Woffenden v. Charauleau

1 Ariz. 346
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1 Ariz. 346 (Woffenden v. Charauleau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woffenden v. Charauleau, 1 Ariz. 346 (Ark. 1876).

Opinions

By Court,

Tweed, J.:

The appeal is from the first district, Pima county. Counsel for the respondent, before submitting his argument upon the merits of the case, asked to be heard upon a preliminary motion to strike out from the transcript certain portions thereof as not being properly certified, citing the twelfth rule of this_court as entitling him to be heard upon such motion.

The rule invoked reads as follows: “Exceptions to the transcript, the bond or undertaking on appeal, or the notice of appeal, or to its service or proof of service, or any technical objection to the record affecting the rights of the appellant to be heard on the points of error assigned, must be taken at the first term after the transcript is filed, and must be noted in writing, and filed at least one day before the argument, or they will not be regarded. In such case, the objection must be presented to the court before the argument on the merits.”

On the tenth of January the case was set for argument on the thirteenth. It was not reached until the twenty-fourth of that month. On the twenty-first the counsel for respondent noted in writing and filed his objections to the transcript, and on the twenty-fourth, when the case was called for argument, asked to be heard upon his motion to strike out. The court declined to hear the motion argued, and counsel for the respondent excepted to this ruling.

The object of the rule is obvious. It is intended to enable the court, as early as is practicable, to dispose of all preliminary objections to a hearing upon the merits of the cases to be brought before it for consideration. To hear such objections as early as possible for its own convenience and for the convenience of the appellant who might be permitted, in case of error or mistake in copying exhibits or otherwise, to correct the same in season for a hearing at the term. The rule requires that the exceptions to the transcript be noted at least one day before the argument, or that they be disregarded.

[350]*350When a case is set for argument, and no exceptions are noted and filed before the day so fixed, we think all exceptions to the transcript should be deemed to be waived. It was with this view of the intention and spirit of the rule cited that we declined to hear the motion of respondent’s counsel; and we take occasion to say here, that wlijle we do not wish to encourage any laxity in practice in appeals to this court, we shall avoid as far as possible allowing technical objections to stand in the way of a hearing upon the merits of such cases as may come before us.

There are obvious reasons why the supreme court of a territory like ours should, by liberal rules liberally construed, aid litigants to obtain a hearing upon the merits of cases brought before it by appeal.

We will now consider the case as presented to us. On the second day of July, 1875, a judgment was rendered by the judge of the district court, first district, Pima county, in favor of the plaintiff herein, in an action then pending in said court for forcible entry and detainer, wherein the plaintiff herein was plaintiff, and the defendant herein was defendant.

The premises in controversy in that action, and for which judgment of restitution was had in favor of the plaintiff, were three quarter-sections of land lying contiguous to each other in Pinal county, and known as the Robledo, Moreno, and Duran ranches. The plaintiff in this action asks to recover the rents and profits of the premises above mentioned from the tenth of April, 1874, up to the second of July, 1875, the period, as is alleged, during which the defendant wrongfully withheld the premises from the plaintiff. Also to recover the value of a quantity of corn and a growing crop alleged to have been upon the premises at the time of the unlawful entry of defendant, and by him converted to his own use; and, among other articles of personal property, two horses and three yoke of oxen, of the alleged value of two hundred and fifty dollars, etc.

The defendant in his answer claims ownership of the premises described in the complaint, admits that plaintiff was owner of one half of the growing crop, denies plaintiff’s ownership of the horses and oxen, and alleges that he, the defendant, is the owner thereof.

[351]*351On the trial the defendant introduced evidence tending to show that certain of the personal property, the oxen and horses, were purchased by him from Anna G. Woffenden, the wife of the plaintiff, and that this property was purchased by her separate means, and was her separate property. Transcript, fo.lios 61, 62.

Testimony of plaintiff upon cross-examination, where plaintiff, in answer to questions touching the purchase of this property, says: “I got that property at home; my wife bought it; she bought it with money belonging to both of us; what is hers' is mine; I did not furnish any money directly to pay for it; I did not furnish any money.” See also testimony of defendant, folio 81.

Among other instructions, the court charged the jury as follows: “The title to the ranches is not here in question, nor to be considered by you. Whatever of the other property in controversy was acquired by the plaintiff and his wife subsequent to their marriage is common property, and as such subject to the management and disposition of the husband, and the wife had no authority to sell the same, unless you find that she was authorized thereto by her husband as any other agent might be. The presumption of its being common property would be removed if you find that said property was taken in exchange for the separate property of either spouse, or was acquired by gift, bequest, devise, or descent; but such proof must be clear and satisfactory. * * * You must also find that said property was owmed by her before marriage with the plaintiff, or acquired afterwards in the manner above described, in order that she might give a complete title thereto as against her husband; or you must find that she was the authorized agent of the husband to sell the same,” etc.

The court also gave the following instructions: “If you find that any of the property in controversy is rents, issues, and profits of the separate property of either spouse, it is common property by the laws of this territory, and subject to the management of the husband, with like power of disposition as over his own separate estate, and no marriage contract in derogation of these rights is of any force or effect.”

The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff for one thou[352]*352sand dollars, itemized as follows: For one half of the crop of 1874, seven hundred and fifty dollars; three yoke of oxen valued at one hundred and fifty dollars; one horse valued at forty dollars; and fifteen hundred pounds of corn valued at sixty dollars.

Both these instructions were excepted to by counsel for the defendant, and their being given is assigned as error. In the first of these instructions we understand the leárned judge to charge to the effect that to constitute separate property in the wife, when the property is obtained after marriage, it must have come to her by gift, bequest, devise, or descent, or it must have been obtained in exchange for her separate property; that she could not sell any portion of her separate property and invest the means derived from such sale in other property, and hold the same as a part of her separate estate, but that such property so purchased would become common property, and subject to the management and disposal of her husband.

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Related

Porter v. Porter
195 P.2d 132 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1948)
Schade v. O'Hara
52 Ariz. 416 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1938)
Estate of Stark
82 P.2d 894 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1938)
Stiles v. Lord
11 P. 314 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1886)
Woffenden v. Charouleau
11 P. 117 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1886)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ariz. 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woffenden-v-charauleau-ariz-1876.