McMath v. Teel
McMath v. Teel
Opinion of the Court
This was an action of ejectment brought by John Teel against John L. McMath; pending the suit both parties died; Alexander Teel, the administrator of the plaintiff, and Mrs. McMath, the wife of the defendant, were made parties, and the cause proceeded. After the evidence had been submitted, the jury, under the charge of the court,
The principal grounds relied upon for a new trial were:
1. That the court erred in admitting a bond for titles, there being two subscribing witnesses thereto, without proof of its execution, it having been brought into court under a notice served upon John H. McMath, the first defendant, before Mrs. McMath was made a party.
2. In not allowing Mrs. McMath, the defendant, to testify that she never held possession under the bond for titles, nor under her husband.
3. In not allowing a letter of October, 1875, to Mrs. Me- • Math, to be read in evidence, upon her testifying that she received it by due course of mail, that it was the handwriting of her sister, who lived with her father, who was old and infirm, and also that of J. W. Finch, a brother-in-law of Louisa Teel, the writer, who said that according to the best of witness’ opinion it was her handwriting.
4. That the court erred in charging the jury, that if the defendant was a married woman and entered the possession with her husband, she could not, without written title, set up possession ,in herself. And although they went in possession over twenty years ago, if afterwards her husband took a bond for titles, he is estopped from denying plaintiff’s title, and she is estopped as the possession of the husband is the possession of the wife.
5. That if McMath took a bond for titles from Teel, although he was then in possession, his possession afterwards was under the bond, and so was hers, and they were both estopped.
6. That if McMath was estopped, and he and his wife entered without written title, and McMath took a bond for titles from Teel, then he is estopped and she is estopped, and if these facts appear you ought to find for the plaintiff.
When the bond for titles was offered, and the statement made as to the manner in which it was brought into court, nothing appeared to the judge except that it came from the hands of the defendant McMath; and that, by consent, Mrs. McMath had come in after his death, was made a party in his place and stead, and stood as an heir at law claiming a benefit under the bond which her husband had produced under a legal notice.
"We think that as the case stood at that time, the bond was admissible, subject to be ruled out if afterwards it should be made to appear that she had a legal claim to the land outside of, and independently of, his bond for titles.
No such title being shown afterwards, the bond remained in evidence properly for the consideration of the jury.
The husband in this state is the head of the family, the wife’s legal existence is merged in his, except for her protection or benefit, or for the preservation of public order. Code, §1753. When these parties therefore entered upon this land and took possession of it, nothing else appearing, the wife was utterly unknown to the law in the matter of the possession; and being in 1858, if the father had said or done anything towards • making her a gift of it, unless it was in writing, and the marital rights of the husband excluded, they would have attached and the possession would have been his.
Therefore, where the instructions given by the court to the jury were, that she could not, without some written title, set up possession in herself, even though she might have gonein twenty years ago; that if afterwards, in 1870, her husband took a bond for titles and gave his note for the land, then they were both estopped; that although he may have been in possession before that time, yet if he took the bond and remained in afterwards under it, then he was estopped; that if he were estopped, and she entered with him without
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- McMath v. Teel, administrator
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published