3 Ind. 170 | Ind. | 1851
This was an action of replevin, brought by West against Ashby, for 420 barrels of flour. The gravamen is, the unlawful detainer of the flour. The defendant pleaded the general issue, and also the following special pleas: 1. Property in himself; 2. Property in Edmund Hale; 3. Property in William Bradley. Replications in denial of the special pleas.
The plaintiff, West, previously to the trial, moved the Court to suppress the deposition of Miles A. Bradley; and the motion was sustained.
During the trial, the plaintiff offered to prove certain declarations which had been made by William Bradley. The evidence was objected to; but the objection was overruled.
The defendant, Ashby, during the trial, offered in evidence the deposition of William Bradley. This deposition was objected to by the plaintiff, and the objection was sustained.
The parties respectively asked of the Court various instructions to the jury. Those asked for by the plaintiff were given; and those asked for by the defendant were refused.
Verdict and judgment for the plaintiff.
The first proceeding in this cause which is objected to, is the suppression of the deposition of Miles A. Bradley, which deposition was offered by the defendant. The ground of the plaintiff’s objection to the deposition is, that the witness was interested in favor of the defendant.
In determining this point, the Circuit Court had nothing
The real question in issue was, whether or not the flour sued for was the property of the plaintiff? The general issue, under the statute, raised that question. R. S. 1843, p. 701.
The deposition we are examining states, that William Bradley deposited the flour as his own with Ashby, the defendant, and took the receipts of Ashby, a warehouse man, for the flour; that said William Bradley assigned those warehouse receipts to Edmund Hale as a security for a loan of money; and that, afterwards, said William Bradley assigned his remaining interest in the flour to the witness, Miles A. Bradley, as a security for a debt due from the assignor to the witness and another person.
The plaintiff contends that the witness had an interest in the flour sued for, and was therefore interested in defeating the suit. But it is no objection to the competency of a witness, in actions of replevin or trover, that he is called to prove the title of the property sued- for to be in himself; as it makes no difference to the witness, in a legal point of view, which of the parties succeeds. The verdict and judgment in such cause would not be evidence in a subsequent action brought by the witness for the property; he not being a party or privy to the suit. Ward v. Wilkinson, 4 Barn. and Ald. 410.
The next question is whether the declarations of William Bradley, which the plaintiff was allowed to prove, were admissible evidence?
The plaintiff first read in evidence the following written contract entered into with him by William Bradley:
“ I have this day contracted with C. W. West Co., to manufacture for them, at my mills in Brookville, Ind., in all of the months of August and September next, 2000 barrels of superfine flour, Cincinnati inspection guarantied, on terms as follows — they to furnish the wheat in barrels at Metamora, Laurel, Null’s mills, and Cambridge City, viz., five bushels of wheat and the barrel, for a barrel of flour. The flour to be delivered on
The plaintiff also proved that soon after the execution of said contract, he delivered large quantities of wheat to said William Bradley under the contract; that the flour in controversy was manufactured by said Bradley out of said wheat, and was shipped by him to the defendant’s warehouse; that the defendant gave said Bradley warehouse receipts for the flour; and that, he, Bradley, transferred those receipts to a third person.
The plaintiff then offered to prove the declarations of said William Bradley, hereinbefore mentioned, namely, that when he, Bradley, received said wheat, he said it was West’s wheat; and when he shipped said flour, he said it was West’s flour. The evidence of these declarations was objected to by the defendant as being hearsay evidence. It is a general rule that declarations, made by a third person “not under oath, are not admissible in evidence. There are some exceptions to this rule, but they do not embrace the evidence in question. The' issue in this case was, whether or not the flour sued for was the plaintiff’s property ? and the burthen of proof was on the plaintiff. The defendant held the flour for the person to whom the warehouse receipts had been assigned; and we think the plaintiff’s case was to be proved independently of the assignor’s declarations as to the property. The assignor himself, for anything that appears, could have been examined as a witness for the plaintiff.
Another question in the cause is, as to the admissibility in evidence of the deposition of William Bradley.
Before this deposition was offered in evidence, the plaintiff had proved said written contraot between himself
At that stage of the cause, the defendant offered to read the said deposition of William Bradley. That deposition was a very important one for the defendant; because William Bradley there states, inter alia, that the greater part of the flour now sued for was in his mill, before he received any of the plaintiff’s wheat under said written contract.
The plaintiff objected to this deposition, on the ground that the witness was interested in favor of the defendant.
The objection would be clearly unfounded, if the witness had not disposed of the flour; because, in that case, his legal rights would not have been affected by the success of either of the parties. Suppose the verdict and judgment in this suit should be in favor of Ashby; and the witness (supposing him still the holder of the warehouse receipts) should afterwards sue Ashby for the flour; that verdict and judgment would not be admissible in evidence for the witness. Again, suppose the verdict and judgment in this suit should be for West, and the witness (not having parted with said receipts) should afterwards sue West for the flour; West could not give said verdict and judgment in evidence against the witness. In neither of those cases, would the witness be a party or privy to the verdict and judgment.
That this deposition of William Bradley, were he still the holder of said receipts, would be evidence for the de
We must next consider whether William Bradley’s assignment of the warehouse receipts makes any difference. If Hale, the assignee, had taken possession of the flour, and this action had been against him, it may be that Bradley, the assignor, would not have been a competent witness. But here Ashby, not Hale, is the defendant, and should Ashby lose this suit, and Bradley be afterwards sued, on his warranty of title, by Hale, the verdict and judgment against Ashby would not be evidence for Hale, the latter not being a party or privy to the first suit.
We are therefore of opinion that the deposition of William Bradley ought not to have been rejected.
The first instruction asked for by the defendant and refused, was, that the written contract between the plaintiff and William Bradley (which is hereinbefore copied) is a contract of sale. We are clearly of opinion that that contract is one of bailment, and not of sale. The refusal of the other instructions asked for by the defendant, must be presumed to be correct, as the transcript does not profess to contain all the evidence. The State v. Beackmo, 8 Blackf. 246.
The first instruction to the jury, given at the plaintiff’s request, was, that said written contract was one of bailment. That is unobjectionable. The others were as
The judgment must be reversed. The depositions of Miles A. and William Bradley ought to have been admitted in evidence; and the evidence of the declarations of William Bradley should have been rejected.
The judgment is reversed, and the proceedings subsequent to the suppression of the deposition of Miles A. Bradley inclusive, are set aside, with costs. Cause remanded, &c.