224 Mo. 639 | Mo. | 1909
Lead Opinion
Action in ejectment for two and one-balf acres of land in Pettis county. Petition in usual form, placing ouster as of April 1st, 1903, and alleging damages in the sum of $100. The answer pleaded (1) general denial, (2) estoppel and (3) the ten-year Statute of Limitations. Reply was general denial. A trial before a jury resulted- in a verdict for plaintiff for possession together with damages in the sum of one dollar. '
“Whereupon it is ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the plaintiff have and recover of the defendant the possession of the real estate described in the petition as follows, to-wit: two and one-half acres off of the north side of the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 19, township 48, range 20, being a strip of land of uniform width, and its length east and west being the distance across said quarter of said quarter section in Pettis county, Missouri. And that plaintiff have and recover of the defendant the sum of one dollar for his damages, together with the costs of this suit.
“It is ordered and adjudged that the plaintiff have a writ of possession commanding the sheriff to deliver to plaintiff the possession of said premises and commanding him to levy ¿nd collect the said damages and costs from defendant.”
From such judgment the defendant, after unsuccessful motion for new trial, in due form appealed to this court.
In 1884, George S. Harryman was the owner of both tracts of land. That is to say, he owned the tract marked on the plat as belonging to the plaintiff, as well as the tract marked on the plat as belonging to the defendant, both in said section 19, aforesaid. It will be noticed from the plat there is a jog in the lines of the land lying respectively east and west of the range line. This jog is seventy-six feet. In 1884, one Lewis Brum-mett owned the land indicated as being in his name on the plat above. On May 2, 1884, Brummett bought from Harryman the land now claimed by P'atterson. Brummett’s land was in the one range and the land to be bought in the other was the jog of seventy-six feet. It is alleged and attempted to be proven that, when Brummett bought the land now claimed by Patterson, it was agreed that the south line thereof should be an extension toward the east of the south line of the land owned by Brummett in range 21, which of course was seventy-six feet south of the real line of the land in range 20. However, the deed from Harryman and wife described the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section nineteen, township 48, range 20. Brum-mett immediately took possession, not only of,the part described in the deed, but the strip in dispute as well. It also appears that under this oral agreement Brum-mett was to give fifteen feet off of the south side of the strip for a road, and Harryman, his grantor, was to give a like strip off of the remaining portion of his land to the south thereof. This agreement seems to have been executed, for it appears that at least partial fences were erected for this road and the same was used as a road.
Brummett’s title passed to defendant Patterson, and Harryman’s title through mesne conveyances
I. ' Whilst Harryman was yet in the possession of the forty acres now owned by Brown, it is alleged he had a conversation with Patterson, the defendant, in which he stated to Patterson where the south boundary line .of the forty now owned by Patterson was, and this declaration of the party in possession was excluded by the court, in so far as the witness Patterson is concerned. Admissions made by Harryman to other witnesses and also a letter from Harryman, indicating the line was where defendant now claims it to be and that such line had' been previously agreed upon and the strip of two and one-half acres sold to Brummett, at the date of the deed, was admitted. It is not disputed by the learned counsel for plaintiff that the admissions of a party in possession can be proved in so far as such admissions tend to show his claims or disclaims, or in other words, in so far as they go to the extent and character of the title under which he holds possession. Neither do they deny that such admissions, if made to third persons, may be used as against the subsequent purchasers of the property claimed under the person making such admissions. The defendant by proper questions tried to prove these admissions by the defendant himself, over and above certain admissions proved by third parties. This proof the court excluded.
We are of opinion that the court was correct in excluding the testimony of Patterson upon this point, it being shown that Harryman was dead at date of trial. This construction given to section 4652, Revised Stat
The statute mentioned disqualified Patterson, and as the trial court admitted other admissions of Harry-man, whilst he was in possession, from witnesses who were third persons, in this regard the court could not have been expected to go further. In other words, whilst the third parties were competent to testify to the admissions of Harryman, whilst in possession of the land south of that now owned by defendant, it does not follow that a privy to such contract, or the beneficiary of such contract or admission can testify when it is shown that the opposing party is dead. The cases cited by defendant are easily distinguished upon principle. The statute itself is too familiar to the bar of the State to require reproduction here. This contention of the defendant will be ruled against him.
II. Defendant claims that there is flagrant error in the first instruction given in behalf of the plaintiff. The instruction reads:
“The court instructs the jury that under the undisputed evidence in this case, the plaintiff is the owner of the strip of land in controversy, unless the defendant has acquired the right to the same by virtue of the Statute of Limitations as defined in the other instructions, therefore your verdict must be for the plaintiff unless you believe from the evidence that the defendant*649 has established his defense, that he is entitled to hold said land by virtue of the Statute of Limitations as hereinafter defined.”
It will he noticed that this instruction limits the defendant to the one defense of the Statute of Limitations. It undertakes to and does fix the issue to he tried before the jury. One paragraph of the answer pleads estoppel. It pleads valuable improvements had been made upon the land with the knowledge and consent of plaintiff’s grantor, and for that reason the plaintiff was estopped now to claim the land. The evidence upon this point tends to show that immediately after Brummett got the land from Harryman, he began clearing the land and fencing it. That this was done with the knowledge of Harryman. The evidence as to the acts of the parties strongly tends to show some agreement - or understanding about this line. That Patterson completed the fence and as we take it from the evidence reduced the land to cultivation. All this was done with the knowledge of Harryman, or his immediate grantees of the Brown tract. The evidence shows that Harryman started to build a fence on the south of Brummett’s fence some thirty feet and that Brummett cut out the fence row and a part of the intended road. It would seem that the land was rough land.
The answer as said contained a plea of estoppel. Hnder this evidence the question of estoppel was in this case, and the court erred in giving this instruction one for plaintiff, which limited the defense of defendant to that of the Statute of Limitations alone.
Going a step further upon the question of estop-pel, the plaintiff’s counsel claimed that there was no disputed boundary line, because both Brummett and Harryman knew the true line, and therefore there was no occasion for an agreed boundary line, and no proof in the record of such an agreement. Grant this to be true and the evidence tends to show that Harryman
In discussing a very similar case, wherein we held that there was no estoppel by reason of the land being reduced to cultivation and fenced under the facts of that case, Foard v. McAnnelly, 215 Mo. 371, we took occasion to further say: “It must be borne in mind that we are dealing now with the question of estoppel, and that too in the absence of an agreed line. If the evidence had disclosed a division line agreed upon by the parties, and in addition, the doing of some act by one of the parties, in pursuance of such agreement and understanding, which act was induced by the conduct as expressed in the agreement, and which act was detrimental to the party, then we can see elements of estoppel in pais; but, on the other hand, if the building of the fence, the plowing and cultivation of the ground, and the continuous use and possession thereof, which are the acts involved here, were superinduced
The trial court refused an instruction upon estop-pel asked by the defendant, and whilst the form of the instruction may not fully measure up to the law, yet he had already cut out the entire question by this instruction numbered 1 for plaintiff, and defendant’s instruction is at least sufficient to show that he was pressing that defense. For the error in giving instruction numbered 1 for plaintiff the case must be reversed and remanded, and in view of these facts, another question as to the admissibility of evidence should be passed upon, which we will do in the next paragraph.
III. A deposition of the wife of Brummett was offered in evidence by the defendant. Brummett had been dead for some years and his wife had remarried to a Mr. Hocker, and lived at the date of the trial in California. In this deposition, she testifies to many things, some important and some unimportant, which were of her own individual knowledge. In the deposition she testifies to an agreement between Harryman and her husband as to where the south line of the present Patterson tract should be, as well as to an agreement as to a road that was to be made between Harry-man and her husband, who was then purchasing the Patterson land. She testifies to the character of the land at that time. She testifies as to what her husband
This question necessarily divides itself into two parts, (1) as to things which the wife knew of her own knowledge and without talk with her husband, and (2) the conversation heard by her and had by her husband and Harryman.
(a). At the common law, the wife was not disqualified from testifying in a suit between strangers. [1 Greenleaf Ev. (16 Ed.), secs. 341-2.] As to facts which she knew of her own knowledge, and there a.re some such facts in this deposition, there can be no question as to her right to testify. In case of Shanklin v. McCracken, 140 Mo. l. c. 358, this court, in banc, said: “The evidence offered in this case clearly does not come within the rule of exclusion laid down in any of these cases. The evidence offered was simply an act of the husband unconnected with any ‘admission or conversation’ with him, a knowledge of which the witness derived not from her husband, but from the exercise of her own sense of sight, and we think the court committed error in rejecting it.” The evidence referred to was the proffered testimony of the widow as to the .act of the delivery of a deed to her deceased husband. Other cases are to the effect that the widow can testify to matters of her own knowledge. [1 Greenleaf on Ev. (16 Ed.), sec. 254; Cornell v. Vanartsdalen, 4 Pa. St. 1. c. 374; Ryan v. Follansbee, 47 N. H. l. c. 101; Elswick v. Commonwealth, 76 Ky. l. c. 157; Smith v. Potter, 27 Vt. l. c. 308; White v. Perry, 14 W. Va. l. c. 80.] Many cases could be cited, but these suffice.
In Smith v. Potter, cited above, Chief Justice Redfield of the Vermont court said: “But where the husband has deceased, it has long been settled that the widow may testify to matters of her own knowledge, and indeed to all matters in regard to any transaction affecting her husband’s interest, unless it involve the disclosure of matters of confidence between the hus
There was evident error in excluding the deposition of Mb’s. Hocker as a whole, and for this error the cause should be remanded for a new trial.
(b). But going to the more vital question and the one which should be passed upon in order to enlighten the court in the new trial, i. e., should Mrs. Hocker be permitted to testify as to any contract or agreement made between Harryman and her deceased husband, Brummett, in her presence?
Death has sealed the lips of both actors. Brum-mett ’s interest in this agreement long since passed to Patterson, at least in a way. Harryman’s views of the contract or agreement and his interest therein, have in a way passed to Brown. Now can Brummett’s widow declare to the world this contract? The present action, so far as the widow is concerned, is between strangers. In such case, she was at common law entitled to testify. The common-law rule has well been stated by Greenleaf. [1 Greenleaf Ev. (16 Ed.), secs. 333c, 334 and 335.] In section 333c, supra, it is said: “Testimony by a husband or wife may involve any one or more of three distinct and independent principles, not always kept separate by authors and judges: (1) One spouse may not testify for the other, (2) One spouse may not testify against the other; (3) One spouse may not testify to confidential communications
The evidence offered in this deposition as to the contract falls under the ban of neither of the three principles announced by the author, nor under the reasons for the three principles. For in the case at bar the surviving spouse is neither testifying for or against her husband, nor is she testifying to confidential communications between husband and wife. Confidential communications between husband and wife usually fall under the ban of secrecy, notwithstanding the relationship has ceased either by divorce or death. But the evidence here is not in the nature of confidential communications between husband and wife. There can be no such character of conversation in the presence of a third party. But further, this is not a conversation between husband and wife, but a conversation between the husband and a third party in the presence of the wife. Leaving out for the present the consideration of our statute which we will consider in another paragraph, we are of opinion that the testimony of this woman was competent on the matter of the agreement.
In addition to the authorities cited and discussed supra, the following additional cases lend support to these views: McGuire v. Maloney, 1 B. Mon. 224;
IY. Bnt in arguing that this testimony of the widow is incompetent the plaintiff plants himself behind a proviso, at the end of section 4656, Eevised Statutes 1899.
The section in full reads: “Ho married woman shall he disqualified as a witness in any civil suit ox proceeding prosecuted in the name of or against her husband, whether joined or not with her husband as a party, in the following cases, to-wit: First, in actions upon policies of insurance of property, so far as relates to the amount and value of the property alleged to be injured or destroyed; second, in actions against carriers, so far as relates to the loss of property and the amount and value thereof; third, in all matters of business transactions when the transaction was had and conducted by such married woman as the agent of her husband; and no married man shall be disqualified as a witness in any such civil suit or proceeding prosecuted in the name of or against his wife, whether he be joined with her or not as a party, when such suit ox proceeding is based upon, grows out of, or is connected with any matter of business or business transaction where the transaction or business was had with or was conducted by such married man as the agent of his wife: Provided, that nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize or permit any married woman, while the relation exists, or subsequently, to testify to any admission ox conversations of her husband, whether made to herself or to third parties.”
As said by Henry, J., in Holman v. Bachus, 73 Mo. l. c. 50: “The proviso is clumsily constructed.” Plaintiff relies upon this Holman case, the case of
The broad language of the Holman and Moore cases was thus commented upon hy this court in the more recent case of Lynn v. Hockaday, 162 Mo. 1. c. 123:
“In Moore v. Wingate, 53 Mo. 398, l. c. 409, concerning the proviso now under discussion, it was said: ‘ This provision of the statute was. intended to apply to all cases, whether the husband was a party to the action or not.’ The language is broader there than necessary; it would have been sufficient if it said that the provision applied to the facts of that case. And perhaps all that was there intended was that it applied as well to a case in which her husband or his estate was interested as it did to a case in which he was a party. That it was not intended to construe the statute as imposing a new disqualification on a wife is shown by the words immediately following: ‘It was intended to leave the disabilities of a married woman, in .reférence to these matters, just as they were at common law.’
“In Holman v. Bachus, 73 Mo. 49, a similar broad expression is found, but the same idea prevails through the opinion, that the statute only dealt with existing common-law disabilities. In that ease the estate of deceased husband, though not sued, was interested. There is nothing in "Willis v. Gammill, 67 Mo. 730; McFadin v. Catron, 120 Mo. 253, or Shanklin v. McCracken, 140 Mo. 356, to which we are referred, contrary to this view.”
In the same case in discussing the force and effect of this proviso, this court further said: “But there was no objection made to her competency as a witness
It thus appears that we have held that the purpose of this proviso was to restrict in the way mentioned in the proviso, the grants* contained in the
In addition to what Valliant, J., said in the Lynn case it might not be amiss to look elsewhere.
In the case of People ex rel. v. Kelly, 5 Abbott’s New Cases, l. c. 405, the New York Court of Appeals adopts this definition of proviso, as taken from 66 N. Y. 395: “A proviso in a grant or enactment is something taken back from the power first declared. The grant or enactment is to read, not as if the larger power was ever given, but as if no more was ever given than' is contained within the terms or bonds of the proviso.”
As applied to an enactment or law, 6 Words and Phrases, p. 5755, thus speaks of the office of a proviso: “The office of a ‘proviso’ is to limit or restrict the general language preceding it, and not to enlarge the enacting clause. [Commonwealth v. Charity Hospital, 48 Atl. 906, 199 Pa. St. 119; Patterson v. Winn, 24 U. S. (11 Wheat.) 380, 387, 6 L. Ed. 500; Van Reipen v. Jersey City, 33 Atl. 740; 742, 58 N. J. L. 262;' State ex rel. v. Browne, 57 N. W. 659, 660, 56 Minn. 269.]”
So too, says Black on Interpretation of Laws, page 271: ‘ ‘ The office of a proviso is not to enlarge or extend the act or the section of which it is a part, but
In 32 Cyc., p. 743, the following outline of the purposes of a proviso to a law is given: “A clause which generally contains a condition that a certain thing shall or shall not he done in order that something in another clause shall take effect; something engrafted upon a preceding enactment, generally introduced by the word ‘provided;’ something.grafted upon a preceding enactment, and is legitimately used for the purpose of taking special cases out of the general enactments, and providing specially for them; something taken back from the power first declared.”
To a like effect is 2 Lewis’s Sutherland’s Statutory Construction, p. 674, whereat it is said: “The proper function of a proviso being to limit the language of the legislature, it will not be deemed intended from doubtful words to enlarge or extend the act or the provision on which it is engrafted.” And on the preceding' page, the same author says: ‘ ‘ The natural and appropriate office of the proviso being to restrain or qualify some preceding matter, it should be confined to what precedes it, unless it clearly appears to have been intended to apply to some other matter. It is to be construed in connection with the section of which it forms a part, and it is substantially an exception. If it be a proviso to a particular section, it does not apply to others unless plainly intended. It should be construed with reference to the immediately preceding. parts of the clause to which it is attached. In other words, the proviso will be so.restricted in the absence of anything in its terms, or the subject it deals with, evincing an intention to give it a broader effect. It is not an arbitrary rule to be enforced at all events, but is based on the presumption that the meaning of the lawmaker is thereby reached. ’ ’
As stated by Judge HeNey, this proviso is not as clear as it might be, but there is nothing in it to indi
It is more reasonable to say that the Legislature meant by this proviso to say to the wives, “We have given you the right to testify in certain cases, but in so doing you must not do the things mentioned in the proviso,” than it would be to say to them that, “Whilst by the body of the act we have given you rights not possessed under the common law, yet by the proviso we have made some new substantive law, by taking from you other rights which you did possess at common law. ’ ’ The Lynn case properly defines the scope and meaning of the proviso involved in this suit. It is not the purpose of a mere proviso to add to the body of the substantive law, nor to take anything therefrom. Its purpose is to restrict, limit or explain the general terms of the act of which it forms a part. See 6 Words and -Phrases, title,.“Proviso.”
So construing this proviso, and it appearing that at common law Mrs. Hocker Was a competent witness in an action between strangers, it follows that her whole deposition was competent.
Y. Appellant insists in the assignment of errors that the trial court erred in giving instruction numbered 2 for the plaintiff. This instruction declares that an oral agreement to sell the disputed property by
Upon the whole, this cause should be and is reversed and remanded.
Concurrence Opinion
concurs; Woodson, J., concurs in result and in the opinion, except he expresses no opinion on the Holman and Wingate cases discussed in this opinion;