Lyon v. Marclay

1 Watts 271
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 15, 1832
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1 Watts 271 (Lyon v. Marclay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyon v. Marclay, 1 Watts 271 (Pa. 1832).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Ross, J.

The declaration in this case contained two counts, one for work and labour done and performed by the said Anne, and the other for money had and received for her use while sole. The defendant pleaded non assumpsit, and the statute of limitations, to which the plaintiff replied an assumption within six years. It seems that Anne, the wife of the plaintiff below, was an illegitimate child of Elizabeth Lyon, daughter of the deceased T. Lyon. She was born on the 29th of May 1799. Robert Hamilton was her putative father. He was indicted for the offence at August sessions 1799, and submitting to the court, was sentenced to pay a fine of twenty dollars for lying-in expenses, and ten shillings per week for seven years, from the 29th of May 1799, to Elizabeth, the mother, for the support of her-child Anne. He gave a bond to Elizabeth in pursuance of the sentence, which bond she afterwards, to wit 20th of March 1802, assigned to her father, T. Lyon, in trust for the use of the child. Judgment had been entered on this bond before the assignment some time in October 1799; and a fieri facias had issued under which two hundred and fifty acres of land had been levied on, an inquisition held, but no condemnation made.

T. Lyon also brought a suit against Robert Hamilton, for seducing and debauching his daughter Elizabeth, and on the 26th of April 1800 obtained a verdict and judgment for 100 pounds. To August term 1799, Elizabeth brought a suit against him for a breach of promise of marriage, and obtained a judgment for 1000 pounds, and on the 24th of August 1801, she entered satisfaction on this judgment. One half of the 100 pounds and one half of the 1000 pounds was retained by James Hopkins, Esquire, for his fees and services in conducting the suits ; so that the amount actually received by T. Lyon on his judgment was 50 pounds; and the sum received by Elizabeth on her judgment 500 pounds. Anne married the plaintiff on the 27th of April 1824, being at that time about, twenty-five years of age. She was raised and supported by her maternal grandfather, T. Lyon, and continued to live with him until she married the plaintiff. During all this time she was treated in the same manner as were the daughters of her respectable neighbours; and when old [274]*274enough, she worked as other daughters of reputable and substantial farmers are in the habit of doing. From this statement it appears that she ‘lived with her grandfather about seven years after she had attained the age of eighteen. A mass of parol testimony was given, in order to prove that T. Lyon held the different sums of money received on the judgments against Robert Hamilton in trust for Anne. That part of the evidence, which seemed to have much relation to the question, trying, were his declarations made when he was offering to loan 600 pounds, or when he was receiving part of the moneys loaned, or endeavouring to secure the same. Thus it was proved, he said, “that he allowed the money to go to his daughter Betsey's child and that he directed the loan to be made payable in gold or silver, and assigned as a reason for being more particular about it than about other money, that “it was the money he allowed for Anne—money for the little girl” again, it was proved, that he had declared that the 600 pounds should go, and ought to go to Betsey's child, though he did not say from whom the money had been received. Many expressions similar to these were proved to have been made by T. Lyon. Much of the evidence given with those declarations was totally irrelevant, and ought not to have been admitted ; or if it were unavoidably received in hearing that which was really applicable to the case, the jury should have been instructed by the court that it was not evidence, and directed to pay no regard to it. Although in questions of secret trusts, or such as the trustee endeavours to avoid, a great latitude is allowed in the admission of testimony, and almost every species of acknowledgement, consistent with the principles of the law of evidence, may be admitted, in order to ferret out the truth, yet some testimony may be so vague, uncertain, and entirely foreign to the inquiry making, as to be calculated to deceive and mislead any mind, but particularly sucíi as have not been well versed in the philosophy of evidence. Courts should never suffer evidence to be given to a jury, which would only tend to bury that which was calculated to elucidate the case under a mass of rubbish totally inapplicable to the points in issue. Even to the most experienced in the investigation of facts, it becomes excessively irksome and laborious, under such circumstances, to sift the wheat from the chaffj and determine as to what may or may not establish the fact proposed to be proved. These general observations will be found to apply to a great part of the evidence, which has been excepted to in this case. The questions were, whether Thomas Lyon was a trustee for Am, and whether he held any money in trust for her at qny time ? If he did: what money was it—how much—and from whom had he received it ? A great portion of the evidence, therefore, respecting the declaration of T. Lyon as to his loaning money, his fears of losing it, his getting it secured, his receiving it afterwards and entering satisfaction on mortgages given to secure the same, could not aid in the solution of these questions, particularly unaccompanied as they were with any thing done or [275]*275said by him, from which it might be inferred,b that he held the same in trust for Ann.

I am unable to discover any legal ground for the rejection of the testimony of N. Lightner. He was offered to prove, that he hadbeen present at the time that T. Lyon was represented to have said it was Ann’s money; and also, that he was present when the bond and note were paid off, and that there was nothing said by T. Lyon, as to any part of the money belonging to Ann. It is a well known rule of evidence, that one affirmative witness, if credited, will outweigh several negative witnesses; because one man may see and hear many things, which another person present may not have seen or heard. The very existence, however, of the rule shows incontrovertibly, that negative testimony is legal, and therefore the court erred in rejecting the evidence of N. Lightner.

But was the statute of limitations, which was pleaded, in this action, a bar to the plaintiff’s recovery ? I think it was, unless the plaintiff proved an assumption within six years ; and perhaps the cpurt would have been justified in excluding most of the plaintiff’s evidence as to proof of acknowledgements made by the defendant, more than six years before the- suit was brought. In order to prevent the statute being a bar, there must be an acknowledgement of an existing debt within six years. 2 Penns. Rep. 305, 306, and authors cited. It has not been contended, that the law is not so settled ; but it is urged, that trusts stand on a different footing, and are exempt from the general rule of the law, and without the operation of the statute. “The sound rule,” says Chancellor Kent,

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Bluebook (online)
1 Watts 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-marclay-pa-1832.