Baird v. Duane

1 Cal. Unrep. 492
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1869
DocketNo. 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 Cal. Unrep. 492 (Baird v. Duane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baird v. Duane, 1 Cal. Unrep. 492 (Cal. 1869).

Opinion

SANDERSON, J.

This is an action to recover the possession of land. The case was tried with a jury. The verdict was for the plaintiffs. The defendants moved for a new trial, which was denied. The defendants have made a number of points, which we shall consider very briefly in the order in which they have been presented.

1. If the court below erred in not allowing the challenge for cause to the juror Brownstone, the error was without prejudice. He was subsequently challenged peremptorily, and the defendants were not prejudiced by being compelled to use one of their peremptory challenges in his case, for they had a peremptory challenge left after the jury had been formed and accepted.

[494]*4942. "Whether the court erred in overruling the defendant’s objection to the questions put to the witness Byfield, as to what knowledge he had of exhibit £IB” — the Gardiner survey —and how he came to employ Curry to build the fence, we are unable to determine. The statement fails to show what answers were made by the witness to either question. If the defendants were prejudiced, the prejudice came from the answers and not the questions. Without the answers of the witness, in such cases, the bill of exceptions, or statement, as the case may be, is incomplete and fatally defective. To show that an irrelevant question was asked is not enough. It must also appear that the question was not only answered, but how it was answered, before we can say that incompetent or irrelevant testimony was admitted. We have heretofore held that to render objections of this character available, the record must show that some evidence was admitted from which the law would infer injury or prejudice: People v. Graham, 21 Cal. 265; People v. White, 34 Cal. 183; Treat v. Reilly, 35 Cal. 129.

3. The deed from Moore to Byfield was properly received in evidence. If it be true, as claimed by counsel, that up to the time it was offered no proof had been made of possession or title in Moore, that circumstance constituted no valid objection to its admission. It is true that the court, in the exercise of its discretion, might have excluded the deed until after proof of the grantor’s title, but the court in its discretion might also admit the deed first. The order in which testimony shall be received is always in the discretion of the court. Nor was the fact, if so, that the description in the deed did not correspond with the description in the complaint any valid objection to its admission. Although the descriptions may have been different, yet they may have described the same land, and it was competent for the plaintiffs to show by evidence aliunde that both descriptions applied to the same land: Began v. O’Reilly, 32 Cal. 11; Reamer v. Nesmith, 34 Cal. 624.

4. The objection to the admission of the deed from Smith to Byfield rests upon the same grounds, and, therefore, admits of the same answer. Without referring specially to the testimony, however, it is sufficient to say generally that there [495]*495was introduced during the trial evidence as to the titles of both grantors sufficient to justify the admission of both deeds.

5, 6, 7. These points all relate to the proof of declarations made by different parties while in possession of the land in suit. The declarations were explanatory of their possession, and tended to show that they were in under the plaintiff’s grantors. Such declarations are always admissible, independent of the question whether the parties by whom they were made are themselves competent witnesses. The objections were frivolous, and ought not to be pressed in this court.

8. The answer of the witness Sweeney to the question as to the condition of the fences six weeks before the trial could have had no appreciable effect. He evidently had taken no special notice of the fence, and so stated, but were it otherwise, no exception was taken to the testimony, and counsel must, therefore, be presumed to have acquiesced in its admission: Turner v. Tuolumne County Water Co., 25 Cal. 397.

9. The objections made to the admission of the notice from Coggswell v. Schaadt that the former had sold to plaintiffs and that the latter must attorn to them, and to the question as to what Schaadt said when the notice was shown to him, are unsubstantial. The objection to the notice was the general one, that it was incompetent and irrelevant, and was grounded upon the assumption that there was no testimony in the case tending to show that Coggswell and Schaadt stood in the relation of landlord and tenant. We think there was. The answer to the question as to what Schaadt said is not given, and the objection is, therefore, so far unavailable, for reasons already given in answer to the second point.

10. 11. These points are frivolous. They relate to the right of one party to interpose and take a witness out of the hands of the other while under examination. No such right exists, except in the discretion of the court, and for the court to refuse to allow it to be done is not error.

12. The testimony of Yon Schmidt as to what Ross said to him in a conversation at the house at Láke Honda was certainly competent as against Ross or his .representative, Mrs. Ross. If the court erred at all in connection therewith it was in directing the jury not to consider the testimony as affecting any of the defendants except Mrs. Ross. The plaintiffs claimed that all the defendants were trespassers, and that Ross [496]*496was the pioneer, and the other defendants subsequently joined him in his raid upon their premises. This claim, on their part, was not without a substantial foundation afforded by the testimony. If the other defendants entered under Ross, they were bound by his declarations and statements, and we think the plaintiffs were entitled to go to the jury with their ease upon that theory, under proper instructions from the court to the effect that the other defendants could not be affected by the statements, unless for the reason suggested.

13. The testimony of O’Keefe as to the arrangement made by him, as agent for the plaintiffs, with Ross was not hearsay. On the contrary, it was the testimony of the identical party by whom the arrangement was made. The objection to the testimony on the score that it was uncertain and indefinite as to time and as to the land, in respect to which the arrangement was made, is, if possible, still less substantial.

14. Under the circumstances in which the question as to his health, on his arrival in the state in 1860, was put to the defendant Duane while on the witness-stand, we think there was no error on the part of the court in not allowing him to answer. In the midst of his examination as to the material issues in the case his counsel abruptly asked him: “What was the condition of your health when you arrived in 1860 ? ’ ’ Up to the time this question was asked nothing had appeared to give it pertinence. Counsel now say that it was the first of a series which they intended to ask for the purpose of explaining why Duane had neglected for two or three years after his return to the state to look after or take possession of this land. We think, with counsel, that his delay for so long a time to take any steps to obtain possession of this land, if he had any claim to it, was a circumstance calculated to east some doubt upon the existence of such a claim, and, therefore, stood in much need of explanation.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Cal. Unrep. 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baird-v-duane-cal-1869.