Kitty v. Fitzhugh

4 Rand. 600, 25 Va. 600, 1827 Va. LEXIS 2
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 31, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 4 Rand. 600 (Kitty v. Fitzhugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kitty v. Fitzhugh, 4 Rand. 600, 25 Va. 600, 1827 Va. LEXIS 2 (Va. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinion

Judge Carr

delivered his opinion.

Concurring, as I do entirely, with my brother Coarter, in the general view which he has taken of this case, on the merits, I have thought it not amiss to state a'separate ground, which, in my mind, justifies the Court below in refusing the instructions asked for by the counsel for the plaintiff.

It is this: that instead of presenting to the Court, the points of law distinctly and separately, as arising out of the facts, and asking on these points the instruction of the Court to the jury, the counsel has presented the whole mass of evidence, and blending fact with law, has asked the Court to instruct the jury generally, that if they believed the facts to be proved, the plaintiff was entitled to her freedom.

In Smith v. Carrington, 4 Cranch, 62, one question before the Court was, whether the Court below erred in refusing to give instructions to the jury, which were asked. The Chief Justice, delivering the opinion of the Court, says, “The difficulty of deciding did not arise from any doubt produced by the facts in the cause, but from the manner in which the question was propounded. After a long and complex statement of the testimony, the counsel for the plaintiffs requested the Court to declare, ‘ whether if the plaintiffs had actually paid the premium to the underwriters, before any notice of the change of the destination of the ship, they had a right, under, the circumstances of the case, to recover the same of the defendant.’ Had the plaintiffs’ counsel been content with the answer of the Court to the question of law, he would have been entitled to that answer, but when he involved fact [605]*605with law, and demanded the opinion of the Court on the force and truth of the testimony, by adding the words, 1 under the circumstances of the case,’ the question is so qualified as to- be essentially changed; and although the Court might, ivith propriety, have separated the law from thefacts,and have stated the legal principle, leaving the fact to the jury, there was no obligation to make ,this discrimination, and consequently no error in refusing to answer the question propounded.”

In Brooke v. Young, 3 Rand. 115, this Court examined this subject, and assigned at some length the reasons why a party, asking the instruction of the Court to the jury, as to the law, should specify the point, and not be permitted to ask instructions generally, as to the law arising out of a complicated mass of evidence; thereby throwing it upon the Court to ascertain all the points of law which might be involved; to separate them from the facts, and decide upon them. To this course there are many strong objections. In the hurry and confusion of a jury trial, points, buried under this mass of evidence, may be overlooked, and this omission may involve a reversal of the judgment; whereas, if the point of law, or the different points arising, had been distinctly put, such a consequence could not follow. The opposite party too, when he heard a specific objection made, might be able to remove it immediately by additional evidence. This course, therefore, is calculated to entrap both the Court and the party. Upon this ground it is, that a party wishing the instruction of the Court on a point of law, is required to give his question a precise shape, and not blend together law and fact.

In the case before us, a mass of evidence filling many pages, is submitted to the Court, and they are asked to instruct the jury, that the plaintiff was entitled to her freedom, if they considered the facts (a long catalogue of which is stated) to he proved. Before the Court could come to the conclusion that the plaintiff was free, observe what they would have to do. This mass of evidence must be care[606]*606fully weighed and sifted, to ascertain what points of .law were involved in it, and then these points must be decided. A few of these points are, 1. What law shall govern the case, that of Maryland or Virginia? 2. Does the Act of Limitations apply ? If so, then, 3. From what time shall it run ? 4. To what weight is the Maryland judgment entitied ? Several other questions, might be put as fairly arising on the record. Now is it to be tolerated, that in the hurry and confusion of a jury trial, a Court should be forced in the way of instructions to the jury, to hunt up all these points, and decide on them in the lump ? Is this either pro-, per or necessary ? If a party wants the opinion of the Court on the law arising on the whole case, let him procure a special verdict, or demur to the evidence; and then the jury are discharged, and the Court deliberates at leisure on all the points which may arise. I have no doubt, that for this reason alone, the Court was justified in refusing the instructions asked.

Judge Coalter.

Although the bill of exceptions spreads the evidence in this case on the record, yet we have nothing to do with it, further than to see whether the instructions of the Court were correct in the case, provided the jury should believe that the facts alleged to exist, were proved.

In examining this case, I will consider it as governed by the laws of Maryland, and will endeavor, as far as I am enabled to do so, to pronounce the law of that State upon it. When the law of that State is not in proof before me, I will take the common law as my guide, the party having furnished me with no other.

I will also premise that the question, whether, if the Statute of Limitations began to run as between Col. Sim and Mrs. Sim, in the county of Washington and District of Columbia, whilst they both resided therein, it continued to run after his removal from the District to the county of [607]*607Prince George’s in the State of Maryland, is not presented by the statement of facts contended for on the part of the appellant. By those facts, if established, the period of three years had elapsed, before that removal; and there is no instruction asked, as to what the law would bo in case that was not the fact. That matter, therefore, both as to fact and law, was left to the jury. They may have found, and probably did find, both against the appellants. On this point, the facts contended for as having been proved, were, 1. That Patríele Sim took possession of the appellant in 1802, and held her in possession in the District of Columbia, until his removal into Prince Georges’s county in 1809. 2. That from 1802, until 1820, Ariana Sim resided in Georgetown in the District of Columbia. 3. That in 1805, she was legally divorced from'her.husband Patrick Sim, and from that time, was capable in law of holding property in her own right, under the will of her father Richard. Henderson.

The evidence set out in the record shews, how Richard Henderson became entitled to the appellant; and his will, which is also in the record, so far as it relates to Kittys made in 1801, gives her to his daughter Ariana, when she shall be capable in law to hold such property in her own right, &c.

The Act of Assembly divorcing these parties, is not in the record; and the only witness who speaks of it, says it passed in 1805 or 1806.

As to the removal of Patrick Sim to Prince George’s, two witnesses only speak of it. One says it was in 1808; the other, in 1808 or 1809.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Rand. 600, 25 Va. 600, 1827 Va. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kitty-v-fitzhugh-vactapp-1827.