Carr v. McCarthy

38 N.W. 241, 70 Mich. 258, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 811
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 38 N.W. 241 (Carr v. McCarthy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carr v. McCarthy, 38 N.W. 241, 70 Mich. 258, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 811 (Mich. 1888).

Opinion

Morse, J.'

The plaintiff sued defendant in trover for the value of certain personal property. The parties are brothers-in-law.

The plaintiff recovered judgment in the circuit court for Livingston county in the sum of $513.55.

Bryan Carr and Catherine, his wife, the father and mother of plaintiff, had for many years owned and occupied a farm in the township of Deerfield, Livingston county. In 1879, both being then upwards of 70 years of age, the old people concluded to, and did, make a division of their property. They had four children, all adults, — two sons and two daughters. The daughters were married. They owned 160 acres of land and some personal property. They gave a mortgage of $1,000 to the two daughters upon this land, $500 to each, and then divided it into halves, and deeded one-half to the plaintiff, and the other to Patrick Carr, his brother. The sons each gave back a life-lease to their parents.

The claim of the plaintiff is that, at the time this division of property was made, he and his father entered into a verbal agreement that the plaintiff should work the whole farm, live in the house with his father and mother, have as his ówn absolutely what personal property there was then on the farm, take care of and support them and each of them, and furnish them with what spending money they might need, during their lives, for which he should receive, besides the personal property then on hand, all he could produce and raise upon the farm.

Under this arrangement, or some other, the proofs show plaintiff took possession of the farm in the fall of 1879, and worked and operated it as his own, and supported his father and mother, until sometime in 1886, when his troubles began.

The theory of the defendant is that the personal property upon the farm, at the time the plaintiff went there, was not to be his absolutely, but, by the arrangement between him and his father, was to be and remain in the possession and' [260]*260ownership of the old people while they lived, and that plaintiff was to have what might be left at the time of the death of the one last surviving, and that he had no right during their lives to sell any property off from the place, and appropriate it to his own use and benefit.

This controversy arises as follows: In May or June, 1886, the plaintiff had an altercation or trouble of some kind with a woman in the neighborhood by the name of O’Connell. She procured his arrest for alleged assault and battery upon her. His father went his bail. The plaintiff left the country before the trial, under fear of the result of the same. He went away in June, leaving wheat and oats upon the place, without making any provision for harvesting them. He was gone about six weeks. When he returned, he found most of the personal property upon the farm had been taken possession of by the defendant. The grain had been harvested and taken care of by McCarthy. He demanded all the property of the defendant, which demand was refused. He was again arrested, tried, and convicted of assault and battery, and sent to the Ionia House of Correction for 90 days. He served out his term.

The plaintiff claimed that he went away with the consent of his father, and that he was induced to do so by his brother and the defendant, who represented that, if he stayed and stood trial, he would probably be sent to State prison, as the woman was going to claim that he made a felonious assault upon her; that he did not intend to abandon the farm, or the support of his father and mother, but only to remain away for a short period, which his father thought was best, until the assault and battery matter was settled or quieted in some way. As soon as he left, the defendant stepped in and took everything.

The defendant’s claim was that the father, Bryan Carr, had a right to dispose of all this property, and that he received it under an arrangement with said Bryan Carr.

[261]*261So;ue of the property sued for had been purchased by the plaintiff, but the defendant claims that such property was purchased by plaintiff with the proceeds of the produce of the farm, and that, having abandoned the support of his father and mother, the plaintiff had no interest in it, and it belonged to his father.

The defendant complains that he was not permitted to show this arrangement that he made with Bryan Carr, the father. When he received the property, he claims that the old gentleman was in possession of it, and that he had a right to show that he bought it of him, and the whole arrangement he made with him, to show his title. There is no doubt of this proposition. He had a right to show the source of his title, and what and how he paid for the property. But wag he entitled to prove what Bryan Carr said to him. about his ownership of the property when the plaintiff was not present? We think not. If the old gentleman had been living, his declarations could not have been admitted in his own favor3 or in favor of any one claiming title under him; and his death did not make the testimony any less objectionable. That Bryan Carr told defendant that he was the owner of the property when he delivered it to him was not competent evidence to establish such ownership, and could have no possible bearing upon the question at issue in any other respect.

He also undertook to show what Bryan Carr said to others about the ownership of the property, and also general repute in the neighborhood that the old gentlemen owned it. This was hearsay, and properly ruled out. The fact that Bryan Carr was dead at the time of the trial could not change the rule.

But the questions looking towards the proof of the purchase of this property by the defendant, ruled out by the court, were most of them leading; and, as it appears by the record, he was afterwards permitted to show that he purchased many of the items of Bryan Carr, and allowed substantially to show [262]*262his whole arrangement with the old gentleman. We think the jury were fully informed that defendant claimed under a. purchase from the old gentleman, and that he based his title-upon the theory that none of the property belonged to plaintiff absolutely, and that, by his abandonment of the premises, he had lost any right to any of it. And we are also unable-to ascertain from the record the full extent of the testimony received under this branch of the case. The bill of exceptions states:

“The foregoing [speaking of the whole of the testimony returned] is not the substance of all the testimony given on the trial, but the substance of a part of it.”

Without all the testimony before us, we cannot presume error. But there is enough in the record to show that defendant was permitted to state that he purchased or received all the property from Bryan Carr. He testified, without objection:

“ I cut the wheat and oats that have been mentioned, in-pursuance of an agreement made between myself and Bryan Carr. I was to pay him 8100 for the horse. I was to harvest- and take care of the crops, and was to give him whatever he wanted occasionally out of the crops, and take him to Fenton, and take him to church, and buy him whatever little things he wanted out of the crops, and the remainder was to-go to myself,” etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 N.W. 241, 70 Mich. 258, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-v-mccarthy-mich-1888.