Ring v. Gray

45 Ky. 368, 6 B. Mon. 368, 1846 Ky. LEXIS 12
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 16, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 45 Ky. 368 (Ring v. Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ring v. Gray, 45 Ky. 368, 6 B. Mon. 368, 1846 Ky. LEXIS 12 (Ky. Ct. App. 1846).

Opinion

Judge Beeok

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an ejectment for four hundred acres of land lying in the county of Todd, in which a verdict and judg. ment having been rendered against Ring, the defendant, he has appealed to this Court,

Case stated and plaintiff's title. Defence,

The declaration contained three separate demises, from Gray, Huling and Cravens. The Court, on motion, dismissed the one in the name of Cravens, it appearing that he was dead before the commencement of the action.

The plaintiff, in support of his claim, relied upon a grant from the Commonwealth to Huling, bearing date in November, 1819, and upon three deeds; the first a Sheriff’s deed to John Lindley, who was a purchaser of the land in contest, under an execution against Huling, the patentee, in May, 1824. The second a Sheriff’s deed to Gray, who was a purchaser in August, 1827, under-execution against Lindley, and the third also a Sheriffs deed to Gray, as a purchaser under execution against William Cravens, in 1839. He also proved that defendant was in possession before and at the institution of the suit.

The defendant then read in evidence, having proved the execution thereof, a deed from Hiding to Cravens for the same land, bearing date December, 1819, and also a deed from Azariah Davis, Lindley, Cravens and others, to the heirs of Tho. Ring, of whom the defendant was one, dated in December, 1824: also a Sheriff’s deed to Mary Ring, the widow of Thomas Ring, as a purchaser under execution against Lindley, in June, 1824. The defendant also introduced testimony conducing to prove that the widow and heirs of Thomas Ring obtained possession of the land in 1815, and that they or some of them, had ever since continued in possession and claimed it; that at the time Gray made his purchases, he knew of the deed from Huling to Cravens, and from Davis, Lindley, and others, to Ring’s heirs, and that they were in .possession.

The plaintiff then introduced a record from the Logan ■Circuit Court, showing that the sale to Mary Ring had been quashed and the deed pet aside in 1826; also the ■copy of a record from the Chancery Court in the State of Tennessee. This was a suil in chancery instituted by the administrator of Thomas Ring against Azariah Davis and others, in which the heirs of Ring were also parties, for the rescission of an executory contract between Thomas Ring and Davis, made in 1814, for three hun[370]*370dred acres of land sold by Davis to Ring,t, This record, together with other testimony adduced by the plaintiff, conduced toprove that the land purchased by Ring from Davis, was part of the land in contest, and that the deed from Davis and others to Ring’s heirs, was not delivered.

Admissions in an answer are evidence against the party malting them.

On the part of the appellant it is insisted that the Court below permitted illegal testimony on the behalf of the plaintiff tobe introduced, and also ruled the law erroneously, and to the prejudice of the' defendant, in giving and refusing instructions to the jury.

The defendant objected to the record of the chancery suit in Tennessee, but the Court permitted the entire re- \ cord to go as evidence to the jury, and refused to instruct \ them that the statements in the answer of Davis, and of f* the other defendants, except the defendant, Ring, now j the appellant,, were not testimony. The object of that,* suit, as we have seen, was a rescission of the contract’ between Davis and Thomas Ring, for three hundred acres' of the land in controversy. That contract was rescinded, and an equitable lien upon the land decreed the representative of Ring, for the amount due from Davis on account of the purchase money which he had received. We do not perceive that the subject matter of that suit or the final disposition of it, has any particular bearing upon this. The fact that Ring purchased from Davis, and that bis widow and heirs, in virtue of that purchase, entered upon and held the land, does not prove that they looked to Huling or Lindiey for title, or that their possession was not adverse to both of them. But notwithstanding the matters controverted and decided in that case mighthave no bearing upon this, yet we thinkjhejmgwer of the defendant, Ring, contains statements and admits facts, which.-have a direct bearing upon some material points in this case. His answer was filed in 1829. He states in it that the three hundred acres purchased by his father from Davis, was embraced in the patent to Huling; that Davis had made no deed for the land: and that none had been made by Huling. He admits the purchase by Lindiey under execution against Huling, and also Gray’s purchase under execution against Lindiey. .These statements and _ admissions, and perhaps some others in the answer, hav® [371]*371súme bearing upon this case, and the record was competent, to establish.them. But further than the facts stated or admitted by the answer of the defendant, Ring, expressly or by implication, we think the record was incompetent.

—But statements by a vendor after he has sold the property, to the title of which the confessions relate, are not evidence against his vendee.

The .answer of Davis was filed in 1.827, long after nis contract with Thomas Ring and the date of the deed to his heirs. His statements, it is very manifest, we think, could not be used as evidence against the defendant. The statements of a vendor in regard to his title and the manner in which he held, made before sale, but not afterwards, may be used against his vendee. We are of opinion, therefore, that the Court erred in permitting the entire record to go as evidence to the jury, and in refusing to instruct them that the statements in the answer of Davis and other defendants, were not testimony.

It is also insisted that the Circuit Judge erred in permitting the depositions of Lindley and Jeremiah Cravens to be read as evidence by the plaintiff. Lindley was one of the grantors in the deed to Ring’s heirs, and Cravens also executed it as attorney in fact for William Cravens. The objection was to the competency of the witnesses and also their testimony, which conduces to prove that the deed was not delivered to the grantees and was not to be delivered, except conditionally; that it was made to aid Davis in the chancery suit in Tennessee, and was not to be effectual as a conveyance, till the residue of the purchase money, due by Ring’s representatives to Davis, or his assignees, was paid. It does not .appear that either Lindley or Cravens had any interest in this suit, which would render them incompetent as witnesses for the plaintiff. The consideration expressed in the deed as to Lindley and Cravens, was nominal, being one dollar, and it contained a covenant of warranty only against persons claiming under them. Their testimony is not inconsistent with any thing contained in the deed. It was competent for the plaintiff to show that the deed-was not delivered, and the testimony conduces to prove that fact, and to that extent we have no doubt of its competency. Butin regard to this testimony or that of Lindley, the Court instructed the jury so that they could not [372]*372well |be misled as to the effect of the testimony. We are of opinion, therefore, that the overruling the defendant's exception to these depositions, when taken in connection with the instructions to the jury, furnishes no ground for a reversal.

The legal ques: lions involved in ibis trial in the Circuit Court,

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Bluebook (online)
45 Ky. 368, 6 B. Mon. 368, 1846 Ky. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ring-v-gray-kyctapp-1846.