Whitman v. McComas

83 P. 604, 11 Idaho 564, 1905 Ida. LEXIS 84
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 83 P. 604 (Whitman v. McComas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitman v. McComas, 83 P. 604, 11 Idaho 564, 1905 Ida. LEXIS 84 (Idaho 1905).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, J.

— This is an action in ejectment, and involves the right to the possession of the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section 27, township 30 north, range 4 east, in Idaho county, the same being included in what is referred to in the record as the W. F. Smith ranch. United States survey of said land was but recently extended over it.

[566]*566The complaint contains the nsnal allegations of a complaint in ejectment, and judgment for possession is prayed for with damages. The answer is a specific denial of the allegations of the complaint. The cause was tried by the court with a jury, which resulted in a verdict for the defendant, and judgment was entered accordingly. The appeal is from the judgment. Numerous errors are assigned, going to the admission and the rejection of certain testimony, and the rejection and giving of certain instructions to the jury. It appears from the evidence that the appellant and one M. S. MeMurry were partners as early as December, 1902, and that such partnership was formed for the purpose of procuring title to certain land, including the land in question, situated in Idaho county, and raising stock thereon. At that time the appellant and said MeMurry were residents of the state of Montana. MeMurry went into Idaho county, Idaho, for the purpose of procuring a stock ranch for said partnership, and it appears from the evidence that he' purchased what is known and referred to in the record as the W. F. Smith ranéh, which includes the forty acres in dispute, and took a conveyance of said Smith ranch in his own name and other lands. That some time in the spring of 1903, the respondent, who is the nephew of said MeMurry, purchased an adjoining ranch known as the Bowen ranch, and it appears that the appellant and respondent and said MeMurry agreed to and did fence a large tract of land consisting of about four hundred and eighty acres, including the W. F. Smith ranch, a part of the Bowen ranch, and other lands.

It appears that Whitman first came to the land in dispute in April, 1903, remained a day or two, returned to Montana, and again returned to Idaho in May', 1903, and remained there until the following October, when he went to Montana and returned to Idaho in April, 1904. Said partnership was dissolved about April, 1904, and under the dissolution agreement, said MeMurry conveyed whatever title he had in said W. F. Smith ranch to the appellant. The deed of conveyance is dated the twenty-second day of April, 1904, [567]*567and was signed and acknowledged on that date. It was witnessed by the respondent J. B. McComas. Counsel for appellant on the trial offered that deed in evidence, and on objection by counsel for the respondent, the court excluded it. By that deed, MeMurry conveyed to appellant all of his right, title and interest of every kind or nature, as stated in the deed, to wit: “In and to my squatter’s right and location and possession, on a certain one-fourth section of land, including one hundred and sixty acres of land known as the W. F. Smith ranch, lying in the Clearwater Meadows, which said one hundred and sixty acres of land being bounded on the north and east by Jesse McComas’ and on the south by Miss Cora MeMurry’s place.” At the same time, counsel for plaintiff offered a quitclaim deed of the same premises from the said W. F. Smith to the said MeMurry. Those deeds were offered for the purpose of laying the foundation to show that plaintiff had deraigned his title to the right of the possession to the land in dispute in this action through them.

We think the court erred in excluding said deeds. The object and purpose of counsel in offering them was to show that whatever title appellant had to the land and his right to possession thereof, he procured through those deeds. That he went into possession under the title deraigned through them. The land was at that time a part of the public domain and had not yet been surveyed and no segregation of it had been made by entering it under any of the land laws of the United States. The relevancy of that evidence is clearly. apparent.

MeMurry testified as a witness on behalf of the respondent and testified that he had released the forty acres in dispute to the respondent McComas in the spring of 1903, and that he released it by and with the consent of the appellant, while the appellant testified that respondent never released it with appellant’s consent, or at all. And the fact that he executed said deed of April 22, 1904, conveying said Smith ranch to the appellant, particularly describing it, .and that said deed was witnessed by the defendant McComas, was a circumstance tending to support the evidence of the [568]*568appellant. For if the forty aeres in dispute which is conceded to be a part of the W. F. Smith ranch had been abandoned and turned over to McComas in March or April, 1903, why did McMurry convey the W. F. Smith ranch to appellant without excluding the forty acres in dispute? And why did the defendant McComas witness said deed of conveyance about a year after he claims to have taken possession of the disputed forty acre tract as his own? It seems to us that this is a strong circumstance supporting the testimony of the appellant, and is a circumstance that the appellant had a right to have placed before the jury.

There is a conflict in the evidence in this ease, and if the fact that McMurry'conveyed the Smith ranch to the appellant more than a year after he claimed to have turned the forty in dispute, over to the defendant, and the deed witnessed by defendant had been' presented to the jury, we are not able to say that their verdict would have been in favor of the defendant.

Counsel for respondent states in his brief that the deed from' McMurry to the appellant, which was offered in evidence by the appellant was rejected by the court as incompetent and irrelevant, but regardless of that fact he consented that it should be introduced in evidence, or that he-himself introduced it, and that it was read to the jury; that plaintiff’s said exhibit “B” is the same as Defendant’s Exhibit “3,” folio 253 of the transcript. It appears that the counsel has gotten the exhibits mixed in his mind, as Plaintiff’s Exhibit “B” was a quitclaim deed from W. F. Smith to one M. S. McMurry. Defendant’s Exhibit “A” was a quitclaim deed from said McMurry to the appellant, and the only indication we have in the transcript that the defendant ever offered a paper marked Defendant’s Exhibit “3” is that the transcript contained the quitclaim deed from McMurry to the appellant under the caption of Defendant’s Exhibit “3.” We have carefully searched the transcript to find whether Plaintiff’s Exhibit “A” was ever introduced in evidence, or that the defendant ever intro- ‘ dueed said exhibit as his Exhibit “3,” and have failed to [569]*569find that defendant ever introduced said exhibit. However, said quitclaim deed from McMurry to the appellant was ruled out by the court, when offered by counsel for the appellant, on the objection of counsel for the respondent, as irrelevant, incompetent and immaterial, and the record does not show that it was ever offered by the plaintiff or admitted in evidence on behalf of the respondent. After that deed had been rejected by the court in the presence of the jury as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, and thus discredited, the introduction of it by the defendant would not cure the error made by the ruling of the court in the presence of the jury. The respondent had a right to prove his case in an orderly way, and not by the grace of respondent’s counsel. That evidence had been condemned by the court, held immaterial and rejected.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 P. 604, 11 Idaho 564, 1905 Ida. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitman-v-mccomas-idaho-1905.