Pinney v. Jones

30 A. 762, 64 Conn. 545, 1894 Conn. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 9, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 30 A. 762 (Pinney v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pinney v. Jones, 30 A. 762, 64 Conn. 545, 1894 Conn. LEXIS 54 (Colo. 1894).

Opinion

Torrance, J.

This is an action brought to foreclose a mortgage made to secure a note for sixteen hundred dollars by the defendant, Emily Jones, to Charles H. Pinney, now deceased.

The defendant claimed to have paid upon said note to Pinney during his lifetime, the sum of fifteen hundred dol[547]*547lars, and whether this was true or not was the main fact in dispute between the parties.

The ease was tried before the Hon. Elisha Carpenter as State Referee.

For the purpose of showing her ability to make such payment, the defendant offered evidence to prove and claimed she had proved, that at the time when she bought the mortgaged premises in March, 1892, she had in her possession the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, in addition to the sum of five hundred dollars which she had paid on account of said purchase; that this sum of fifteen hundred dollars was in a package in her house; that she moved into the house upon the mortgaged premises in April, 1892, and two or three weeks thereafter, in the presence of her daughter Cora, who was produced as a witness, she counted said fifteen hundred dollars, and after counting the same, deducted fifteen dollars therefrom, and placed the remainder in a tin box and placed the box, with the money in it, in a jar and sealed up the jar with putty; and that after leaving the jar upon a shelf to dry for two or three days, she and her husband, who was produced as a witness, buried this jar in the cellar near the bottom of the stairs, covered it over and placed a paint barrel over the spot where the jar was buried.

While Mrs. Jones was upon the witness stand, her counsel offered to prove by her that some time within two months after the money had been counted as aforesaid, Mrs. Jones requested her daughter Cora to go with her to the said place where the money was then buried, and that thereupon Cora and she went to the spot from the sitting-room above; that Mrs. Jones then and there removed the paint barrel and told Cora that the money was in a pot in the ground, and that she wanted her to know where it was, “ for if she should die she wanted her to know about it.”

The finding states: “ It was not claimed that. the earth was removed from over the jar in which the money was claimed to have been placed, or that the jar or other thing, in which it is now claimed the money then was, was so exposed or attempted to be exposed to view. The plaintiff’s [548]*548counsel objected to the admission in evidence of the conversation between the said Emily Jones and her daughter Cora upon this occasion, and it was excluded; to which ruling the defendant duly excepted.”

Mrs. Jones thereafter upon this point testified without objection as follows: “Cora went with me down cellar; went down the cellar steps to the left hand of the stairs just as you go down. I showed her the money; I took the paint barrel and moved it around like this (illustrating) and pointed out to her where the money was concealed; then I set the barrel back on the same spot I had removed it from; then we went upstairs ; that she, Cora, was the only person so far as she knew besides her husband that ever knew or was shown where the money was.”'

The daughter Cora also testified without objection, to her going down in the cellar with her mother and being shown where the money was concealed, substantially as her mother had done.

The referee found that said claimed payment of fifteen hundred dollars had not been made.

To the report made by the referee the defendant filed a remonstrance, setting up as the ground of it, the action of the referee in excluding the conversation aforesaid between Cora and her mother. He further set up therein that the plaintiff claimed that Mrs. Jones did not have said sum of fifteen hundred dollars at any time after 1891, and that her entire story with reference to the possession of said sum was false. The plaintiff demurred to the remonstrance, the court sustained the demurrer, judgment was rendered for the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed.

This appeal presents but a single question, and that is whether the statement made by Mrs. Jones to her daughter was admissible. It is apparent that the defendant obtained the benefit of everything else claimed by her except this statement. She was allowed to testify fully to her acts and conduct in going into the cellar and pointing out the place where she claimed the money was concealed, and from all this Cora understood that the money was there buried. She [549]*549says indeed that she there showed Cora the money, but from her own testimony and from other parts of the record it is clear that all she meant by this was that she showed her the place where the money was concealed. Essentially then, in this view of the matter, all that was excluded was her statement of her reason for having Cora know where the money was concealed; and it is perhaps questionable whether even on the defendant’s view of the case the exclusion of that was error. Russell v. Frisbie, 19 Conn., 205-211. And if it was, the case might perhaps be disposed of on the ground that the error did not harm the defendant. But as we think the evidence was rightly excluded, we prefer to rest the decision upon that ground rather than upon the one suggested.

As we have said, what was done in the cellar was, without objection, fully testified to by both Mrs. Jones and Cora. What was said was excluded; and that was, in substance, a statement by Mrs. Jones that the money was buried there in a jar, and that she wanted to have Cora know, for a reason then stated, where it lay. The defendant strenuously insisted that this statement characterized the act of Mrs. Jones in going to the cellar and doing what she did there, and was admissible in corroboration of her claim to the possession of the money, and as part of the res gestee; and in support of these claims he relies mainly upon the case of Card v. Foot, 56 Conn., 869.

The general rule is that a party cannot give in evidence his own declarations in his own favor, made in the absence of the other party; but there is one well recognized exception to this rule, where such declaration is part of, what for want of a better name, is called the res gestee. Kilburn v. Bennett, 3 Met., 199; Stirling v. Buckingham, 46 Conn., 461. The nature and limits of this exception are tolerably well defined, although the application of the rule embodied in the exception in particular eases, is sometimes attended with difficulty. That rule is thus stated in Starkie on Evidence (10th Ed.), 466-687: “In the first place, an entry or declaration accompanying an act seems, on principles already announced, to be admissible evidence in all cases where a [550]*550question arises as to the nature or quality of' that act. Indeed, •whenever an entry or declaration reflects light upon, or qualifies, an act which is relevant to the matter in issue and is evidence in itself, it becomes admissible as part of the res gestee, if it be contemporaneous with the act.”

According to this writer, before a written declaration made by a party in his own favor , can be admissible as part of the res gestee, the act which it characterizes and of which it forms a part must be itself admissible in evidence in the case; and so are the authorities. “ Where an act done is evidence per se, a declaration accompanying that act may well be evidence if it reflects light upon or qualifies the act.

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Bluebook (online)
30 A. 762, 64 Conn. 545, 1894 Conn. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinney-v-jones-conn-1894.