21 Mo. 444 | Mo. | 1855
delivered the opinion of the court.
The court should have admitted the testimony of the witmess, Mayfield. The defendant’s atfswer to the action, as appears from the evidence, though not in the pleadings, rested on the assumption that Ray was the owner of the mare. Now, it 'is a settled rule of law that a party cannot create evidence for himself. Yet he may, by his acts and declarations, make evidence against himself. If Ray was the owner of the mare, although he could not confirm or strengthen his title by his own declarations, yet his declarations may weaken or disprove his ¿title. The possessor of property, nothing more appearing, is presumed by the law to be the owner of it. The law raises this presumption in favor of him who is in the possession of property. Now if he will, against his interest and against the presumption of law, make declarations or admissions, those declarations and admissions are, like all others, made against a party’s'interest, and will be evidence against him. When one is in possession of property, the presumption of law is, that it is his, if nothing more appears. Now, if he will, by his words, show that the property is not his, why should not those admissions -be evidence against him, just as any nther admissions made against his interest-?
In order to show property out of another, is it not every day’s practice to receive his declarations or admissions that it does not belong to him, or that he has only a limited interest in it, or holds it in a fiduciary capacity ? ( Turner v. Belden, 9 Mo. Rep. 797.)
The answer did nothing more than controvert the allegations
Reversed and’ remanded'; the other judges concur.