Riley v. . Hall

26 S.E. 47, 119 N.C. 406
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 S.E. 47 (Riley v. . Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riley v. . Hall, 26 S.E. 47, 119 N.C. 406 (N.C. 1896).

Opinion

Fujbohes, J.:

This action is for the purpose of declaring void a deed from John Riley to the defendants, dated September 29, 1887, and for the possession of the land therein described. The plaintiffs, in the first article of their complaint, allege that on or about September 29, 1887, .John Riley, the father of plaintiffs, executed to W. J. B. Hall, J. R. Hall and I. J. Hall, the defendants in this action, a deed for the following tract of land (describing it).

In the second article of the complaint they allege that John Riley died soon thereafter, to-wit, in February, 1888, leaving the plaintiffs his children and only lieirs-at-law.

Third. That John Riley, at the time he executed said deed, was of weak and feeble intellect.

*409 Fourth. That at the time of executing the deed he did not have mental capacity to malte a deed.

Fifth. That the said deed was obtained by the undue influence of the defendants over John Eiley, and of other persons in their behalf.

Sixth. That the consideration paid was grossly inadequate, if anything at all.

Seventh. That said deed was obtained from John Eiley by the fraudulent practices of the defendants, or of other persons in their behalf.

The eighth, ninth and tenth paragraphs are as to the possession of the defendants, and the eleventh is that the yearly rental value of the land is at least two hundred dollars.

Defendants contended that the allegations of the complaint were not sufficiently specific, and moved the court to require plaintiffs to make them more specific, especially the fifth paragraph, or to strike them from the complaint. This the court declined to do, and defendants excepted. We see no error, and cannot sustain the exception. All that we can do is to see that a cause of action is stated. The manner of stating it, upon objection and motion to correct, must be left with the court below as a matter of discretion, and can only be reversed on appeal where it appears to this Court there has been a gross abuse of discretion. Wyc he v. Ross, at this Term. This action had been investigated before the court and a jury once before, when the jury failed to agree, and a mistrial was had. This, it would seem, was sufficient to give defendants such information as they demand in their motion, if they did not have it before.

Defendants then contended that the first issue had been found by the jury on the former tidal in their favor, and should not be submitted to the jury again. But as the *410 jury failed to agree, and a mistrial was ordered, we fail to see bow this can be so, and the learned counsel who argued the case failed to cite any authority to sustain this position.

During the argument of the case the deed from John Riley to defendants, which had been introduced in evidence during the trial, was exhibited to the jury under the objection of defendants, and defendants excepted. And defendants say in their supplemental brief “ There was no testimony that there was any defect in this deed.”

This is the reason it was not error to allow it to be exhibited to the jury. This rule that defendant insists on, that evidence must be addressed to the ears and not to the eyes, is to prevent papers from being exhibited to the jury where there is an alleged defect, as forgery, erasure, &c., where the matter depends on expert testimony, for the reason that the jury are not experts. This distinction has not always been kept in mind as it should have been. But still it is the rule that should be observed and which should govern in cases of the bind.

We have cases where the bastard child has been exhibited to the jury as evidence of paternity, where weapons used in affrays and homicides have been exhibited, and this evidence has been allowed and sustained by this Court. But if the rule was allowed to the extent claimed by defendant it would destroy the rule allowing the body to be exhibited, &c. The exception is not sustained.

John Horne, a witness for plaintiffs, in answer to a question (which is not stated) answered : I am 67 years old. Knew John Riley ever since he was a little boy; I know his wife.” Objected to. Again, question: “When did Sally ELall come to live with Riley?” Objected to by defendants. These exceptions are without merit and cannot be sustained.

*411 Defendants insist that the issues submitted are not sufficient to determine the title to the land, that plaintiffs are claiming that they are the owners, and there should have been an issue submitted to the jury as to their ownership. This objection cannot be sustained.

Defendants claimed under John Riley by deed from him. Plaintiffs claim as the heirs-at-law of John Riley. And it was admitted that he was dead, and that plaintiffs were his children and only heirs-at-law. So both plaintiffs and defendants claimed under John Riley, the common source, and neither party could dispute his title. So the question was as to the validity of the deed of September 29, 1887, to the defendants. If it is valid, the defendants are the owners ; if it is not, the plaintiffs are the owners. This result followed the finding on the deed as a matter of law.

Defendants objected to the 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th issues. And it seems to us that the third issue might have been omitted. It is in its nature evidentiary, and might have been supplied by the charge of the court in its instructions upon the first issue. But if the court chose to submit it as a distinct issue, we are unable to see what harm it could work to the defendants. His feeble condition of mind was certainly a proper subject for the consideration of the jury in making up their verdict on the first issue. And the fourth, fifth and sixth issues, under certain views of the case, were presented by the pleadings, and in our opinion proper, and this objection cannot be sustained.

Defendants asked the court to instruct the jury that all evidence introduced as to undue influence should be considered solely upon determining that issue, and that they should not allow it to prejudice them, as to the defendants, upon any other issue. This the court declined, and we think properly. It is proper for the court to- *412 instruct the jury in proper cases that certain evidence is not substantive but only corroborative, or that confessions •or declarations of one defendant are not evidence against another defendant. But how the court could instruct the jury as to what consideration they should give to substantive evidence, that was proper evidence against all the •defendants, without invading the province of the jury, we are unable to see.

But if defendants had been entitled to this instruction, it appears from the case that the court’s failing to give it was harmless, as the only other issue that it could have had any bearing upon was the second issue, which is as follows : At the date of the execution of the said deed, did the said John Biley have sufficient mental capacity to execute a deed ? Answer, ‘ Yes.’ ”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Little v. . Little
169 S.E. 799 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 S.E. 47, 119 N.C. 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riley-v-hall-nc-1896.