87 Mo. 617 | Mo. | 1885
This is an action in ejectment for the-undivided one-half of block forty-seven in the town of Keytesville, Chariton county ; a piece of ground clevised to Emma Chapman, wife of her co-plaintiff, by hermother, Lucy Anu Horsley, the grantee in a deed executed by Dougherty, the defendant. On the trial defendant admitted the existence of this deed, which was for the property in suit; that it was last in his possession, and was lost. Other testimony offered on behalf of plaintiffs showed a prima facie title in Mrs. Horsley to the premises in controversy. The controlling' question in this cause, then, is whether Dougherty was-a competent witness in regard to the deed just mentioned ; i. e., as fco the delivery or non-delivery thereof.
The provisions of the statute'in relation to cases like the present are contained in these words: “Provided, that in actions where one of the original parties-to the contract, or cause of action, in issue and on trial,.
In our statutory ejectment all the constituent elements of title are involved : possession, right of possession, and right of property. Now, “title maybe defined generally, to be the evidence of right which a person has to the possession of property.” 2 Abbott’s Law Diet. 566. “Title is when a man hath lawful cause of entry into lands whereof another is seized ; and it signifies also the means whereby a man comes to lands or tenements, as by feoffment, last will and testament,”' etc. Jacob., p. 245. And it is. elsewhere defined as “the means whereby an owner possesses his property justly, or the evidence of ownership.” Whart. Law Lex. 824. And in an action which brings the title in question, something more is involved than the actual occupation, or mere pedis possessio. It is one which also involves the justa causa possidendi. Gregory v. Kanouse, 2 N. J. L. 62. These definitions and remarks, effectually dispose of the contention of defendant’s counsel that the “cause of action in issue and on trial was the alleged unlawful withholding by the defendant of the possession,” etc. The “cause of action in issue- and on trial” was of a much broader scope, since it was the title to the premises in controversy which was in
All these things were put in issue and necessarily involved therein; and the defendant was one of the original parties to the contract or deed which evidenced the title whereon plaintiffs relied, without which their title could not be established or maintained, and the other party to that contract was dead ; that contract or deed was thus necessarily in issue, constituting as it did the highest evidence of ownership, and consequently the most material fact which went to make up plaintiffs’ cause of action; that cause of action was in issue and on trial, and without proof of the validity of that deed in consequence of a delivery thereof, plaintiffs had no standing in court. The importance of the defendant’s testimony, denying, as it did, the validity of the deed by reason of the fact, to which he testified, that it had never been delivered, is, therefore, most obvious; since that testimony struck at the very foundation of plaintiffs’ cause of action. Was his testimony admissible \ “ The reason of the statutory prohibition is the prevention of one person testifying where death has sealed the lips of his adversary.” Fulkerson v. Thornton, 68 Mo. 468. Wharton, when speaking of similar statutory prohibitions, says: “The reason of this exception is, that when there is no mutuality there should not be admissibility ; i. <?., when the lips of one party to a contract are closed by death, then the other party should not be heard as a witness. * * * Much, however, as the statutes may differ in words, they are the same in purpose. That purpose is to provide that when one of the parties to a litigated obligation is silenced by death, the others shall be silenced by law.” 1 Whart on Evid., sec. 466.
And this view has been reiterated by this court in
In Vermont, a state possessing statutory provisions identical with our oivn, the grantee of the heirs of an intestate through the administrator of the estate, brought ejectment against the defendant, who had held the land sued for prior to the death o£ the intestate. The - plaintiff claimed this possession was not adverse; the defendant claimed the contrary, and he was admitted' by the lower court to testify in support' of his claim;
It will readily be observed that Hollister's case, supra, fully sustains the position heretofore taken as to
In quite a recent case, that of Hughes v. Israel, 73 Mo. 538, it was ruled in an action of ejectment where the plaintiff claimed under a deed from defendant to his
If I am correct in my views, heretofore expressed,, as to the scope of the issues in an ejectment suit; as - to its embracing within its issues the title, and all that such term implies, then it follows that defendant was incompetent as a witness to overthrow by his testimony any instrument to which he was one of the original parties, such instrument being the muniment of title .on. which the plaintiffs rely. Any other doctrine than the one here asserted, would place it in the power of every grantor in an action of ejectment where the grantee is dead, to overthrow by his oath bis most solemnly exe-, cuted conveyance on the specious plea that such instru-, ment was not embraced within the issues of such a suit. The defendant in this case confidently relies on Bradley v. West, 68 Mo. 69, as sustaining his position as to the narrow scope embraced in the issues of an action of ejectment; and that measured by the standard of that case, defendant was a competent witness. In that case*'
Indeed, the rule in Bradley v. West, tends to render the titles of heirs unmarketable in their hands; for: under that rule, so soon as they convey to a stranger, he must needs run the gauntlet of anticipatory perjury, and take the risk of seeing any link in his chain of title ’ swept away by the bare oath of some dissatisfied party" whom he may find it necessary to sue, or whose good pleasure it is, mayhap, to sue him.
For these reasons, I am of opinion that the rule laid ■ down in that case is not law; should' no longer be foi- * lowed, and that the judgment of the lower court should1 be reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to, proceed conformably to this opinion.