Marshall v. Hancock
Marshall v. Hancock
Opinion of the Court
Action to quiet title. Judgment for defendants. Motion for new trial overruled. Plaintiff appeals.
The controverted question in the court below was as to the genuineness of a deed from one Michael White and wife to Henry Hancock, under which the defendants claimed to be the owners of one half of the real estate in controversy. The deed appeared upon its face to have been regularly executed and acknowledged. The plaintiffs claimed it to be a forgery, and that Michael White was out of the state at the time it purported to have been signed and acknowledged. The court below, after hearing testimony as to the execution of the deed, held the same to have been executed and admitted it in evidence.
The appellants assign several errors upon rulings made during the hearing, and claim that the decision of the court that the deed was genuine was not sustained by the evidence. A witness called by the plaintiff testified that he knew White, that he was at White’s house, on the ranch, cultivated his land, and had a conversation with him. He was then asked what the conversa
In order to show the absence of White at the time the deed purported to have been executed, the plaintiffs proved by his wife, that he left home, and that she accompanied him part of the way. She was then asked if, when she bid him good by, he told her where he was going. This was objected to, and the objection sustained. This question is like the one above referred to. There was no offer to prove any statement that would have tended to corroborate the testimony of other witnesses that he went to Lower California, nor did the question indicate that such would be her answer. We cannot assume error in order to reverse the case, nor can we, for the purpose of sustaining the appellants’ position, presume what he fails to show, viz., that the answer of the witness would have been material if it had been allowed.
The defendants, in order to prove that the name of White to the deed was in his handwriting, proved that White had, prior to that time, been a justice of the peace; a record from the clerk’s office, shown to
The appellant’s contend that' the record admitted in evidence was not sufficiently authenticated or proved to be a public record kept by White. But this was entirely unnecessary. The evidence was not offered to prove the contents of the record or to establish any fact. The name appearing therein was the only material thing. It could make no difference whether the name offered appeared in a public record, a private writing, or on a blank piece of paper. If admitted, or proved to the satisfaction of the judge to be genuine, it could properly be compared with the handwriting in controversy for the purpose of showing that the latter was genuine. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 1943,1944.) Of course the record introduced did not prove that the name of White appearing therein was his genuine signature; but there was positive evidence to that effect which we must presume was proof to the satisfaction of the judge that it was genuine.
The defendants were permitted to introduce in evidence the testimony of White given in an action not shown to have been between the parties to this action, or to have involved the matter in controversy here. The object was to show declarations of White, who was deceased, tending to show that he executed the deed in controversy. The admission of this testimony was erroneous. (1 Greenl. Ev., secs. 125, 163; Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1870.) But we have examined the evidence carefully, and find nothing in it to prejudice the appellants. Therefore, the ruling of the court, although erroneous, was harmless, and we cannot reverse the case on that ground
The point is made that the decision of the court on this question was not sustained by the evidence, but we think otherwise.
Judgment and order affirmed.
McFarland, J., Paterson, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ELVIRA C. MARSHALL v. JOHN HANCOCK
- Cited By
- 25 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- Evidence—Objection to Question—Otter of Proof when Necessary — Review of Ruling. — Where a question to which an objection is sustained on the trial does not itself indicate whether the answer to it will be material evidence or not, the party seeking to introduce the evidence must, in order to have the ruling reviewed on appeal, make an offer of what he proposes to prove, so that the trial and the appellate court can determine whether the proposed evidence is material or not. Id.:—Comparison of Handwritings — Signature of Official — Proof of Public Record. — Where the genuineness of the signature of a person who was a justice of the peace is in controversy, his signatures to his official docket as justice, after being proved to the satisfaction of the trial judge, are admissible in evidence for the purpose of comparison with the handwriting in controversy, without formal proof that the docket is a public record, Id. — Admissibility of Testimony of Deceased Person. — The testimony of a witness in a prior action is not admissible, after his decease, in a subsequent action between different parties and involving a controversy as to a different matter. Id. — Immaterial Error. — Error in the admission of evidence which could not have prejudiced the opposite party is not ground for a reversal.