Company to the order of and purporting to have been indorsed by the decedent and her husband, Andrew Irving, and the other for $3,500, purporting to have been made by the decedent to the order of and indorsed by her husband, Andrew Irving. The $5,000 note was not acquired by the trust company until September 3,1918. These two notes were presented to the executor for payment and by him rejected. After trial before the surrogate on a judicial settlement of the accounts of the executor the said notes were disallowed as valid claims against the estate of decedent on the ground that her purported signatures appearing on said notes were not genuine.
Much of the testimony at the trial and all of the testimony on the part of the respondent was given by expert witnesses on
In weighing evidence it is a fundamental rule that all the evidence should be harmonized if possible and that each part thereof should be considered in reference to the entire testimony and so as to bring about a consistent result. And it is particularly important that such a construction be placed on the evidence if it is reasonably possible to do so as will avoid the imputation of crime to any person. If two constructions are equally suggestive one of which implies crime or moral turpitude and the other is free from such implication, the latter should by all means be aclopted. Such we conceive to be the situation here. The decision we are reviewing not only implies that some one forged the decedent’s name but also quite strongly suggests that some of the appellant’s witnesses have deviated from the strict path of truthfulness. It is our duty to say whether we cannot so construe and reconcile the evidence as to avoid such a result.
Andrew Irving was a man prominent in the business and social fife of the city where he resided. He had also been president of a bank and of various important civil departments of the city government. He had at different times negotiated to this trust company notes of the Eastern Quebec Land and T,,mber Company, indorsed by himself. It is claimed that
The history of the $3,500 note is as follows: On December 1, 1917, there appeared in the trust company a note for $2,600 made by Mrs. Irving to the order of and indorsed by her husband: That was the first note bearing her signature accepted by the trust company. This note matured May 1, 1918, on which day the trust company accepted two notes purporting to have been made by Mrs. Irving to the order of and indorsed by her husband for $2,500 and $1,000, respectively. These two notes included and extinguished the $2,600 note which matured on that day. The two notes matured August 1, 1918, and on that day the trust company accepted in the place thereof the note in question for $3,500 made by Mrs. Irving to the order of and indorsed by her
There is nothing inconsistent or improbable in the testimony of the president of the trust company. On the contrary, subjected to careful analysis it bears inherent evidence of probabifity. Were it a fabrication it would in all likelihood be different in some respects. He does not testify as a fact that Mrs. Irving personally signed either the $5,000 or $3,500 note but his testimony makes her estate liable for the amount of both notes. His testimony as to the facts is not in conflict with the expert testimony on handwriting nor with any other evidence in the case. He is not discredited unless it be because as an officer of the trust company he is interested. Furthermore he is corroborated. Witnesses testified to having seen Mrs. Irving in the office of the president at the trust company. It was established that she never had any business transaction there unless it may have been in connection with the notes in question. She kept her bank account in another institution. A careful analysis of the evidence produces the conviction that it is such as to require us to find that even assuming as claimed
The decree should be modified by directing payment of the claims of the appellant and by eliminating the costs awarded against it, and as so modified- affirmed, with costs in its favor payable out of the estate. This court finds all the facts as contained in the appellant’s requests for such findings as submitted by it to the surrogate and disapproves the refusal by him to find such facts as he refused to find.
Present — John M. Kellogg, P. J., Cochrane, H. T. Kellogg, Kiley and Van Kirk, JJ.
Decree modified by directing payment of the claims of the appellant and by eliminating the costs awarded against it, and as so modified unanimously affirmed, with costs in its favor payable out of the estate. This court finds all the facts as contained in the appellant’s requests for such findings as submitted by it to the surrogate, and disapproves of the refusal by him to find such facts as he refused to find.