Johnston v. Furnier
Johnston v. Furnier
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered, January 9th 1872, by
The first error assigned is to the rejection by the court below of an offer of the defendant to prove by the records of the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland county, “ that at the time of the death of David Furnier, his land was largely encumbered by judgments against him, which were paid by Robert Johnston, after his marriage with the widow of David Furnier; also by judgments against his personal representatives after his decease, which were paid by Robert Johnston.”
Before proceeding to the consideration of this assignment, it will be proper to notice a preliminary objection which has been made to it. It is said, that it infringes the well-settled rule of practice of this court, which requires that, whenever there is a bill of exceptions taken to the exclusion of any written evidence, a copy of the document offered must be attached to the bill, in order to enable the court to judge of its relevancy: Gratz v. Gratz, 4 Rawle 411; Stafford v. Stafford, 3 Casey 144 ; Aiken v. Stewart, 13 P. F. Smith 30. The rule is a necessary one, and must be adhered to in all cases to which it is properly applicable. But this is not the case when the offer is to prove the mere fact of the existence of a judgment or judgments in the same court, by the production of the original records. The very documents offered could not be attached, and to require full copies would be a burdensome and unnecessary expense. Nor is it within the reason of the rule, for it is not necessary that the entire record should be inspected to determine the question whether the existence of judgments was or was not relevant to the issue.
We are of the opinion that the offer thus made was relevant and ought to have been admitted. David Furnier died in 1807,
But we think the court below ought not only to have admitted this evidence, but to have gone further, and instructed the jury that Bowman Furnier, by his deed to Solomon Speers, absolutely ratified and confirmed the partition of 1822. He conveyed the share allotted to him and his sisters clear of his mother’s life-interest in one-third, she being then living, reciting her release and the award and settlement of 1822. He received his one-third of $1800, the full value of the land unencumbered by her title to one-third. A partition by an infant, even if unequal, is only voidable by him when he comes of age, and not void. If he take the whole profits of the unequal part after his full age, the partition is made good for ever: Co. Litt. 171 b. So, if he continues in possession of land received in exchange: 2 Vermont 225. “If any act of confirmation,” says Chancellor Kent, “ be requisite after he comes of age, to give binding force to a voidable act of his infancy, slight acts and circumstances will be a ground from which to infer the assent:” 2 Com. 237. Leases by a guardian which endure beyond the minority of the ward, are not void, but only voidable, and may be confirmed by his acceptance of rent accruing after he comes of age: Bingham on Infancy 170; Smith v. Low, 1 Atk. 489. The authorities upon this subject are fully examined by Mr. Justice Duncan, with his usual learning and ability, in Brown v. Caldwell, 10 S. & R. 114, and it was there held that if consentable lines are fairly made between adjoining tracts by the guardian of an infant, if the infant do not dissent when he comes of age, but acquiesces, he is for ever bound. See also Hill v. Roderick, 3 Penna. Law Jour. 417. Now, what can be a more unequivocal and conclusive assent and ratification by an infant after majority of a partition made by his guardian, than a sale and conveyance of the land allotted to him, clear of the encumbrance which would have otherwise attached to it, reciting the very partition as valid which he now claims to avoid ?
Upon this view of the law, as applicable to the facts, it is of course unnecessary to examine the remaining assignments of error.
Judgment reversed, and venire facias de novo awarded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.