Kendall v. Metroz
This text of 65 Colo. 387 (Kendall v. Metroz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Plaintiff in error brought suit against defendant in error for an accounting, and a recovery of a share of the proceeds of a sale of a ranch bought by the parties on partnership account, and sold by defendant who held title.
The answer admitted the purchase, on partnership account, and the sale, and set up in defense that the plaintiff abandoned the enterprise, left the ranch, saying that he would have nothing more to do with it, arid that defendant could have the property to do with as he pleased.
Plaintiff by replication denied that he had given the property to defendant.
The action was begun some eight months after plaintiff left the ranch, and about three months after its sale by defendant.
The court found that there was a valid gift of the interest in the land by parol, and dismissed the action.
[388]*388For plaintiff in error it is urged that the plaintiff’s interest was an interest in land; that it was not subject to gift by parol, because of the statute of frauds; and, further, that the gift is not valid because there was no evidence of possession followed by valuable improvements made in reliance on the gift.
The statute of frauds was not plead, nor was the question of the statute raised on the trial; hence, it need not be considered.
It is undoubtedly true that a parol gift of an interest in real property is good in equity, as a rule, only when valuable improvements have been made in reliance on the gift, so that to refuse to enforce it is inequitable.
Counsel are correct in stating that there is no evidence of improvements in this case; but can they base an objection to the judgment on that fact, since the record shows that on two occasions defendant’s counsel asked witnesses what improvements had been made on the ranch after plaintiff’s departure, and, in each case, on the objection of plaintiff’s counsel, the testimony was excluded? To permit them to reverse the case for lack of evidence which was excluded by their action, is to give them the advantage of error for which they are responsible.
They are not permitted to change the theory on which they tried the case, and now ground a plea for reversal on the want of evidence of improvements, which, but for their objection, might have been introduced. They insisted on the trial that the only issue was as to the making of a gift, and the question of a consideration therefor, though a gift contradicts the idea of a consideration.
They made no point of the necessity that the making of improvements be shown, but by their objections denied the pertinency of such evidence.
Parties cannot thus shift their position.
In Stratton C. C. M. Co. v. Ellison, 42 Colo. 498, 94 Pac. 303, this court said:
[389]*389“Upon appeal it is too late to introduce a new theory differing radically from that on which the court and both parties proceeded at the trial below.”
In Lebcher v. Lambert, 23 Utah 1, 63 Pac. 628, the court in reviewing a record presenting the very point now under consideration held that counsel, having by objections excluded evidence that later, on appeal, they asserted to be necessary, must stand by their original theory, and could have no advantage of the new theory.
This rule is well settled and just. 3 C. J. 718.
Plaintiff in error being thus unable to press the only substantial error assigned, the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice White dissenting.
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65 Colo. 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kendall-v-metroz-colo-1918.