Hood v. Hood

2 Grant 229
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 1, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 Grant 229 (Hood v. Hood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hood v. Hood, 2 Grant 229 (Pa. 1859).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Church, J.

— The court below very properly ruled adversely to the alleged trust. The evidence was clearly insufficient to support that character of defence. Hence the only questions in this corn-t, arise out of the charge to the jury, touching the title set up under the Statute of Limitations, and upon the exceptions taken by the plaintiff to evidence admitted in the trial, on the same subject. These latter will be discussed first.

The portions of the deposition of Richardson, considered inadmissible, relate specially to the question of trust, but the court having peremptorily instructed the jury that this branch of the defence was not established, by the evidence in the cause, there would scarcely be propriety in reversing the judgment on this account. And some of the principles involved in the exceptions covered by the second, third, fourth and fifth specifications of [234]*234error, could be disposed of here in like manner, but for others embraced in them having relation to the question upon the statute, and which consequently demand further notice and attention. It is an undoubted principle of evidence, that a defendant in ejectment may prove his own act of taking possession to show its character and extent, as well as his intention and object or purpose in doing so, as the same was at the time manifest from his own concurrent declarations; on the principle that they form an essential part of the act — the res gestee. But it is a well settled elementary doctrine, that such declarations are only competent because and vrhen they are contemporaneous with the act itself, and so immediately connected with it as to illustrate its true character with reasonable certainty. And, therefore, it is obvious, that declarations in the nature of a narrative of a past occurrence, cannot be received as evidence of such occurrence. 1 Stark. Ev. 302, 303; 1 Green. Ev. §§ 108, 110; Tompkins v. Saltmarsh, 14 S. & R. 280; Enos v. Tuttle, 3 Conn. Rep. 250. The admission, by the court below, of the testimony of the witnesses Luster, Boggs and Hiley, as the same appears in the exceptions and specifications of error, was a violation of these rules and principles of evidence. It was incompetent for the defendants to show, by the declarations of their ancestor, the circumstances of Ms previous possession. How and what he claimed and held then, at the time of his speaking, was the most they could thus be permitted to prove. The evidence received was beyond this limit.

That the previous verdict and judgment for the defendants was competent evidence for them, there could be no doubt. Koons v. Hartman, 7 W. 20, and Levers v. Van Buskirk, 4 Barr, 309, are authorities for it. But it was inadmissible for those purposes that are indicated in the sixth specification of error. The evidence, however, does not very distinctly appear to have been received, or the use of it by counsel permitted by the court, for any such purpose. The plaintiff’s paper book is defective in this respect. And the allegation is denied by defendants ; consequently the court would not reverse for an error depending on such an uncertainty as arises here.

The seventh specification of error, is neither in form nor substance, presented according to the rules of court, (6 Har. 578,) nor can it be otherwise rendered very intelligible. And the defendants having taken advantage of this defect or omission, the question supposed to be embraced in it will not be discussed. It is not, however, very probable that defendants can evade the effect of the rule upon them to produce these letters, by any such subterfuge as indicated by plaintiff. The character of the counsel concerned is such as to preclude all suspicion that he is involved in, or privy to any transaction of the kind.

[235]*235And now we come to the consideration of the questions presented by the several specifications or assignments of error to the charge of the court in answer to plaintiiFs points. In the trial of complicated causes before a jimy, there may as much error sometimes result from the manner, as from the matter of the charge of the court. The former, however, can seldom be the subject of review and correction here. But tl*e latter is easily re-examined and controlled, by the practice of proposing points of law to the court, for instruction to the jury. And if these points, distinctly propounded, are pertinent, and material to the issue or questions involved, and legitimately arise from any portion of the evidence in the cause, direct and unequivocal answers must be given. Any material omission or evasion whatever, directly or indirectly, by way of argument, or otherwise, or a want of reasonable precision and distinctness in the answer, will be treated as error, except where a negative would have been proper. These views are supported, both by sound reason and an unbroken chain of authority. Brown v. Campbell, 1 S. & R. 176, 178; Shaeffer v. Landis, Ib. 449; Smith v. Thompson, 2 Id. 49; Powers v. McFarren, Ib. 44; Hamilton v. Menor, Ib. 70; Vincent v. Huff, 4 Id. 298; Slaymaker v. St. John, 5 W. 27; Noble v. McClintock, 6 W. & S. 58; Kitchen v. Deardorf, 2 Barr, 481. In our peculiar method and form of trial, wherein the verdict of a jury may be, in effect, decisive of the law and facts both, we shall have no settled rules whatever, but become a lawless people indeed, unless these two departments be kept so entirely separate and distinct, that the former may be fairly and definitely brought before the superior tribunal. Very careful attention, therefore, by the courts, to this rule of law, is of the utmost importance. And unless this court demand a strict practical adherence to it, there will be neither security for property, nor eertainty in the administration of justice.

The general principles of law, announced by the court, are not so obnoxious to criticism, nor subject to so much ground of complaint here, as the manner and connections with which these principles were enunciated, in answering the plaintiff’s points. This latter forms, indeed, the principal material substance of nearly all the errors assigned to the charge. The eighth specification of error, may be taken as a fair illustration. The proposition in the point was very clearly and distinctly presented, that whether the original, or subsequent entry of the defendant’s ancestor was, with the consent of, and under, plaintiff’s testator and devisor, was a question of fact for the jury; and if they should find he did so enter into possession, his subsequent declarations of ownership, payment of taxes, and making the kind of improvements he did on it, taken singly or collec[236]*236tively, were insufficient in law to confer a title, under the Statute of Limitations. This was certainly a distinct legal proposition, pertinent to the case. But the court seem to have treated it as a matter of fact alone, and as such, submitted the question to the jury, under the instructions given in the general charge, to determine “ the character of the possession under all the evidence of the case.”

After a careful examination of the evidence before us, we entertain no doubt of the insufficiency of this answer. It does not cover the question proposed.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Grant 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hood-v-hood-pa-1859.