67 Ala. 290 | Ala. | 1880
— The question which meets us at the threshold of this case is, did the Circuit Court err in refusing to remove the claim suit, or trial of the right of property, to the Circuit Court of the United States ? The application was made under the act of Congress, approved March 2d, 1867, which is in the following language : “ That when a suit may hereafter be brought in any State court, in which there is
It was necessary for plaintiffs to prove, in the trial of this case, that the property in controversy belonged to the defendants in attachment, and to 'disprove, if necessary, any asserted or assumed right in McElwain to convey it. Elliott’s claim and right rested alone on McElwain’s conveyance, and any legal testimony offered tending to disprove his authority to execute the trusr deed, could not be ground of error. The title to the iron-works property, real and personal, appears to have been, at one time, in the Cornwall Iron Works Company. It was allowable to plaintiffs to prove that fact, and to trace the title and ownership through its various stages, down to the defendants in attachment. It was also permissible to prove the nature of McElwain’s possession, and, by doing so, to disprove his authority to make a trust deed, assigning the property, and the products of the Iron Works. Each and all of the documents offered in evidence in this cause, tended to show either the ownership of the property in the defendants in attachment, or the nature and extent of McElwain’s possession, and power over the property.
There were, at least, two important questions^ which were necessarily and prominently raised by the issue in this cause.
The question raised on the admissibility of secondary evidence, of the contents of the written power under which McCullough executed the contract for Marshall, will not, probably, arise again, should this case return to the Circuit Court. Coming up as the question does, with proof before the court, that the power of attorney was in the State of Georgia, beyond the jurisdiction of the court, this authorized secondary evidence of its contents. — 1 Whar. Ev. § 130, and note 6; 1 Greenl. Ev. § 558; Shorter v. Sheppard, 33 Ala. 648; Scott v. Rivers, 1 St. & Por. 19.
In suppressing the answer of the witness, Printup, to the 6th interrogatory in chief, and to the first and third cross-interrogatories, the Circuit Court erred. They were reasonably responsive and explanatory of the subject called for in the interrogatories, and tended to prove the existence of the
Many objections were urged to answers of the witness McCullough. We think none of them are well taken. They were but the statement of collective facts, which, as a rule, witnesses may depose to. If the claimant desired to know the foundation on which the witness rested his conclusions of fact, he should have interrogated him. on that subject. S. N. Railroad v. McLendon, 63 Ala. 266.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause remanded.