Turner v. Patterson

35 Ky. 292, 5 Dana 292, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 56
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 3, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 35 Ky. 292 (Turner v. Patterson) 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
Turner v. Patterson, 35 Ky. 292, 5 Dana 292, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 56 (Ky. Ct. App. 1837).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Doe, on the demise of eight persons claiming to be the surviving children of Catharine Patterson, deceased having, in an action of ejectment, obtained a judgment against Thomas Turner, for eight thirteenths of a tract of land containing about fifty acres — each party prosecutes a writ of error to reverse the judgment, and presents various questions for revision by this Court.

It appears from the bill of exceptions, that Jesse Patterson, who held ah obligation on one Mobberly, for a conveyance of the legal title to the tract of land which is the subject of controversy in this suit, sold the land to John Turner, his father-in-law, to whom Mobberly made a deed, in 1809; that Patterson and wife continuing to live on and enjoy the use of the land, with the permission of Turner, and without being charged with rent, he made the following disposition of it by his last will, admitted to record in January, 18131

That a dedimus is blank as to the county in which the depositions are to be taken, & also, as to the magistrate authorized to take them, is not an available objection to the depositions. Though a deposition may contain some interrogatories rather leading if its would he substantially the same without the answers to those interrogations a refusal to reject it will not be good ground for a reversal.

Item — to my daughter, Catharine Patterson, I give, her and her children, the fifty acres of land they now live on, to each an equal part;” that Patterson and wife still continued to occupy the land until sometime in the year 1815, when they sold and conveyed their interest therein to Thomas Turner, the defendant in the court below, referring expressly to John Turner's Will as the source of their title; that, when the testator died, his daughter Catherine Patterson had seven children living, of whom two died in infancy during her life; — that she had five more, of whom, also, two died whilst they were infants, and after her death; that she died in 1830, her husband and ‘ten of her children surviving her; that Turner continued to occupy the land, claiming it as his own, from about the date of his purchase to the institution of this suit — a period of not quite twenty years; and that the eight how surviving children of Catharine Patterson are the lessors, together with Samuel Reid, who is described as the husband of one of them.

Upon this state of facts, the Circuit Court instructed the jury that, if the lessors had a right to recover, they were entitled to eight undivided thirteenth's of the entire ¡tract of land: to which instruction, both parties objected, and Turner also excepted.

That instruction presents the principal ground of controversy in this Court. But before we proceed to consider it, we will first dispose of some preliminary and minor points urged by Turner against the judgment.

First. Having objected, on the hearing in the Circuit Court, to the reading of some depositions which purported to have been taken in Missouri, he now insists that the Court erred in overruling his objections: which were, (1) that some of the interrogatories were leading; .and (2) that the dedimus, under which they had been taken, was blank as to the county in which they were to be taken, and also as to the magistrate authorized to take them.

But we concur with the Circuit Court in the opinion that the objections were unsubstantial, and merely tech[294]*294nical. The dedimus gave authority to any justice of the peace of the State of Missouri, and that was all-sufficient for every rational or practical purpose; and if any of the questions contained in any of the depositions were such as are called leading, they were but few and but slightly leading; if so at all; and had the answers to all such been expunged, the material facts would have remained in full force.

In ejectment on the demise of husband and wife, the title being in the wife, proof of the marriage is not essential. Proof of declarations of co-lessors, made before suit brought or intended, may be sufficient evidence of the marriage of a member of their family. Lis mota, as an objection to declarations, does not apply where the declarations were against the interest of the party making them. There being no evidence from which a jury might infer that an ejectment was barred by time, there was no error in refusing instruction; on that point.

Second. Turner also complains that the Circuit Court refused to instruct the jury, that there could be no recovery oil the demise of Reid and wife—because, as his counsel insists, there was no proof of Reid’s intermarriage with one of the female lessors, or of the fact that the marriage was anterior to the date of the demise.

This objection, also, is unsubstantial. If Reid had hot intermarried with one of the lessors, the demise was not affected by the error of associating his name with that of a proper lessor who had title; and moreover, the evidence was sufficient, in our opinion; to authorize the inference that Reid was the husband, and was married at the date of the demise. The declarations of members of the family of Jesse Patterson were, for that purpose; competent evidence; and those declarations being made by two of the co-lessors, before the Commencement of this suit, were not inadmissible on the ground that they were made when this suit was contemplated. It does not appear that there was such a lis mota as should render them incompetent; and the more especially, as it was not the interest of the declarants to state that their sister was married; and therefore, the general rule as to the incompetency of declarations made, as to marriage or pedigree, by a member of the family, in favor of his own interest, post litem motam, does not apply to the declarations proved in this case.

Third. He also insists that the lapse of time might have operated as a legal bar, and that therefore, the Circuit Court erred in refusing to instruct the jury, as requested, hypothetically, on that point.

But there could have been no error in that respect, because, as Turner entered under the deed from Pat[295]*295terson and wife, and that deed showed that they held under the will of John Turner, the jury could not have inferred that there had been an adverse occupancy for twenty years; and more especially, if, as will appear presently, the lessors had no cause of action until after the death of Catharine Patterson.

Either party may avail himself of exceptions taken by the other to show that instructions he did not ask for, but objected to, were given. Children is a term of purchase, not of limitation; and being used; in a will, with, nothing indicating that heirs, was meant, by it —thus: ‘To my daughter C. P. I. give, to her and her children, the 50 acres &c. to each an equal part, imports that they are to take equal shares as tenants in, common—the mother and seven children eight shares And no time being fixed by the will, for enjoyment by the children, or for partition, the estate vests, at the testator’s death, in the mother and children then living. But—The terms, C. P. is to have no more than

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Bluebook (online)
35 Ky. 292, 5 Dana 292, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-patterson-kyctapp-1837.