Nease v. Capepart

15 W. Va. 299, 1879 W. Va. LEXIS 27
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 15 W. Va. 299 (Nease v. Capepart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nease v. Capepart, 15 W. Va. 299, 1879 W. Va. LEXIS 27 (W. Va. 1879).

Opinion

Johnson, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

It is insisted by counsel for appellants, that the Court should, notwithstanding the verdict of the jury, upon the final hearing, have looked into ’ the whole record, and decreed in favor of the complainants, as according to their claim the two depositions taken and returned after the verdict was rendered, but before the decree was pronounced, showed a preponderance of evidence in behalt of the complainants.

Before the first appeal was taken, as ascertained by this court, it was the duty of the court below upon the hearing to have, directed an issue, as the evidence was so conflicting as to make it impossible for the court to decide the question of fact satisfactorily. 8 W. Va. 133; Arnold v. Arnold, 11 W. Va. 449; Jarrett v. Jarrett, Id. 584; Cranmer v. Anderson, Id. 562; McFarland v. Douglass, Id. 637.

Syllabus 1. Where an issue out of chancery is properly directed [305]*305and regularly tried, whether directed by tbe Appellate or inferior court, and a verdict rendered by tbe jury, unless there is some sufficient ground for setting aside the verdict, it must be held to be conclusive of the facts submitted, and a decree should be rendered in accordance therewith.

In Carter v. Campbell, Gil. 159, it was held: “In a case proper for an issue the verdict is conclusive, where the evidence is conflicting.” In Paul et al. v. Paul, 2 H. & M. 525, it was held, that, “ the court, before whom an issue out of chancery was tried, having been satisfied with the verdict of the jury, and having overruled a motion for a new trial, to which opinion no exception was taken, the verdict ought forever to remain undistured.” In Lee’s ex’r v. Book, 11 Gratt. 182, it was held: “ where an issue is directed in a chancery cause, and a verdict is found to which no exception is taken, and a decree is rendered thereon, the facts found in the verdict must be regarded in the Appellate Court as the established facts of the case.” To the same effect is Fitzhugh’s ex’rs v. Fitzhugh, 11 Gratt. 210.

It would be absurd to say that in a certain cause it was error not to direct an issue; and when that issue had been directed and regularly tried, and no errors committed in the trial thereof, and the verdict of the iury rendered Syllabus 2. derecr thereon1 and properly not 'set aside by the court, that the court b&low erred in accepting the verdict of the jury as conclusive of the facts submitted, and in decreeing accordingly. If after verdict has been rendered there be after-discovered evidence, the chancellor may set aside the verdict for such cause under the rules applicable in such cases. Generally the depositions of witnesses taken after the verdict, to which there is no sufficient objection, and before the decree, can not be read upon the final hearing of the cause, because if that principle were admitted, it would be a needless waste of time to try the issue, and would be a premium put upon the grossest [306]*306negligence. There is nothing in the record- to take this' cause out of the general rule. '

After the verdict is rendered upon an issue properly directed, the court cannot look at the record for the facts submitted in the issue, nor to the facts or evidence certified upon the trial of the issue, but must accept the verdict of the jury for such facts, unless under the rules goveening courts of equity in such cases it should set aside the verdict, and grant a new trial.

It is true that the object of directing the issue is to Syllabus 4. satisfy the conscience of the chancellor; but that conscience must be satisfied with the verdict of the jury upon an issue properly directed, where no errors have been committed during the trial thereof, either by the court or jury to the prejudice of either party. Henry v. Davis, 7 W. Va. 715; S. C., 13 W. Va. 230.

The first, second, third and fourth exceptions are to the rulings of the court in refusing to permit certain evidence to be admitted to the jury.

The principles, upon which a court of equity directs a new trial of an issue, are somewhat different from those which govern a court of law in granting new trials. ‘‘It has been held over and over again (says the Ld. Chancellor in Barker v. Ray, 2 Russ. 63) that if on the trial Syllabus 5. of an issue a judge reject evidence which ought to have been received, or receive evidence which ought to have been refused, though in that case a court of law would grant a new trial, yet if this court is satisfied that if the evidence improperly received had been rejected, or the evidence improperly rejected had been received, the verdict ought not to have been different, it will not grant a new trial merely upon such grounds.” This principle was approved by this Court in Tompkins’s ex’rs v. Stephens et al., 10 W. Va. 156. The evidence refused, as appears by the first bill of exceptions was, “ that it was the general understanding in the community that James Cape-hart did hold the said Rogers land in trust for said Ye-liemiah Rogers and his heirs.” That refused as appears [307]*307oy the second bill of exceptions was, that said Nehemiah Rogers while in the possession of the land “claimed to be the owner thereof and by this means it was attempted to show that said James Capehart merely held the same in trust. The evidence refused as appears by the third bill of exceptions was substantially the same as appears by the second bill.

Looking at the evid.ence as certified in the sixth bill of exceptions, the verdict should not have been changed by the introduction of the refused- testimony. The evidence was clearly inadmissible by the most elementaiy rules of evidence. If Rogers had been living, he certainly could not have been permitted to testify that he claimed to own the land, to show his title thereto; and certainly his declarations to that effect are inadmissible. There was absolutely no excuse for undertaking to prove title to the property in Rogers by showing what the “ general understanding in the community ” was with reference thereto.

Bill of exceptions No. 4, attempts to raise the question, whether one of the plaintiffs could testify to conversations had between James Capehart, deceased, and the brothers and sisters of witness who were co-plaintiffs, such conversations not being addressed to witness but to his brothers and sisters in his presence and hearing. The bill states that “the plaintiffs in order to maintain the issue upon their part produced Charles Rogers, one of the plaintiffs, who was duly sworn as a witness, and after proving by him that his brothers and sisters, co-plaintiffs in this suit, had all gone west, and that his understanding was that they had land there, offered to prove by said witness that James Capehart, deceased, had told them to go, and all that Capehart, deceased, said upon that occasion in his, witness’s, presence and hearing; and that it was not a transaction had personally by witness with said Capehart, deceased, but a transaction between the deceased and his, witness’s brothers and sisters in witness’s presence. To which the defendant, James Cape-[308]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 W. Va. 299, 1879 W. Va. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nease-v-capepart-wva-1879.