Taylor v. Peck

21 Va. 11
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 23, 1871
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Va. 11 (Taylor v. Peck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Peck, 21 Va. 11 (Va. 1871).

Opinion

Moncure, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a supersedeas to a judgment of the Circuit court of Montgomery county, reversing a judgment of the County court of said county, in an action of unlawful detainer. It appears that the land sued for had been leased by the plaintiff' to the defendant by a sealed lease for the term of five years, commencing the first day of January 1868, and ending on the 1st of January 1873, at an annual rent of three hundred dollars. The action was brought on the 5th day of November 1869, before the end of the second year of the said term of five years. Several errors in the judgment of the County court (which was for the plaintiff) were assigned in the defendant’s petition for a supersedeas to the Cireuit court, but one of them only was noticed in the judgment of the Circuit court, and on that the judgment of the County court was reversed. Before noticing that, we will notice one other of the errors assigned in the judgment of the County court, which error, we think, is well assigned, and upon it, also, that judgment might have been reversed. The error here referred to is the first in the defendant’s assignment of errors in his petition for a supei’sedeas to the said judgment of the County court; that is, that “ the court erred in refusing to continue the case upon motion of petitioner, as appears from the second bill of exceptions filed in the case.”

The defendant, undoubtedly, would have had good ground for a continuance of the case on account of the absence of the plaintiff, but for the agreement made between them in regard to the production on the trial of [15]*15the cause of the agreement, then|n her possession, under which he claimed to be entitled to the possession of the land in question. She had been duly summoned as a witness, and was absent at the trial; and her materiality as a witness' for the defendant was pi’oved to the court. This state of facts, standing by itself, would have presented a plain case for a continuance. But the defendant further proved that he had told the plaintiff, that if she would cause the said agreement to be produced in evidence on the trial of the cause, then she need not attend the court. And if the plaintiff had been willing, when' the case was called for trial, to produce the said agreement as evidence in the cause, there would have been no ground for a continuance on account of her absence. But her counsel refused in open court, upon being applied to, to consent that the said writing should go before the jury, but said they would produce it in court on the trial of the case, as notified, and -that the question of admitting it before the jury was to be determined hereafter. How, if the understanding between the plaintiff and defendant was as proved by the defendant, that the said waiting should be produced in evidence on the, trial, then, clearly, the refusal of the plaintiff’s «counsel to cousent that said writing should go before the jury entitled the defendant to a continuance, notwithstanding the declaration of said counsel, as aforesaid, that they would produce said writing in court on the trial of the case, as notified, and that the question of admitting it before the jury was to be determined hereafter. The condition on which the defendant had jsonsented.to. dispense with the necessity of the plaintiff’s personal attendance on the trial as a witness on his behalf, not having been performed, he of- course had the same right to a continuance that he would have had if there never had been any such condition. The declaration of the plaintiff’s counsel, that they would produce said writing in court on the trial, and that the question [16]*16of admitting it before the jury was to be determined hereafter, makes no difference. The condition as proved the defendant, in which view we are now considering it, was that the said writing should be produced in evidence on the trial; that is, should bo read as evidence before the jury; not that the question of admissibility should first be referred to the decision of the court, and the writing be produced in evidence only in the event of' its being determined to be legally admissible.

There'was, on the motion for a continuance, evidence before the court tending to show that the defendant had said he told the plaintiff she need not attend as a witness, if she would produce the said writing before the court, saying nothing about its being produced to be read in evidence on the trial of the cause. But the weight of evidence decidedly sustained the defendant in his view of the condition on which he agreed to dispense with the necessity of the presence of the plaintiff as a ■witness on the trial.

But whether the plaintiff or the defendant were right in regard to their respective views of the said condition, there was, at least, a misunderstanding between them on the subject; and that of itself, entitled the defendant to a continuance of the cause to prevent the effect of a surprise upon him.

If, however, the plaintiff desired to avoid a continuance on that ground, she had it in her power to do so, by consenting that the said writing, which her counsel then had in court, should be read in evidence before the jury on the trial of the cause. There could have been no good reason for refusing so to consent, if the said writing were legally admissible, as the plaintiff by her counsel now contends that it was. It is contended further by her counsel that there was no necessity for such consent ; that the said writing was clearly admissible evidence though insufficiently stamped, and that the defendant would have been entitled to read it in evidence [17]*17before tbe jury when the time came to do so. But it was not then, if it be now, a settled question, that such evidence is admissible. The defendant’s counsel manifestly thought that it was not admissible, and the plaintiff’s counsel probably then entertained the same opinion ; though he is now of a different opinion, and cited in his brief sevéral recent authorities to sustain his present opinion. At all events, the plaintiff’s couusel, by refusing to consent that the said writing should be read in evidence, plainly indicatéd an intention to question its admissibility when it should be offered as evidence before the jury ; and the defendant was not bound to run the risk of its being excluded, but had a right to have the case continued, when the plaintiff' refused to give her consent as afosesaid.

We will now proceed to consider the ground of error on which the judgment of the County court was reversed by the Circuit court; that is, that the evidence of the defendant which was excluded by the County court, was admissible evidence and ought not to have been so excluded.

The question presented by this assignment of error arises on the 4th bill of exceptions ; from which it appears, that on the trial of the cause, the plaintiff proved herself to be the owner in fee of the lands in question, and that defendant was in possession on the 5th day of November 1869, the date of the writ, and was still in possession at the time of the trial, and the plaintiff lived two miles from the main dwelling which was occupied by the defendant on said premises ; and closed her evidence. The defendant, to sustain the issue on his part, then introduced two receipts signed by the plaintiff in the words and figures following, to wit:

“Beceived of Ci L. Peck, three hundred dollars, amount in full for the rent of my property for the year 1868. M. B. Taylor.”

[U. S. revenue stamp, 2 cents; cancelled.]

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21 Va. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-peck-va-1871.