Garnett v. Kirkman

41 Miss. 94
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 41 Miss. 94 (Garnett v. Kirkman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garnett v. Kirkman, 41 Miss. 94 (Mich. 1866).

Opinion

Ellett, J".,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant’s intestate brought this suit, in 1849, against T. N. Waul, executor of Samuel Hurd, deceased, to recover an open - account, due by the deceased wife of Hurd, before her [95]*95intermarriage with him. The case has already been three times before this court, and is found to be reported in 13 Smedes & M. 599, 27 Miss. 823, and 33 Miss. 389. The declaration contains but one count, which is on an account stated by and between the plaintiff below, and Hurd, the defendant, and the plea was non assumpsit. No copy of the account was filed. In effect, the cause was tried without pleadings, under a written agreement that all special matter might be given in evidence under the declaration, in the same manner as if the proper counts were written out, and that the plaintiff should be at liberty to show other and different agreements than the one named in the declaration ; and the defendant to be allowed to make every defence.

Mrs. Hurd had died on the 8th of October, 1843, leaving a will, of which her husband became the executor. On the first trial, it would appear that the effort was to charge Hurd personally for the debt, on the ground that, both before and after his wife’s death, he had promised to pay it, in consideration of forbearance. Most of the evidence since relied on was then before the court, and it was decided that there was no evidence sufficient to establish an agreement by Hurd, such as was alleged by the plaintiff. There was no agreement for forbearance proved, and as to the promises made in Mrs. Hurd’s lifetime, it was held that these amounted to no more than a recognition of his common law liability, as husband, for the debts of his wife; and as to those made after her death, these were invalid for want of a new consideration, and because not in writing, as required by the statute of frauds.

When the case came here the second time, it appeared that the right of recovery had been rested in the court below solely on the ground of promises made by Hurd, after the death of his wife, to pay the debt in consideration of forbearance ; and the letters of Hurd to ICirkman, some written in the lifetime of his wife, and others after her decease, and some before, and some after his qualification as executor, all of which had been given in evidence on the former trial, were relied on as sufficient evidence of an agreement in writing within the statute of [96]*96frauds. It was again, decided that the evidence did not show any promise to pay in consideration of forbearance, nor any agreement for forbearance whatever; and that the letters were, at best, mere unaccepted proposals of terms of adjustment.

On the third appearance of the cause in this court, the record showed that the right of recovery had been rested in the court below, on the ground that Hurd, during the life of his wife, being then liable as husband for her debts, had made a new and original agreement with Kirkman, whereby he assumed absolutely the payment of the debt, in consideration of forbearance, and time given him by Kirkman; and that such an agreement was not within the statute of frauds. After a close and searching examination of all the testimony, this court came to the conclusion that there was no evidence in the cause, legitimately conducing to the conclusion that any such agreement as that relied on by the plaintiff had ever existed; and that the court below had therefore erred in refusing to instruct the jury, as requested by the defendant, that in this case the plaintiff has proved nothing which conduces to show his right to recover, and that they must find for the defendant.”

After this decision the cause was again tried in the Circuit Court of Yalobusha county at April term, 1858, and a verdict found in favor of the defendant. This verdict was set aside on motion of the plaintiff, and a new trial was had at the October term, 1858, which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. A motion made by defendant to set aside this last verdict was overruled by the court, and judgment entered upon it. On both these last trials the defendant took bills of exception to the action of the court on the motions for a new trial, in sustaining the first and overruling the second, and upon these bills of exception the cause is again brought to this court.

It is first insisted that the court erred in granting the new trial on the motion of the plaintiff, at April term, 1858, and in refusing to enter up a final judgment in favor of the defendant, on the verdict of the jury.

The record shows that in this trial the plaintiff relied on the [97]*97same evidence that was before this court on the preceding trial, except that the testimony of Angus Johnson, and several letters of Hurd to Enrkman, written after the death of Mrs. Hurd, do not appear to have been offered on this trial, and except that the marriage contract between Hurd and his wife, on being offered, was ruled out by the court.

No instructions were given or asked, on the part of the plaintiff ; but a number of charges were given at the instance of the defendant, fully and clearly expounding the law of the case, according to the former decisions of this court, and including the charge refused on the former trial, which of itself was conclusive of the case.

On the motion for this new trial, no objection was made to any action of the court during the trial, nor was it pretended that the verdict was against the law or the evidence, as the case was presented to the jury. The plaintiff stated several propositions as the grounds of his motion, all of which are resolvable into two, to wit: First. That he was forced into trial in the absence of the counsel upon whom he relied to try the cause, and was thereby prevented from having his case fairly presented, and by which injustice was done him; and secondly, because, since the trial, he had discovered new and material evidence.

As to the first ground, the absence of counsel is not, alone, a sufficient reason for granting a new trial. It must also appear that there were probable merits in the party’s case, which sustained prejudice in consequence of the absence of the counsel relied on to present the case to the court and jury. In this case it is too late for the plaintiff to claim the existence of merits, so far as relates to the testimony given on the trial. That testimony had already been three times decided by this court, not to conduce, in any degree, to make out a case for the plaintiff. The most that can be said of it is, that it goes to show, perhaps with sufficient clearness, that the wife of the defendant’s testator owed the debt sued on to the plaintiff, before her marriage, and that it was a just claim against her estate, in his hands as her executor. But in every aspect in [98]*98which it had been offered to establish the liability of Mr. Hurd, after the death of his wife, to pay the debt out of his own estate, it had been held to be totally insufficient for the purpose.

The only special ground alleged by the plaintiff in his affidavit, read in support of the motion for a new trial, to show that his cause was prejudiced by the absence of counsel, is, that certain written testimony, which was among the papers at the trial, was not read by the counsel, unexpectedly introduced to try' the cause, they being unaware of its importance, and ignorant of the connection of the case. The testimony alluded to consisted of the letters of Hurd to Kirkman, written after the death of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
41 Miss. 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garnett-v-kirkman-miss-1866.