Featherston v. . Wilson
Featherston v. . Wilson
Opinion of the Court
This is the fifth time this case has come before this Court. See 118 N. 0.,- 84U; 119 N. C., 588; 120 N. C., 446; Í22 N. 0-, 747, where the facts and history of the whole matter will be found. It was held by this Court (119 N. C., 588) that under the trust deed of John Wilson, husband of defendant and father of plaintiff, the wife and children are tenants in common in the trust estate. The plaintiff is the only surviving child and owns two-thirds and the defendant one-third of said estate. At the last trial, now here for review, the plaintiff, demanding her two-thirds of the net profits, rents, etc., in the hands of the trustee, introduced her evidence and rested her case. The defendant moved to non-suit the plaintiff under the Act of 1897, Chapter 109. The plaintiff asked permission to introduce other and further evidence, which was allowed by the Court, and the defendant excepted. Plaintiff introduced further evidence and rested again. Defendant renewed the motion for non-suit under the Act of 1897, which was refused, and the defendant again excepted.
Defendant then introduced evidence and the case was *626 tried by the Court and jury. The issues were found in favor of the plaintiff and judgment was entered declaring that the plaintiff was entitled to two-thirds of the rents and profits in fee, and defendant to one-third during her life, and remainder to the plaintiff. Appeal by defendant. This recital presents all the facts necessary to the consideration of the real question before us.
The question is. when the defendant first moved for non-suit, was it the imperative duty of the Court to pass upon the legal question presented by the motion under said Act of Assembly, or had he the discretionary power to hear further evidence from the plaintiff against defendant’s objection. The Court has held in Purnell v. Railroad, 122 N. C., 832, and other cases, that the motion for non-suit under the Act of 1897 (Chapter 109) is a demurrer to the evidence, and the defendant by noting his exception, preserves his right to have the motion passed on on appeal, although he proceeds to trial with his evidence, contrary to the former practice. Said Act of 1897 seems to give the defendant two chances (1) with the Court, (2) with the jury, but it gives no direction on the practice or procedure under its provisions. We have discovered nothing in The Code or in any other statute changing the long established rules of practice in our courts, and- unless some statute is found inconsistent with the former practice and procedure, that system is still the rule. Insurance Co. v. Davis, 74 N. C., 78.
Whilst The Code dispenses with the formal mode of commencing actions and of pleading, it does not dispense with the rules for conducting trials heretofore established, as essential to the administration of law. By a demurrer to the evidence, the case is put upon the sufficiency of the evidence which means the exitus *627 issue or end of the case, and strictly speaking no issue of law is raised until the opposing party joins therein. Co. Litt., 71b. In the case we have, there was no join-der in demurrer, but the plaintiff moved for and obtained leave to give further evidence. We do not care, however, to put the case on this-strict technical point of pleading.
' Under the former rules of practice and procedure, had the Court the power to receive other evidence on motion of the plaintiff after the defendant’s motion for non-suit, as by demurrer, under the Act of 1897, Chapter 109 ? We find by former decisions that he had the power iii the exercise of his discretion. In Kelly v. Goodbreed’s Executors, 4 N. C., 28 (468) it is held: “After the testimony in a cause is closed, the introduction of other witnesses is a matter within the sound discretion of the Court.” Parish v. Fite, 6 N. C., 258, says: “The Court may. in its discretion,' permit new witnesses to he introduced and examined before the jury after the argument of counsel is 'closed,” but it ought not to he done except for good reasons shown to the Court. In Barton v. Morphis, 15 N. C., 240, the ruling is that the refusal of the Court to permit a witness to he re-examined is no ground for a new trial, it being discretionary with the Court to permit it or not. State v. Rash, 34 N. C., 382: “In criminal as well as civil cases, all the testimony on both sides should he introduced before the argument commences. After that, the parties have no right to introduce additional testimony, though the Court in its discretion may permit it to be done.” This rule will be' found in later cases.
The argument made is that if the above rule of practice prevails, it destroys the Act of 1897, Chapter 109.' Not necessarily so; for if the Judge refuses to hear other *628 evidence, the defendant puts to the test the strength of the plaintiff’s case on which he rested.
The charge of the Court is very full and seems to cover the material parts of the defendant’s prayers for special instructions. The hardship of the result to the defendant was referred to in the argument, but, whatever- we might think of that, we are not authorized to express any opinion about it.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CLARA FEATHERSTON v. SAMANTHA WILSON, G. W. NEELY Et Al.
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- 8 cases
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- Published