Harrington v. Harrington

3 Miss. 701
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 Miss. 701 (Harrington v. Harrington) 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
Harrington v. Harrington, 3 Miss. 701 (Mich. 1838).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Shaukey

delivered the opinion of the court.

The foundation of this proceeding was upon a suit atlaw, instituted by Hezekiah Harrington, as executor of the last will and testament of Sarah B. Bradford, against Jephthah Harrington, for the recovery of certain negroes, as' a part of the estate. As a bar to the action, the defendant set up a deed of gift for the negroes in question, made by Sarah B. Bradford in her lifetime. By the courts of law, the instrument under which he claimed was decided to be a testamentary writing, and not a deed of gift, and the plaintiff interposed a subsequent will, by which the previous one was revoked, and succeeded in recovering the negroes. An execution was sued out to enforce the judgment, and for the coming bond given and forfeited, and another execution issued, and the defendant then filed this bill to enjoin the proceedings at law, and for reforming the testamentary writing, alleging that it was intended as a deed of gift, but was made a will by the error, mistake, and unskilfulness of the draftsman.' By this instrument, property was given to Jephthah Harrington, Gabriel Harrington, and John Harrington, and the bill is preferred in the name of Jephthah Harrington in his own right, and as administrator of Gabriel Harrington, who [716]*716has since died, and John Harrington, against Hezekiah Harrington, Francis Cates, William Y. Cates, Mary Jackson Harrington, and William Harrington, who are legatees under the last will. The answers deny the execution of the first instrument as a deed of gift, and require full proof. To show that Mrs. Bradford intended this instrument as a deed of gift, and the mistake of the draftsman, the complainants, at the hearing, introduced and relied on depositions which were taken in the suit at law between Hezekiah Harrington, executor, and Jephthah Harrington, to the admission of which, the respondents objected, but they were received by the chancellor, and a decree for reforming the instrument, and that the respondent be perpetually enjoined, &c., was rendered, and this appeal taken.

These depositions being the only evidence in support of the allegations of the bill, naturally present to the court the first questions for adjudication. The counsel for the appellants have raised two objectionsto them. First, thatthey are inadmissible as evidence between the parties to the bill; and secondly, that even if they were properly received, yet it is insisted, that they are not sufficient to establish the alleged mistake, and to justify a reform of the instrument.

The rule for allowing depositions taken in one cause to be read in another, seems to derive its support from necessity rather than principle, and is justly subject to several restrictions. The following may be considered as the usual tests by which the admissibility of such testimony is to be determined. First, the parties must be the same, or in privity. Secondly. The question in controversy must be the same. Thirdly. That had the testimony been different, it would have been prejudicial to the party introducing it. Fourthly, that the verdict and judgment rendered in one case would be evidence in the other; and Fifthly. The legal existence of the first suit. 1 Starkie on Ev. 253, 54; 264, 5, 6, 7, 8; 4 Wash. Cond. Cha. Rep. 186; 1 Munf. Rep. 389. If all these preliminary questions be essential and indispensable, and I take them to be so, the depositions were improperly admitted. In the first place, the parties are not the same. The suit at law was in favor of Hezekiah Harrington as executor, against Jephthah Plarrington indi[717]*717vidually, and Jephthah Harrington in his own right, and as administrator, and John Harrington, have become the complainants in this suit, against Hezelriah Harrington and all the other legatees by the will. It does not become necessary to inquire whether there is a privity between Hezekiah Plarrington as executor, and the other legatees, as other and distinct parties are made complainants. John Harrington was not so interested in the first suit as to make the depositions admissible, because his rights were not in litigation. It is true he claims under the same instrument of writing, but he claims different property, and the adjudication on that instrument did not conclude him. If the testimony had tended to defeat the deed of gift, I do not think it could have been offered in evidence, in a suit brought against him for his portion' of the property; and if not, it cannot be good for him.

But it is insisted, that although the parties are not identically the same, yet there is a privity, and on this ground, the depositions were properly received. In support of this position, we are referred to the definition of privies given by Jacobs in his Law Dictionary, and they are said to be “ those who are partakers, or who have an interest in any action or thing, or any relation to another.” Fornlius gives user the same definition, but it is so general, that we get no satisfactory idea of privity. A better understanding of the term is gathered from the examples given by the last mentioned author of the different kinds of privies, and I shall endeavor to apply these examples for the purpose of ascertaining whether the privity exists in this case. The counsel for the appellees have divided privies into four kinds, to wit, in blood, in estate, in law, and in deed, and insist that John Harrington is privy in estate. Now let us take the examples given, and see whether they sustain this position of counsel. The first instance given by the author of privies in estate, is as between donor and donee, lessor and lessee; another instance is, “ as he in reversion ■or remainder, when land is given to one for life, and to another in fee, for that their estates are created both at the same time.” A third is between joint tenants, baron and feme, lessor and lessee, &c. From these examples, I am led to conclude that this privity cannot exist, unless one hold under another, and claim title through [718]*718him, or unless both have an estate in the same identical thing by title accruing at the same time, when the possession of one is not incompatible with the title of the other, or unless the title and possession be joint. There was privity between John Harrington and Mrs. Bradford, if the deed was valid, and also between her and Jephthah Harrington, but I see nothing to raise a privity between Jephthah Harrington and John Harrington. They claimed different property, and the near approach to a privity between them is, that they both claimed by virtue of the same instrument, but each one had a right to have a separate adjudication on it as to the right he claimed under it. I consider the two cases cited above, from 1 Munf. Rep. and 4 Wash. Rep. as strikingly analogous to the present case, and decision of the question. The case last cited was one in which five joint heirs instituted a suit against the defendant, and took depositions. There were many other heirs claiming the same property, under the same ancestor, who subsequently all joined in another suit. The depositions taken in the first suit were ruled out on the ground that had the proof been different it would not have been admissible as against the heirs, Avho were not joined in the first suit, although they claimed the same property under the same ancestor.

The depositions are also objectionable for another reason. They were not offered in connection with the record. There is such a record as that mentioned in the bill, made an exhibit, but is not connected in any manner with the depositions, and we can only know by inference, that it is the same cause in which the depositions were taken.

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Miss. 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrington-v-harrington-miss-1838.