Smith v. Shacklett's Heirs
This text of 1 Ky. Op. 482 (Smith v. Shacklett's Heirs) 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.
Opinion
Opinion of the Court by
The appellees, as thé children and only beirs of John Shacklett under whose possessory title they claim the land in contest in this action were the only necessary parties as plaintiffs, because their mother, having waived her right to hold the homestead until assignment of dower, removing therefrom and settling on a tract unconnected therewith and holding possession of it for her children, had lost any interest which could have made her a necessary party.
The evidence on the last trial was substantially the same as on the first trial, but was rather stronger in favor of the verdict so far as it proved that Robert’s patent, with which the appellant attempted to connect himself, does not cover any of the land in contest. And consequently this court, having, on an appeal from the first judgment, decided that the evidence sustained the first verdict, cannot now consistently adjudge stronger evidence insufficient on the last trial.
The death, nonresidence, or disability of witnesses whose statements were read on the first trial, did not deprive the appellees [483]*483of the right to use them on the last trial — as embodied in the bill of exceptions on the first trial — and the exceptions to the depositions filed on the 5th of February, 1857, were properly overruled because they did not question the competency of the witnesses, and all other objections had been waived by law as well as by express agreement.
Nor is there any available error in either giving or refusing instructions. All the instructions given on the last trial for the appellees, except 7 and 10, had been given on the first trial, and this court, in its -former opinion, tacitly approved all of them except 7 and 10, and reversed the judgment only because these two were considered misleading. And, on the last trial, they were modified as prescribed in the mandate. We could not, therefore, reverse the last judgment for error in giving instructions for the appellees. All the instructions asked by the appellant were given except No. 6 which proposed the exclusion of the bond from Lewis to John Shacklett on the ground that there was no evidence tending to prove the execution of it. But not only was the refusal to give the same instruction on the first trial silently approved by the former opinion of this court, but the facts proved by Ross and wife conduced to establish the execution of the bond so far as to authorize the jury to consider those facts and decide upon them.
We cannot, therefore, reverse for imputed error in again refusing to give that instruction.'
Wherefore, perceiving no available error, the judgment is .affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1 Ky. Op. 482, 1867 Ky. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-shackletts-heirs-kyctapp-1867.