Jarrell v. Lillie
This text of 40 Ala. 271 (Jarrell v. Lillie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The rule of practice adopted at the January term, 1853, (31 Ala. p. v,) does not change any rule of evidence, or impose upon the plaintiff any greater or less burden of proof when the plea is verified as required by the rule. Its effect is, merely to require the plea “to be verified by affidavit” in the particular cases referred to in the rule, and to relieve the plaintiff from the proof of title, if this is not done. It leaves the sufficiency of the proof to establish the interest of the plaintiff in the cause of action to be ascertained by the same principles which were applicable before the adoption of the rule.
If a preponderance in favor of the plaintiff will not authorize a verdict in his favor, by no rule of law can he be entitled to one when the evidence is equally balanced. Even if the court referred by the words “said issue” to the rebutting evidence of the defendant to the proof of possession by plaintiff of the notes sued on, and the defendant rebuts that proof by evidence which equally balances that of plaintiff; still, in such a case, the court should not charge the jury that they must find for the plaintiff. — 1 Ala. 203; 15 Ala. 468. When the burden of proof is on the plaintiff, as to any fact which is necessary for him to prove, to entitle him to recover, so tong-as the evidence is equally balanced as to the existence of that fact, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, whether the fact is one of agency, possession, ownership, title, bail[274]*274ment, or otherwise. In any such case, an equilibrium of proof does not entitle plaintiff to a recovery; and a preponderance may or may not. — 27 Ala. 272; 15 Ala. 468. The burden of proof, in its legal signification, is never shifted by evidence, so as to devolve on the opposite party the necessity of rebutting by preponderating evidence.
Charges, as a general rule, should be based on the conviction the evidence produces on the mind of the jury; and ■that conviction should be produced after weighing all the evidenee*before them, not by deciding on the equilibrium or preponderance of evidence. Besides, the evident effect of the charge is to mislead the jury. — 13 Ala. 537; 17 Ala. 685, in point; 16 Ala. 53; 1 Ala. 423; 5 Ala. 682; 29 Ala. 200; 21 Ala. 72; 23 Ala. 591; 28 Ala. 606; 22 Ala. 796, 501; 24 Ala. 651; 29 Ala. 188; 28 Ala. 100, 514.
Let the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded.
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