Roberts v. Tennell

19 Ky. 247
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 2, 1825
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 19 Ky. 247 (Roberts v. Tennell) 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
Roberts v. Tennell, 19 Ky. 247 (Ky. Ct. App. 1825).

Opinion

Chief Justice Boyle

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This case was formerly before this court, when the judgment which had been rendered for the plaintiff in the circuit court was reversed, and the cause remanded, for new proceedings to be had, not inconsistent with the opinion then given by this court. By adverting to the report of the case in 4th Lit-tell 286, the nature of the case and the state of the pleadings will be seen, and need not be again here detailed.

It is sufficient to observe that the action was a replevin for taking a horse beast, and the main question involved in the issues to which the matters of law now in controversy relate, is whether there was rent in arrear, due from the 'Fennells, one of whom was the plaintiff in the action, to Roberts the dev fendant, for which lie had a right to distrain.

On the trial when the case was remanded, Roberts, after reading in evidence the distress warrant, proved by two witnesses, that about the 19th of January 1830, the Tennells and Roberts came to [248]*248the witnesses and brought with them two bonds which Roberts held for a tract of land, with assignments thereon from him to the Tennells, bearing date the 19th of January 1820, and a note bearing the same date, executed by the Tennells to Roberts, for $100 payable the 4th of September 1821, and, that the Tennells and Roberts agreed that the latter should keep the. note for $100, and the two bonds should be placed in the bands of one óf the witnesses, to be kept by him until the note became due, when the bonds should be delivered to which ever of the parties produced the note to the witness, and if Roberts produced the note he was to have the land*bonds, and the land to be his, and the Tennells were to pay twenty-five dollars a yéar as rent, for the land. The witnesses further stated, that when the $100 note became due it was not paid, and Roberts having produced it to the witness, the land bonds were delivered to him, and that at the time the agreement Was made, Roberts was in possession of the land, and delivered the possession thereof to the Tennells, who occupied it for two years.

i'c»nel,s evidence. Evidence offeroii by Roberts and rejected. Instructions given on motion of TenSiell, &c.

The plaintiff Tennell then read in evidence an answer of Roberts in a suit.in chancery between the same parties, to the reading of which Roberts objected, but his objection was overruled. Tennel then read in evidence a note, purporting to be executed by the Tennells to Roberts, bearing the same date, and payable at the same time as the note for $100, with an assignment thereon from Roberts to E. Barnes, to the reading of which Roberts objected but bis objection was overruled.

Roberts then offered to read in evidence another answer filed by him in the same suit in chancery, in response to an amended bill, to the reading of which Tennell objected, and the court sustained the objection.

This was the whole of the evidence, and on this state of the case, the circuit court, at the instance of the plaintiff Tennell, instructed the jury, that if they found from the evidence? that the contract for the payment of rent was by parol, and was not to he performed within a year from the making thereof, it v as void, and that they must find for the plaintiff, against Roberts,

Answer in chancery is e°Sencoagainst”the party, as his gt^!inonts011 Where the answer mea* pfrty all its statements are made eví-, foi And once, a“ amended p^nator/of the general terms of tIia mMieF fcf/* him.— —But a sub», sweTto an amended bill cannot in suo^ca?® for thepariv.

To these several decisions Of the circuit court, the defendant Roberts excepted, and a verdict awl judgment having been rendered against him, he has brought the case to this court by writ of error.

There cuts, in out* opinion, be no reasonable doubt, that the circuit court was correct in admitting the answer of Roberts to be read as evidence against him. A man’s own confession is always admissible against him, and much more ought it to be so where it is made in a solemn proceeding in a court of justice, under the sanction of an oath.

There is more room to doubt the propriety of rejecting the second answer offered by Roberts to be read as evidence; but we are inclined to think that this was hot erroneous.

It is true, that wherever the declaration of a party is used as evidence against him, the whole of it must be taken together, as well that which operates in bis favor as that which makes against him, and hence it is an established rule that if an answer of a party is used against him he has a right to insist «i pon the whole of it being read; but regularly it is only the whole statement which he makes at the same time, which he has a right to insist upon being read in his favor when a part of it is used against him, and, therefore, if the statement made at one time is used against a party, it does not make a statement made by him at a different time evidence in his favor.

It is asserted, indeed, to have been 'decided in one? case that whore one answer had" been put in by the defendant and, on exceptions being taken to it, he put in a second answer, he was allowed on an information for perjury, to read the second answer in explanation of the general terms of the first. Peak Evil. 66.

This case is, however, very questionable upon principle, and we may remark, that it differs from the present, in as much as the second answer in that case was in response to the same bill, and was only read as evidence in explanation of the general terms of the first; whereas, in this case, the answer offer-ea m evidence by Roberts was in response, not to the same bill, to which the first answer had been a [250]*250response, but to an amended bill and it was not offered ,as evidence in explanation of the'genexal terms of the first answer merely, but as evidence in geueral.

Where a writing is introduced collftterrally on a trial, it njust be proved by tlie subscribing witness, or bis absence accounted for, tho’itir execution be admitted by the party against Whom it is offered in an answer read in evidence.- Query — As to the character of the contract,whether a lease tor two years subject to he converted into a sale ot an immediate sale subject to be reduced to such a lease—

[250]*250With respect to the propriety of the admission of the note for fifty dollars objected to by Roberts, we cannot concur with the circuit court. The execution of the note was admitted by the defendant in the answer which had been read as evidence, but there was a subscribing witness to the note, and he was not produced, nor was there any attempt to shew that his attendance could not be procured, and in such a case it has been held that the confession of the party, even in an answer in,chancery, is not sufficient to dispense with the subscribing witness.

Where a writing is the foundation of an action, and it is not put in issue by the pleadings, it will not be necessary to prove its execution

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ky. 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-tennell-kyctapp-1825.