Doe v. Prettyman

1 Del. 334
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 1, 1857
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Del. 334 (Doe v. Prettyman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Prettyman, 1 Del. 334 (Del. Ct. App. 1857).

Opinion

By the Court:

The object of our recent statute is .to allow amendments either in form or substance any time before judgment, on such-terms as the Court may deem reasonable under the circumstances, to prevent a failure of justice, or unnecessary delay in the judicial administration of it, by reason of mistakes, accidents or surprises of this character. The Court will therefore allow the amendment to bp made by.the plaintiffs, on condition that they-pay the costs of the term and grant a continuance of the case, if [337]*337the counsel for the defendants requires it. The counsel for the defendants replied that he was willing to proceed with the trial, if the costs of the term were paid by the plaintiffs. But the Court said that if the amendment did not require a continuance of the case on the part of the defendants, they could impose no condition on the plaintiffs as to the costs of the term. After some consultation between the counsel, however, the plaintiffs agreed to pay the costs of the term, and the trial proceeded.

W. Saulsbury, for the defendants,

raised the objection that the testimony was not admissible. The plaintiffs were es-topped by the proceedings in chancery on their petition for partition of the premises between themselves as the heirs of John Short and H. Piper as the grantee of Isaac [338]*338Short, in which she was admitted and recognized, alike in the petition, the commission to make the partition, and in the decree of the Chancellor affirming and establishing it, as seized in fee of the one moiety of the premises, by virtue of the said Isaac Short’s deed to her, as tenants in common with them who were seized of a like interest and estate in them, under the devise by Edward Short to John Short, their father. 1 Greenl. Ev., secs. 22, 23, 207, 528; Jackson v. Hoffman, 9 Cow. 271; Inskeep et al. v. Shields et al., 4 Harr. 345; Tubbs v. Lynch, 4 Harr. 521; Stean v. Anderson, 4 Harr. 209. Furthermore, it was not competent in a court of law to impeach the validity of a deed executed, acknowledged and recorded,, on the ground of the mental incapacity of the grantor to make it, at least it had never been done in this State.

[337]*337The defendants’ counsel then offered in evidence the deed of Isaac Short to Hannah Piper, dated January 12, 1835, for his share of the premises, which was objected to on the other side, ffrst because it appeared to be null and void upon its face, and secondly because the grantor was incompetent, by reason of his mental incapacity, to make a valid deed at that time. But the Court overruled the objections. They applied to the effect, not the admissibility of the deed, as evidence for what it was worth. For if it appeared to be formally executed, and was delivered as his deed, it was admissible in evidence, and the grounds of objection were matters for consideration before the jury. He then put in evidence sundry other deeds, by which he traced the title from Hannah Piper in the premises to Robert Prettyman, one of the defendants. After which, testimony was adduced on the part of the plaintiffs to prove that Isaac Short, who was now dead, was in his lifetime a person of weak and imbecile mind, and had been so from his birth; that he was non compos mentis, and was conse- . quently incapable of making a valid deed and conveyance for his interest and estate in the premises to Hannah Piper, from whom the defendant R. Prettyman derived his title. During the examination of the second witness to this point,

C. S. Layton, for the plaintiffs:

It is competent in a court of law to impeach a deed on the ground stated. Porter v. Buckingham, 2 Harr. 197. Under the will of Edward Short, and according to the construction given to it by this Court, in the case of Connoway v. Piper, 3 Harr. 482, John Short and Isaac Short took but a life estate in the lands devised to them in the third item of it, and the petition in chancery for the partition of it between the heirs of John Short and H. Piper as the alienee of Isaac Short, did not allege any larger estate in them. It was therefore not within the power or jurisdiction of that or any other tribunal, by the ' commission or the decree affirming the partition, to confer upon the parties any other estate in the premises than that which they took under the devise in question. 5 Law Libr. 60; Greenl. Ev., secs. 22, 23.

E. D. Cullen, on the same side:

A party was not estopped from averring anything consistent with the record. 1 Saund. Pl. & Ev. 62. The will was a part of the record, and by it it appeared that the parties in partition had hut a life estate. Again, a party was not estopped by a record coram nonjudice, and the Chancellor exceeded his jurisdic[339]*339tian in decreeing a fee, and the parties were not estopped from denying that they took a fee under the will. A remainderman is not bound by a partition between the tenants for life, and to which he was not a party. The allegation must be certain to every intent in particular, and if a thing be not particularly and certainly alleged, a party should not be estopped by it. Arch. Pl. 208. Where was it particularly and certainly alleged in the proceedings in chancery that the parties to the partition took a fee ? The plaintiffs therefore were not estopped from denying that Isaac Short took but a life estate under the will. 8 Mees. & Wels. 209; 5 Cow. 201; 7 Mass. 78; 19 Wend. 367; 17 Wend. 119; 4 Wend. 278. A deed may be impeached in a court of law on the ground of the imbecility of the grantor. 2 Law Libr. 163; 25 Idem, 15.

The plaintiffs in this suit may impeach the deed in question, notwithstanding it was executed, acknowledged, and recorded, if they can show to the satisfaction of the jury that the grantor had not sufficient intelligence and understanding to know what he was doing when he made it. The acknowledgment and recording establishes the factum of the deed, and dispenses with any proof as to its execution and delivery; but this does not exempt it from impeachment in a court of law, on the ground of fraud, or imposition, or that the grantor was non compos mentis and had not sufficient capacity to comprehend the nature and effect of it, or to make a valid deed at the time of executing and acknowledging it.

In regard to the other objection, made to the admissibility of the testimony, the principle of estoppel is, that what a party admits by deed or of record to be true, in reference to 'his own title, or that of another party, he cannot afterwards deny, to the prejudice of any party who would be injured by the denial of that admission. Edward Short was the owner of the four hundred and three acres in dispute, in fee, and devised the premises without limita- , tian to his sons John and Isaac Short. The latter con[340]*340veyed his undivided half to Hannah Piper in fee. John Short died, and his heirs-at-law, among whom were the lessors of the plaintiff, instituted proceedings in chancery for the partition of the land between them and Mrs. Piper, in which proceedings they admit the title of Edward Short and of Isaac Short, and also of the title of Mrs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bool v. Mix
17 Wend. 119 (New York Supreme Court, 1837)
Brownell v. Brownell
19 Wend. 367 (New York Supreme Court, 1838)
State v. Stevens
139 A. 78 (New York Court of General Session of the Peace, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Del. 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-prettyman-delsuperct-1857.