Carmichael v. Browder's Adm'rs
Carmichael v. Browder's Adm'rs
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Administrator of F. A. Browder, deceased, brought his action of trover against the appellant, in the circuit court of Wilkinson county. Issue having been taken upon the allegations of the declaration; the jury to whom the issue was submitted, returned a verdict for the defendant; whereupon the plaintiff moved the court for a new trial, which was granted. To the opinion of the court upon the motion for a new trial, defendant’s counsel ex
The questions which present themselves, and require the adjudication of this court, arise in the progress of the cause as above detailed, and will be considered in the order in which they stand, to wit:
1. Did the court below err in setting aside the verdict for the defendant, and granting a new "trial?
The evidence adduced on the trial in support of plaintiff’s ground of action, is embraced in the bill of exceptions to the opinion of the court, and a portion of that upon which the defendant had rested his defence, appears also of record. It is stated in the bill of exceptions “ that the marriage contract and the will of Butler, found among the papers of the suit, marked A. and B. were read in evidence by the defendant.” It is inferrible from the arguments at bar, and a subsequent part of this bill of exceptions, that the decision of the court upon the motion for a new trial, was controlled by the legal construction given ¿by the court to the marriage contract between'Browder and his wife: but we are precluded from an examination of the correctness of the judgment in reference to this contract, as it constitutes no part of the record. We are not to be understood as deciding that an instrument of writing can in no case, by reference, be made a part of the bill of exceptions; but in this instance we are clear that the reference in the bill of exceptions to the contract and will is not sufficiently definite and distinctive in its description to make it absolutely certain what contract or what will is intended to be referred to. The law evidently intends that nothing through the medium of a bill of exceptions, shall become a part of the record, unless its verity shall be established by the signature and seal of
2. Did the court err in permitting the plaintiff to file his amended declaration?
The right of the party to amend his declaration was not contested by the opposite counsel; but it is maintained that the amended declaration was the same in substance as the original. To this objection it is a sufficient answer, that the plaintiff in his amended declaration changes his demand from a general right to the property sued for, as the administrator of Browder, to a claim for personal property, specially acquired by his intestate in the state of Mississippi, after his marriage with Harriet A. Hook, and during the continuance of the coverture.
3. The third assignment of errors sets out, that one of the issues upon which the jury found, was an immaterial issue.
The first plea contains the following averment, to wit: “that the property mentioned in the declaration was not acquired by the said plaintiff in his life time, within the state of Mississippi, after his marriage-with one Harriet Hook, since deceased, and during the subsistence of the coverture, &c. without this that they are guilty of the trover and conversion, &c.” This plea contains a negative pregnant, upon which issue was taken, arid found with the other issue in favor of the plaintiff.
4. Is there error in the decision of the court in ruling out the defendant’s evidence of title to the property in dispute ?
The bill of exceptions taken to this decision recites, that the defendant offered, as administrator of Ann Browder, deceased, the following will and marriage contract, in evidence as the foundation of his title, as administrator as aforesaid, to the property in the declaration mentioned; but it does not embrace and set out the will or contract further than by a reference to them, which reference was evidently not made by the counsel who tendered the bill of exceptions, but by the clerk who transcribed the record. The remarks made upon the first point, apply with equal force here, and need not be repeated. The record not presenting the evidence, upon the competency of which the court below decided, we are bound to presume that it decided correctly.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- J. F. Carmichael v. Browder's Adm'rs
- Status
- Published