Larman v. Huey's heirs

52 Ky. 436
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 5, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 Ky. 436 (Larman v. Huey's heirs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larman v. Huey's heirs, 52 Ky. 436 (Ky. Ct. App. 1852).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the opinion of the court..

[437]*437This action of ejectment was brought in October, 1848, on the demise of the heirs of Robert Huey against James Larman, for the recovery of one half of an island in the Ohio river opposite or near the mouth of the Tennessee. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff; and the defendant’s motion for a new trial having been overruled, he prosecutes a writ of error for the reversal of the judgment rendered against him. On the trial, the plaintiff read in evidence an old patent from the state of Virginia granting the island to Jacob Myers, and to make out title under that patent, read the record of a suit in chancery in the Fleming circuit court, brought by George O. Johnson in 1815 against certain persons designated in the bill as devisees of Jacob Myers, and as unknown heirs of his devisees, which showed that a decree was rendered against the defendants for a large sum of money claimed as due from said Myers, and that among various executions and sales for its satisfac? tion, a sale was made of this island in 1818 under an execution directed to the sheriff of Livingston county, at which George C. Johnson became the purchaser. The sheriff’s deed conveying the island to Johnson in 1818 was also read, and a deed from Johnson convey-ind it to John Berry and Robert Huey in 1821; and then proved that the lessors were the heirs of Robert Huey ; that Huey and Berry claimed the land under said deed, and that between 1821 and 1825 Huey had wintered some stock on the island one winter, and in the spring left a man living on it, but witness did not know that he entered to take possession; also, that Huey died in 1842, and that his eldest child was at the time of the trial twenty-eight years old, and was married before his death; and that the defendant Larman, on whom the declaration and notice were served in October, 1848, was then in possession of the island.

Here the plaintiff’s counsel announced that he was through with his opening evidence, and the defendant’s counsel moved for instructions as in case of a [438]*438nonsuit: But while this motion was under discussion, the plaintiff’s counsel asked and obtained permission to introduce additional evidence, declaring, at the same time, that he had been and still was of opinion that it was not necessary. Under the leave thus obtained, additional testimony was adduced by the plaintiff, on which the motion for a nonsuit was overruled, and the cause proceeded and was decided upon the evidence produced by both parties.

The defendant excepted to this action of the court, and now insists, not only that the court erred in not instructing the jury to find as in case of a nonsuit, and in permitting additional evidence on the part of the plaintiff after the motion for such instruction was made, but also that these errors, though there were no others in the case, should produce a reversal of the judgment. But although we are satisfied that upon the evidence above stated, the plaintiff had not made out any title from Myers, because the Fleming record, which did not even contain the will of Myers, furnished no evidence as against the defendant, who was no party to it, either of the death of Myers or of the fact that the defendants in the Fleming suit were either his heirs or devisees, and there was no other proof of these facts, which were essential to make out ' title from Myers; and there was no proof of any such connection between Robert Huey and the defendant as might dispense with proof of title; still, it does not follow that the court erred in not giving the instruction after the plaintiff asked to introduce additional evidence then in his power, or in permitting him to introduce such evidence. Nor does it follow that this court should reverse the judgment even for an erroneous refusal to instruct as in case of a nonsuit, if there were no other error but that of allowing further evidence to be adduced by the plaintiff, or requiring evidence on the part of the defendant.

The question as to the propriety of allowing the plaintiff to introduce additional evidence, and thus to [439]*439¡remove if he could the grounds of the motion for a nonsuit, if essentially a question of practice, upon which the court presiding over the trial must have a broad discretion, to be exercised with a view to the convenient dispatch of business, and more especially to the attainment of justice in the particular case, by means of a fair and full trial, and an impartial verdict. It is not incompatable with these objects nor with the rules of procedure intended for their attainment, for the court to permit counsel to correct errors of omission, whether arising from inadvertence or from mistaken opinion of the law, provided the correction may be made without inconvenient delay, and is such as while it is essential to a fair presentation and trial of the case on the one side, does not occasion surprise nor throw any unjust burthen upon the other. And it can make no difference in principle, whether the counsel asking to supply the omission retracts the erroneous opinion which led to it, or makes his motion in deference to the opinions of others. The court sits not to award a triumph to the skill or acuteness of counsel, but to insure, as far as maybe, a fair trial and a just decision of the conflicting rights of their clients. Even where there has been an erroneous refusal to instruct as in case of nonsuit* in consequence of which the trial has proceeded with further evidence on both sides, this court does not,according to its present practice, reverse a judgment founded on a verdict for the plaintiff merely because, at a particular stage of the trial, a motion for a non-suit was erroneously overruled. But if upon the whole evidence the verdict is justified, and if there be no other error of the court in conducting the trial-,, and no ground of surprise or discovery, for which at new trial should be granted, the judgment is affirmed because a reversal would only result in a new trial upon the same evidence, when there has already been a full and fair trial, and a verdict uninfected by the error of overruling the motion for a nonsuit. If the motion in this case had been peremptorily overruled. [440]*440and without further evidence on either side a verdict had been found for the plaintiff, the judgment must have been reversed, because the verdict was not sustained by the evidence and would be presumed to have been infected by the error of the court in determining that there was evidence to authorize it,But if, after the motion was overruled, the trial had proceeded and the case was placed fully before the jury on the evidence, the question on the motion for a nonsuit would have lost its consequence, and would, in effect have been merged in the more important questions of evidence and of law which might have affected the verdict. Here the motion was not in form, though it was in fact, overruled by permitting the plaintiff to adduce further evidence. Andas this was not, in our opinion, an abuse of discretion, since it involved neither inconvenient delay nor any surprise or injustice to the defendant, we think the case is to be regarded just as if there had been no motion for a nonsuit, and cannot now be decided as if it stood upon that motion alone. We proceed, therefore, to state briefly the additional facts appearing in the evidence on both sides.

1.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Combs v. Ezell
24 S.W.2d 301 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)
Pope v. Brassfield
61 S.W. 5 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1901)
King v. Carmichael
35 N.E. 509 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 Ky. 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larman-v-hueys-heirs-kyctapp-1852.