Nunn v. Mayes

30 S.W. 479, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 366, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 367
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1895
DocketNo. 1637.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 30 S.W. 479 (Nunn v. Mayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nunn v. Mayes, 30 S.W. 479, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 366, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 367 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

HEAD, Associate Justice.

— This is an action of trespass to try title, instituted by appellee to recover from appellant .984 acres of land, a part of the one-third league granted to colonist Isaac Aldridge. Appellee claimed under an Isaac Aldridge, who married Polly Worthington, in Georgia, sometime prior to 1835. Appellant claimed under an Isaac Aldridge, who was born in Bhode Island, and went to Georgia when quite young, where he lived with his uncle, George Aldridge, until 1835, when he came to Texas, and died, without ever having been married.

The verdict finding that the Isaac Aldridge under whom appellees claim was the one to whom the grant was made, is well supported by the evidence; as would have been one in favor of appellant, had it been rendered.

We are of opinion no reversible error is shown in the admission of the certified copy of the marriage license and certificate thereto from Putnam County, Georgia, showing the marriage of Isaac Aldridge and Polly Worthington, under whom appellee claims. Without considering the objections made to this certificate, we think the legality of this marriage was sufficiently shown by other evidence, in so far as it was material in this case. Mrs. Emeliue Adams testified to the marriage *368 of her father, Isaac Aldridge, with her mother, Mary Worthington, in Georgia; and we find nothing in the record to contradict this. The admission of the copy of the marriage license and certificate referred to in the first assignment was therefore immaterial error, if error at all. Boone v. Miller, 73 Texas, 557.

We find no error in the exclusion of the letters of A. M. Carter and certain ex parte affidavits, referred to in the second assignment, which it is claimed should have been admitted to rebut the imputations of fraud and bad faith made by Carter, as counsel for appellee, against appellant in his preliminary statement of his case to the jury. We think the evidence should be restricted to the material issues made by the pleading, and we know of no rule which would authorize the admission of ex parte affidavits and letters solely to disprove insinuations made by opposing counsel.

James S. Stewart, a witness for appellant, was allowed to testify, without objection, as follows: “My age is 60 years; reside in Montgomery County, Arkansas; have resided here one year. I was not personally acquainted with Isaac Aldridge; only knew of him by what I heard his uncle say about him. I knew George Aldridge in Hurd County, Georgia. Have known him all my life. I do not know whether Isaac Aldridge was a married man, bat his uncle often stated to me that he was not. I never knew Isaac Aldridge personally. I was never personally acquainted with John Aldridge, but only knew him by what I heard his father say of him. Rever saw either Isaac or John Aldridge in my life. I lived in one and one-half or two miles of George Aldridge, while I lived in Georgia. They were all under good character. John and Isaac Aldridge were first cousins. I knew Henry Aldridge, a son of George Aldridge. I knew him all my life in the State of Georgia. George Aldridge is dead. He died in Hurd County, Georgia, in 1872, at the age of 82 years. I know Henry Aldridge. He resides in Montgomery County, Arkansas. His post-office is Stacy, Arkansas. As far as I know, Henry Aldridge is nearest of kin to Isaac Aldridge. * * * I have no knowledge that John Aldridge’s relatives ever did anything with trying to get his estate. I have always understood that Isaac Aldridge was a single man. I derived my knowledge of these facts from George Aldridge, the uncle of Isaac Aldridge. I heard George Aldridge say that John and Isaac Aldridge died, or were killed in the Texas and Mexican war. This conversation was in Hurd County, Georgia. I can not say that any one else was present at the time he made such remarks. George Aldridge was father of John and uncle of Isaac Aldridge.”

In addition to this evidence, the appellant offered the following answers from the deposition of this witness:

“He (referring to Isaac Aldridge) was generally represented to be a single man.
“The last I knew of him, he went to the Texas and Mexican war.
*369 “To the best of my information, they (referring to Isaac and John Aldridge) left Georgia about the year 1835.
“As far as I know, Henry Aldridge is the only heir of John Aldridge.
“Isaac Aldridge was never married, and so left no children, so far as I know.”

Which were excluded, on objection of appellee that the evidence was hearsay and incompetent.

We are of opinion that no reversible error is shown in this action of the court; inasmuch as all of these answers are substantially embraced in that part of the witness’ evidence which was admitted.

There is also a clause in the opinion of our Supreme Court, recently rendered in the case of Byers Bros. v. Wallace, 87 Texas, 503, which would require the exclusion of this evidence, upon the ground that the only knowledge the witness had of the matters testified about was derived from George Aldridge, who, at the time he made the declarations, was the heir of the one to whom he was thus showing himself to be related; but. as we are not fully satisfied as to the extent to which the opinion referred to was intended to go upon this point, nor as to its soundness, we prefer to rest our decision upon the ground first stated.

The clause of the opinion referred to is as follows: “The court also admitted, over objections of defendants, the declarations of William Wallace, through whom the plaintiffs claim title, to the effect that he had a nephew in Texas named William Wallace, who was killed at Goliad, in the Fannin massacre. The evidence shows, that if the declarations were true, the declarant was the only heir of the party t.o whom the declarations related. The declaration must have been made after the supposed death of the nephew, and goes directly to establish the title of the declarant as the sole heir of the nephew. It was a self-serving declaration, made in the interest of the declarant, and should have been excluded. 1 Whart. on Ev., sec. 207; Plant v. Taylor, 7 H. & H., 237; Morrill v. Foster, 33 N. H., 370.”

The next clause of the opinion is as follows: “The plaintiffs were permitted to prove by William Wallace, one of the plaintiffs, over defendants’ objections, that according to his family history, William Wallace, the father of witness, under whom plaintiffs claimed title, had a nephew named William Wallace, who went to Texas in the spring of 1835 for the purpose of enlisting in the Mexican war, and was killed in 1836, at what was known as Fannin’s massacre.”

This evidence was held admissible, from which it would seem that the court makes a distinction between cases in which the witness gives the name of the deceased relative who made the declaration, and those in which he nierely testifies to family history, without giving his authority.

In this case, it is manifest that the witness Stewart only purported to testify to facts which were told him by George Aldrich, and he *370 specifically gives the name of his informant.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.W. 479, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 366, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nunn-v-mayes-texapp-1895.