Madden v. Stegman
Madden v. Stegman
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
E. F. Madden brought ejectment against Christ Stegman and Apolona Stegman, husband and wife. He claimed title under a sheriff’s deed based upon a sale on execution on a judgment against the
The evidence showed that in 1898 the husband had arranged for the purchase of the land, that the deed as executed by the seller left the name of the grantee blank, and the name of Apolona Stegman was after-wards inserted. The plaintiff insists that the defendants’ own testimony showed beyond dispute that while the formal title was taken in the wife the real ownership was in the husband. It is true there were apparent contradictions in this testimony, but as it included explicit statements that the wife furnished the money with which the land was purchased, an issue of fact was presented upon which the jury was required to pass. (Acker v. Norman, 72 Kan. 586, 84 Pac. 581.) The jury returned a negative answer to the question whether Apolona Stegman had on a former occasion stated or claimed that her husband owned the land, oían interest in it. A transcript of her testimony in -a different action showed that she had asserted that the land was occupied by her husband and herself as a homestead, and had spoken of it as having been purchased and paid for by her husband; but she did not deny that the purchase was made with her money and for her benefit, and was not questioned upon this phase
In the answer of Apolona Stegman she claimed ownership under a deed executed by the plaintiff, and said nothing about the deed already referred to. The evidence developed that after the original deed had been executed, and Mrs. Stegman’s name had been inserted in it as grantee, the Stegmans executed a deed to Madden as security, and upon the payment of the debt so secured Madden made a deed to Mrs. Stegman, which was of course in effect merely the release of a mortgage. The fact that in her answer Mrs. Stegman based her claim of title specifically upon this deed from Madden-ought not to preclude her from showing that the title was in her prior to the execution of the security-deed. There is nothing in the record to indicate that the plaintiff suffered any prejudice from the defective pleading.
The plaintiff also introduced in evidence the transcript of testimony given by Christ Stegman in the prior proceeding. He complains of an instruction given in this connection, reading as follows:
“Testimony has been offered regarding statements claimed to have been made by Christ Stegman in another trial. This was permitted only for the purpose of affecting his credibility. He could not by any statements as to the ownership of the land or by any acts of his change the facts as to ownership so far as his wife’s title extended, if she had any. His statements would not bind his wife as to any title she may have had, if any.”
Christ Stegman was a party to the present ejectment action. His státements made on the witness stand in another case were of course competent for ah purposes as against him. But as the two Stegmans
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- E. F. Madden v. Christ Stegman
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. 1. Ejectment—Answer—Different Sources of Title. Where in ejectment a defendant in an answer claims title under a deed from the plaintiff, and the evidence discloses that this deed was given to clear the title upon the payment of a debt to secure which the defendant had executed a deed to the plaintiff, such pleading should not preclude the defendant from . recovering upon a title held prior to the giving of such security-deed, where the plaintiff is given full opportunity to meet the claim of such prior title. 2. --— Evidence — Declarations of Husband Inadmissible against Wife. In ejectment brought against husband and wife by one who has purchased the propery at sheriff’s sale on an execution against the husband alone, where both defendants maintain that the wife was the sole owner, declarations of the husband asserting title in himself are not ordinarily admissible against the wife. 3. Evidence—Stenographer’s Transcript. The statute authorizing the stenographer’s transcript of the testimony of a witness to be introduced in evidence by any party “under like circumstances and with like effect as the deposition of such witness,” permits such use only in actions between persons who were parties to the litigation in which the testimony was given.