White v. Van Horn

159 U.S. 3, 15 S. Ct. 1027, 40 L. Ed. 55, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2281
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 3, 1895
Docket261
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 159 U.S. 3 (White v. Van Horn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Van Horn, 159 U.S. 3, 15 S. Ct. 1027, 40 L. Ed. 55, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2281 (1895).

Opinion

Me. Justice White,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

*11 The assignments of error are addressed, first, to the alleged illegal admission of evidence ; secondly, to the refusal of the court to give certain charges; and, thirdly, to the charges actually given.

1st. The defendant objected to the introduction of the deed' of sale made by J. H. Chism on October 31,1838, of his bounty certificate, because it was res inter alios and irrelevant. ■ The objection was untenable. The issue of forgery vel non of the deed from which the title in controversy was deraigned. clearly made the proof relevant. The evidence tended tó show the manner in which J. H. Chism signed his . name at or about the time it was contended that the transfer signed by J. H. Chisholm had been executed. It was also admissible as tending to show how J. H, Chism then valued Texas land, and thus to disprove the claim that he had sold a certificate entitling him to 1400 acres at $150 at just about the same time he had obtained $500 for a certificate for a less quantity. Irrespective of this, testimony had been elicited without objection to the effect that J. H. Chism had declared, on his second return to Kentucky, that he had sold land in Texas, and this deed was competent to explain that statement. It is a matter of no moment whether testimony as to these declarations.of J. H. Chism was admissible or not, since it was admitted without objection, and it was competent to offer evidence to throw light upon and explain them.

2d. The objection taken to the statement of the witness Moreman, that “ he. should say ” that the original, of which the certificate produced was a copy, was among the papers turned over to him by the father of J. H. Chism, went, obviously, to the effect and not to the admissibility of that statement. Besides, the objection separates the words I should say ” from the whole context of the witness ’ testimony; whereas th¿ context makes it clear that those words, instead of being the expression of a conjecture, were simply a form of speech, for, after using them, the witness proceeded to furnish the basis for his statement by describing the original document in such a way as to give emphasis to his identification of the copy.

*12 3d. The court refused to instruct the jury, at defendant’s request, as follows: “The uncontroverted evidence in this cause shows that the certificate by virtue of which thé land in controversy was located came into the hands of W. R. Baker, as agent of E-. M. Robinson, as a purchaser, in December, 1838, and that it was thereafter located on the land by Steiner as the agent of Baker, who had acquired the title of Robinson in the same, and if the person who sold the same to Robinson through Baker, under whatever name, was, at the time of the sale to Baker, the owner of the certificate, you will find a verdict for defendant; and in this connection you are instructed that it is a presumption of fact that a person in possession of a certificate is the owner in the absence of evidence to the contrary, whether he have a written assignment- or not, and it is shown by- the evidence that the certificate in question was' in possession of a person who sold it to him for Robinson recently after it was issued, it having been issued in November, 1838; if you should believe such person was not the same' to whom it was issued, yet, unless the evidence. shows that the person to whom it issued had not sold it, you would be authorized to find for the defendant.”

This charge was rightly refused. It practically requested the court to disregard the proof, and amounted to a request to instruct a verdict for the defendant. The very issue in the case was whether the certificate did or did not come into the hands of Baker, as agent, in 1838. The reliance of the defendant was on the testimony of Baker, and the fact that the name J. H. Chisholm and the name J. EL Chism were idem sonans. But Baker’s testimony was directly contradicted by that of Moreman, and it is impossible to reconcile the two. If the certificate 'was in Moreman’s hands as testified to by him, it could not have been in the hands of Baker, in 1838, as sworn to by him. There were, besides Moreman’s testimony, many circumstances tending -to refute Baker’s statements. These were the fact that the transfer from Robinson was not put on record until 1852, when Baker was clerk, and therefore himself made the record; the loss of the original; the fact that the transfer was made in the name of Robinson, whose exist *13 ence and whereabouts were so meagrely disclosed as to render it impossible from the testimony to discover him; that, although the first transfer in 1838 purported to have been made in the name of Baker as agent, there was a subsequent transfer by Baker to De Cordova, and yet, a third transfer from De Cordova back to Baker; that the patent for the land was not obtained until 1858, many years after Baker claimed that .he was in possession’of the certificate; and, finally, that the transfer itself, when examined by the light of surrounding facts, affords some ground for the claim that Baker could not have had the certificate in his possession in 1838, when the transfer was made.

The certificate contained six statements: First, its class; second, the quantity of the land for which it issued.; third, its number; fourth, the date of its issue; fifth, the name of the person to whom it was issued; sixth, the county from, which it was issued.. The transfer, in describing the certificate, states it as having been issued to J. H. Chism ; makes no mention of day or number. It says, “ No.-,” and that the certificate was “dated November, 1838,” giving no day of the month, and it is signed “ J. H. Chisholm.” The failure in the transfer to give either the number of the certificate or the day of the month on which.it was issued, as also the mention of the name of J. H. Chism in its body, coupled with the signature “ J. H. Chisholm,” were in themselves claimed to be, as they undoubtedly were, circumstances tending to’.show that the party who wrote the transfer could not have been in possession of the certificate.

It was contended that this inference was further strengthened by the public records. Thus, the return to the General Land Office by the county clerk gave the number 990, corresponding with that of the certificate itself, and gave the month as November, 1838, without giving any day of the month. The report of the Travelling Board described the certificate by a wrong number, 701, instead of 990; it gave the date thereof as November 1, 1838, and the name of the grantee as J. H. Chisholm. The fact is that the transfer seemed to have been drawn with reference to these public records, and, in order, not *14 to conflict with either of them, it uses the name J; H. Chism in the body and the name J. H. Chisholm in the signature, and it omits the number of the certificate altogether, and mentions no day of the month, the day being also omitted in one of the records. Under this condition of the proof, the court was obviously correct in not taking the question of fact from the consideration of the jury.

4th. The court refused to charge as follows at the request of the defendant:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 U.S. 3, 15 S. Ct. 1027, 40 L. Ed. 55, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-van-horn-scotus-1895.