61 Mo. App. 376 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
—The facts in this case, which are undisputed, are that Elizabeth Berman and. her husband, Louis Berman, came to Phelps county, Missouri, from the state of Michigan, and moved upon the farm of Q-. W. Hoke under a lease, and purchased from him certain stock, paying $270 in cash and the husband’s note for $107, secured by a chattel mortgage on other horses, which were acquired by said Elizabeth Berman from “her folks” while she and her husband lived in Michigan, and which were claimed by -her as her separate property during her residence in this state; and
The first point appellant makes is that the court erred in permitting the husband to testify on behalf of the wife.. Appellant excepted to the admission of the testimony of the husband at the time, but, having wholly failed to call the attention of the trial court to this exception in his motion for new trial, he can not avail himself of it in this court. Bank of Warren County v. Kemble, 61 Mo. App. 215.
“Q. I will ask you, if you have not been convicted in this court for stealing hogs?
•‘Q. Didn’t you plead guilty to changing the mark of a hog with a design to steal it?”
The answers to both of these questions were excluded by the court on the objection of respondent, to which appellant excepted at the time, and made such exception one of the grounds of his motion for new trial. ■ The point is, therefore, properly saved. The answers to .these questions were properly excluded, because the best evidence of the facts sought to be elicited would be the records of the court. The questions asked in the cases cited, by appellant in support of this point were not, as in this case, such as to require record proof. State v. Taylor, 118 Mo. 153; State ex rel. v. Miller, 100 Mo. 445.
The next point made by appellant is the refusal of the court to permit him to read in evidence on the trial of this cause the record of the cause of Hove v. Marling. The exception to the exclusion of this evidence is not referred to in the motion for new trial, and the point is not before us.
Appellant objects to the instructions given on behalf of respondent. The fourth and sixth instructions given on behalf of respondent stated an incorrect proposition of law. By these two instructions the jury were told, in effect, that a tender to a mortgagee of chattels in possession after forfeiture destroys the mortgage lien. This was error and necessitates a reversal. Jackson v. Cunningham, 28 Mo. App. 354. My associates are also of opinion that the court erred in giving plaintiff’s first instruction, as a tender is in the nature of a judicial admission that the amount tendered was