Clement v. Clement
Decision Date | 28 September 1949 |
Docket Number | 168 |
Citation | 55 S.E.2d 459,230 N.C. 636 |
Parties | CLEMENT v. CLEMENT. |
Court | North Carolina Supreme Court |
The plaintiff sued the defendant for recovery of a balance alleged to be due on three notes, all under seal: One made March 3, 1930, in the sum of $100; another made June 25 1931, in the sum of $200; and another made January 16, 1930 in the sum of $1,900. All of these were made to the plaintiff. In his complaint he admits various payments made upon them, reducing the total indebtedness, as he alleges, to a balance of $2,229.76, principal and interest. The defendant admits the execution of the notes, claims that they have been discharged by various payments made thereupon and are no longer owing; and pleads as a further defense that the plaintiff, some time after the execution of the notes, agreed not to charge any interest upon them, in view of the fact that the defendant had lost a large part of the proceeds in the failure and closure of the banks. This was denied in plaintiff's reply.
On the trial the evidence as to the exact sum due upon the notes, if any, was for the jury and need not be gone into in detail. The interest, however, which plaintiff claimed, constituted a substantial amount since the loans had run over a considerable period before suit was brought. The controversy is principally over this interest which, it is contended under the instructions of the court, plaintiff was allowed to recover.
The question here posed is whether under the facts relating to this item, recovery was proper.
The language of the answer in setting up the defense is as follows:
The evidence admitted in support of it is substantially as follows: 'Me and him got to talking, and I lost so much money in the bank that I said to him if he had had his money in the bank he would have lost it; that mine was gone and that he ought not to charge me interest on this money anyway, and he said I am not going to charge you any interest.'
Defendant introduced in evidence the following writing:
There was evidence tending to show that this writing was signed by the plaintiff.
Plaintiff objected to the introduction of the evidence concerning this document or transaction on the ground that it was not contemporaneous with the execution of the notes and was without consideration. The court charged the jury with respect to consideration as follows: The jury, answering the issue as...
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