Nelson v. Iverson

17 Ala. 216
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 17 Ala. 216 (Nelson v. Iverson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson v. Iverson, 17 Ala. 216 (Ala. 1850).

Opinion

CHILTON, J,

1. The first question is, did the court properly reject the fifth direct interrogatory propounded to Mrs. Martha Nelson, and the answer thereto. We think the proof proposed was competent. The question was whether Garland Dawkins had given the'property in controversy to the plaintiff? This witness is examined to prove the gift, and is then enquired of as to the reason which prompted the donor for making it. She states that be “received more of the estate of his father than his brothers and sisters, and gave the property to the plaintiff on that account, and promised to do even more than that.’’ Tiie witness states this as a fact, and inasmuch as it tends to show a moral consideration operating upon binabas inducement to the gift, it was not wholly irrelevant, especially since there was an effort to show that the declaration of the dijpor by which a gift was sought to be established, was made in jest.

2. In laying the predicate so a,s to impeach a witness by proving that ho has made declarations different fg>m his testimony given upon the trial, the general rule^qnires that thaexamination should relate to such declaration® as are pertinent to the issue, and when the supposed contradiction consists in verbal statements, the party desiring to inyadfeh the witness must call his attention to the time, place and’perso'fffnvolved in the supposed contradiction. — 1 Green]. Ev. § 462; The Queen’s case, 8 Bred. & Bing. 313-’14; Angus v. Smith, 1 M. & Malk. 473; 8 C. & P. 606; 9 ib. 277; Lewis v. Post & Main, 1 Ala. 65-9; Moore v. Jones, 13 ib. 296. We do not think, however, the rule is so stringent as to require that the party should ask the witness if ho did not use certain language, but it will suffice to give the substance of the counter declaration, and ask the wit[220]*220ness if he did not make that or one of similar import? We think the predicate laid in the case before us fully comes up to the rule. Here the witness, Mrs. Nelson, is asked on the cross-examination, “Did you not in a certain conversation with Reuben Dawkins, at his house in the spring of 1S30, speaking of the promise of Garland Dawkins to give Judy to a boy, if you had one, say that such was his promise, but that he had not done so? —or did you not say that said Garland Dawkins spoke only in jest when he made the promise, and that you knew it at the time, or something to that purport, and what?” To this the witness answers, she did not. After this predicate, we think it was entirely competent for the defendant to prove by Reuben Dawkins, the person with whom the conversation enquired for was had, that at his house, in the spring of 1S30, the said Martha had stated to him that Garland Dawkins never had given Judy to the plaintiff, and that what he had said to her on the subject was said in jest. It is substantially the conversation enquired for, and is pertinent to the issue in the cause.

3. Upon the subject of the donor’s declarations, made after the alleged gift, but while he had possession of the property, we think the co.urt entirely misconceived the law. The plaintiff bad proved by one witness that in June 1823, the said Garland Dawkins had given the property in dispute to him, and that the gift, which was by parol, had been consummated by an actual deliveryThat the mother of the plaintiff had kept the property for him (he being an infant) for more than seven years until 1S30, when she delivered the property to said Garland to be returned in a few days to her. The circuit judge permitted Ihe witness to prove that Garland Dawkins, while he had said property in his possession as above, declared, 1st, That said property belonged to him : 2d, That he had never given the same to the plaintiff: 3d, That what he had said about givingtbe property to the plaintiff, was in jest; and 4th, That he had only loaned said property to Martha Nelson, his sister. Now if we concede that the donor may by his declarations, made while he has possession of the subject of the gift, defeat the title of the donee, it is very clear that such declarations would be inadmissible except as explanatory of his possession. They may be introduced to show the character in which he held the slaves, whether in his own right or for another; but when they are not [221]*221explanatory of the possession — when they relate to facts or transactions outside of and having no necessary connection with the possession, they become inadmissibile. The character of the possession is the main fact to be proved. How did he hold or possess the slaves ? Did he couple his holding with any declaration which explains it ? Did lie say they were held by him as his own property, or his possession was as bailee for another? These and similar declarations accompanying'the maiu fact and explaining it form parts of the res gestee, and are legitimate as proof. But it has never been held by this court, notwithstanding the distressing number of decisions involving pretty much similar questions, that the possessor may avail himself of his possession to make his declarations, which are a narrative of and relate to past transactions involving the title of others to the property in dispute, legal proof. Were such the law, a party who has no shadow of right save such as possession evinces might declare himself into a good title by defeating that of the true owner. But the law holds out no such temptation to deceit and falsehood. The counsel for the defendant in error has refered us to several cases which he insists are in point to show that these declarations should have been allowed. We will briefly notice them. In Oden v. Stubblefield, 4 Ala. 40, the question was whether W. T. Stubblefield had held the possession of the property sued for three years without interruption, so as under the statute to protect Oden, a purchaser from him. It appeared, however, that, the property in the meantime had gone into the possession of the plaintiff, John Stubblefield, from whom William T. claimed to have obtained it by deed of gift. The latter regained the possession, and while he was holding it said he had some difficulty in getting the possession, and to satisfy the family had to promise to return it at the end of the year. This declaration was held admissible, and very correctly, as explaining the possession of William T.; for it amounted to this — :tI am holding this property as my own, but under a promise to return it to John Stubblefield, from whom I obtained it.” But it was perhaps admissible in another view. It was the declaration of a vendor before the sale, made against his own interest, and was offered against one who set up a title acquired subsequent to its being made from the declarant. — 1 Greenl. Ev. § 190; Jackson v. Bard, 4 John. Rep. 230; Weidman v. Kohr, [222]*2224 Serg. & Rawle, 174. The declaration, however, was clearly part of the res gesta, as explanatory of the possession. The-case of Garey v. Terrell, 9 Ala. 200, is no authority in support of the defendant’s position; for in that case the declaration,, which was that the party in possession claimed the property as his own, was admissible solely upon ibe ground of its being part of the res geske, as it tended to show whether the party held it in liis own right or under another. Besides, in that case the doctrine laid down in McBride & Wife against Thompson, 8 Ala. 650, is re-affirmed, namely, that the declaration of the party in possession would be no evidence of the price he had-paid for the property, or that it was acquired dona fide and for a valuable consideration, or was paid for with his own money, and the like. But it is unnecessary further to dwell on this point.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Ala. 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-iverson-ala-1850.