Kelly v. Jackson

31 U.S. 622, 8 L. Ed. 523, 6 Pet. 622, 1832 U.S. LEXIS 491
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 16, 1832
StatusPublished
Cited by88 cases

This text of 31 U.S. 622 (Kelly v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly v. Jackson, 31 U.S. 622, 8 L. Ed. 523, 6 Pet. 622, 1832 U.S. LEXIS 491 (1832).

Opinion

Mr Justice Stout

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Many of the questions arising in this case have been- disposed of in the judgment already pronounced in the case ofCráne V. Jackson, upon .the demise of the same parties; the title and evidence being in each case substantially the same, It will be necessary, therefore, to examine into those óbjec-, tions only, to the.ruling of the circuit court at the trial, which are presented by the bill of exceptions taken by the defendant (now plaintiff in error); and which have.not been decided in the.other case. '■

The .first objection is td the refusal of the court’ to instruct the jury that <J'Roger Morris was a grantor, or stood in the character of a grantor in that (the settlement) deed,” This is but a slight variation in fora? from the point presented in the case of Crane v. Jackson, and the instruction given by the court, “ that the.mcre possession of the deed by .Morris was no affirmative proof on either side of the fact of delivery,” has been already fully considered.

The next objection is to the refusal of the court to instruct the jury that “the holding from the marriage, settlement to the attainder, cannot be said to have been Under the settlement deed, until it was first, ascertained that the deed had been delivered. ” This instruction was certainty proper in itself to have been given, if it’had not been already substantially given in the other instructions: and if the court had given this reason for the refusal, there would not have been the slightest difficulty in maintaining it; for no court is bound at the mere instance of the party, to repeat over to the jury the samé substantial proportion of law, in every variety of form, which the ingenuity of counsel may suggest. It is sufficient, if it is once laid down in an intelligible and unexceptionable manner. The instruction here asked and refused, was but a branch of the next preceding instruction prayed for (which covered the whole ground), and is so put by thei defendant. The latter asserted, that “the fact"that Morris and wife were in possession of the land before the revolution, taking the.rents and profits, is not of itself any evidence for or against the validity *629 of the deed) because' they were entitled to the possession, whether the deed was delivered or not.” This instruction was given by the court; and the jury had been previously instructed that it was necessary to the validity of the deed that it should have passed into the hands of the trustees, or of some .person for them, with intent that it should take effect as a conveyance. Indeed, the-whole controversy between the parties turned upon the question of th,e delivery of the settlement, deed, as the tenor Of every instruction asked abundantly shows; and therefore it was necessarily implied in every step that there could be no holding or possession under the. deed, if it was never delivered. It appears to. us, then, that no injustice has been done to the defendant by refusing to give the instruction prayed;, since, in a more general form, it.had been already given.

The next objection is to the refusal of the court to instruct the jury, first, that in the absence of any direct evidence, that, the trustees, or any other person for them, ever had the settlement deed, and the possession being equivocal in its character, the fact that it came out of the hands of Morris in 1787, is sufficient of itself to rebut any presumption of a delivery arising from the proof of the deed by William Livingston, or the proof of the hand-writing and death of the. subscribing witnesses;” and; “ secondly; that if not sufficient of itself to destroy any presumption of a delivery, it is at least evidence against a delivery, to be considered and weighed by the jury.” The court gave as a reason for refusing this second branch, that Morris was, technically, neither grantor nor grantee, and therefore the mere possession of the deed by Morris, was no affirmative evidence either for or against the fact of delivery..” This instruction has been already disposed of. The other instruction varies from that in the case of Crane v. Jackson, merely.in substituting the words “direct evidence” for “ all proof;'” and.the .words “ and the possession being equivocal in its character,” for “ arid there being no proof of a holding.under it.” It is obnoxious t'o the same objection which was relied upon in that case; for it called upon the court to express an opinion upon the nature, weight and effect of the evidence before the jury, which was no part of its duty. And the whole evidence being before the jury, it was *630 their explusive right to decide for themselves upon its credit, and cogency.

The next objection is to the admission of an extract from the journal of the assembly of the state of New York, for the year 1787, as follows. February 24, 1787. i( Mr Hamilton, from the committee to whom was referred the petition of Johanna Morris, on behalf of herself and the other children of Roger Morris and Mary his wife, setting forth that the said Roger and Mary had been attainted, and their estates sold, and conveyed in fee simple; that by a settlement made previous to their intermarriage, the real estate of the said Mary, was vested in Johanna Philipse and Beverley Robinson in fee to certain uses; among others, after the decease'of the said Roger and Mary, to the use of such child or children as they should have between them, and their heirs and assigns, and praying a law to restore to them the remainder of the said estate in fee, reported; that if the facts'stated in such petition are true, the ordinary course of law is competent to the relief of the petitioners, and that it is unnecessary for the legislature to interfere. Resolved, that the house do concur with the committee in the said report.”

It was objected, first, that the journal of the proceedings in question, was not legal or competent evidence against the defendant; and, secondly, not so without producing the petition mentioned in the journal. But the .objections were overruled, and the evidence admitted.

Now, if the evidence was admissible for any purpose, the objections were rightly overruled. It did not appear to have been offered as proof of any of the facts stated in the petition; but simply of the public .legislative proceedings, on the very claim and title now set up by the children of Morris at the early period of 1787. There were two points of view in which the evidence might be important, in the actual posture of the case before the jury. In the first place, it might' be important to repel the notion, that the claim of the children.of Morris asserted in the present suit was stale, and founded upon a dormant deed, never brought forward until a' very great, .lapse of time after, its pretended execution: a circumstance which might essentially bear upon the fact of its having ever been delivered and acted upon as á valid .instrument.. In the- *631 next place, it might add strength to the probate of the deed by Governor Livingston, as his attention could scarcely fail of being called to such public proceedings, occurring at so short a period as within two months before the time of that probate.

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Bluebook (online)
31 U.S. 622, 8 L. Ed. 523, 6 Pet. 622, 1832 U.S. LEXIS 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-jackson-scotus-1832.