Stooksbury v. Swan

22 S.W. 962, 85 Tex. 563, 1893 Tex. LEXIS 231
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1893
DocketNo. 12.
StatusPublished
Cited by104 cases

This text of 22 S.W. 962 (Stooksbury v. Swan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stooksbury v. Swan, 22 S.W. 962, 85 Tex. 563, 1893 Tex. LEXIS 231 (Tex. 1893).

Opinion

*565 STAYTON, Chief Justice.

This cause comes before us on certificate of dissent involving only two questions, and none others will be considered.

All of the judges of the Court of Civil Appeals concurred in holding that the deed through which defendants claim was properly admitted as an ancient instrument, notwithstanding an affidavit of forgery.

The rights of the respective parties depended upon the genuineness of that instrument, and its proper execution and authentication to give it effect as a conveyance made by a married woman of her separate estate.

There was much evidence introduced by the respective parties, in addition to the paper which purported to be a deed made by plaintiffs’ ancestors, on the one side tending to show that the instrument was genuine and properly executed, and on the other tending to show that it was not genuine, and that it never was authenticated as required by law.

In this state of cause, the court gave the following instruction:

“That in order to make the deed in controversy sufficient to convey the title of the land involved in this suit to John Stiles, it is necessary that it should have been signed by Robert W. Hamilton and Eliza Ann Hamilton; and in determining whether or not the signature of Robert W. Hamilton to such deed is a forgery, you are charged that a deed over thirty years old is admitted as evidence before the jury without any other proof of its execution, and the affidavit of forgery filed herein does not require defendants to prove such deed to be genuine, but the burden of proving it to be a forgery is on the plaintiffs; but the fact that the deed is thirty years old or over is not conclusive of its genuineness, but it can be shown to be a forgery by evidence, as could any other instrument; and the jury are to determine, from all the facts and circumstances in evidence, whether or not such deed is in fact genuine or a forgery. If, therefore, the jury find from the evidence that the signature of Robert W. Hamilton to such deed was not made by Robert W. Hamilton, and that the same is a forgery, you should find for plaintiffs on the issue of title.’’

The assignment of error, so far as necessary to be considered, was as follows:

“ The court attached undue weight to the instrument upon which said charge was given, by assuming in said charge, and conveying the idea to the jury, that said instrument as presented to the jury proved its own execution and genuineness as the deed of Eliza Ann Hamilton to the land in controversy, and placed the burden on plaintiffs to disprove the same.”

The rest of the assignment was argumentative, and may not have been calculated to sustain the proposition embraced in so much of the assignment as is here quoted; but we are of opinion that the assignment is sufficient to require an examination of the charge.

The deed purported to be made by Robert W. Hamilton and his wife *566 Eliza Ann, the mother and father of the plaintiffs; and while the affidavit of forgery applied to the entire instrument, there was no direct evidence tending to show that it was not executed by the mother, but there was direct testimony tending to show that the father did not sign it.

If the deed was properly admitted as an ancient instrument, in the absence of all testimony tending to show that it was not a genuine instrument, the judgment must necessarily have been for the defendants, if there was no other question in the case; but the question arises, where there was testimony tending directly to show that the instrument was not signed by the father, and other circumstances bearing on the question of the genuineness of the instrument, whether the charge was calculated to mislead the jury.

The latter part of the charge informed the jury, that the age of the deed was not conclusive evidence of its genuineness, and that notwithstanding its age it might be proved to be a forgery, as could any other instrument, and it directed the jury to look to all the facts and circumstances in evidence to determine whether the deed was genuine or a forgery.

There can be no objection to so much of the charge; but in view of what preceded, what facts and circumstances were the jury to consider as in evidence, and what weight were they to understand from the charge should bo given to the deed itself ?

They had been instructed, in effect, that the deed was admissible and had been admitted in evidence because it was over thirty years old, and if this had been connected immediately with the latter part of the charge, which we have already noticed, there could have been no reasonable objection to it; but were the words “ the affidavit of forgery filed herein does not require defendants to prove such deed to be genuine, but the burden of proving it to be a forgery is on the plaintiffs,” calculated to mislead the jury, or was the charge by reason of this erroneous ?

In cases in which evidence is introduced by the respective parties, tending to prove and to disprove the issues of fact involved in a cause, occasion does not arise for declaration upon whom the burden of proof rests; for the question then becomes merely one of preponderance of evidence, which is for the decision of the jury under all the evidence introduced, whether this be direct or circumstantial.

In such cases a charge upon the burden of proof is more likely to mislead than to give a jury a correct view of their duties.

The charge placed the burden of proving that the deed was not genuine upon the plaintiffs. Was that correct? The land having been granted to an ancestor of Mrs. Stooksbury, proof that she was the sole heir entitled her to a judgment, in the absence of testimony sufficient to show that her mother, joined by her father, executed the instrument under which defendants claim.

The burden of bringing evidence to show that that instrument was ex *567 ecuted by them rested upon those who asserted that fact, and a charge to the contrary was erroneous. Upon whom rests the burden of bringing evidence to establish a material issue of fact must be determined by the court; but whether that burden has been met, when there is a conflict of evidence, must be determined by the jury.

The charge assumed that the age of the instrument entitled it to admission as evidence without reference to proof of the necessary corroborative facts; and, in effect, informed the jury that its age and admission made it necessary for plaintiffs to bring evidence sufficient to show that it was not executed by the father and mother of Mrs. Stooksbury.

There are several objections to such a charge.

On the issue as to the genuineness of the instrument, the jury were entitled to look to all the evidence tending to prove or to disprove any corroborative fact necessary to be shown and considered by the court in the first instance in determining whether the instrument should be admitted, and the charge was calculated to induce the belief that all facts of this character had been conclusively settled by the court when the paper was admitted as an ancient instrument.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W. 962, 85 Tex. 563, 1893 Tex. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stooksbury-v-swan-tex-1893.