25 Colo. App. 251 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1913
Rehearing
On Rehearing.
rendered the opinion of the court.
This suit was instituted May 19, 1909. Appellees (plaintiffs helow) allege in their complaint, in substance, that they are the sole heirs at law of James Davenport, who died intestate about April 8, 1909, and as such heirs are the owners and entitled to the possession of lot 22, block 186, Stiles’ Addition to the City of Denver, said Davenport dying intestate and being at the time of his death the record owner in fee of said premises; that on or about April 6, 1909, defendant (appellant) wrongfully took possession of the premises, and wrongfully withholds the same from the possession of plaintiffs.
Answer, including cross-complaint, was filed, admitting the death of James Davenport, and that the legal title to said premises was in him at the time of his death, but denying the other allegations of the complaint. In the cross-complaint it is alleged that at the time of the death of said Davenport he held the premises in trust for defendant; that Davenport married defendant’s
The record is short, contains but little testimony, and is practically undisputed. In order to recover upon the issues in this case, defendant must have established at the trial, a resulting trust in the property in issue. In other words, the proofs must show that the money of defendant’s mother was used by Davenport in the purchase of. the said real estate, the title to which he' took in his own name, and how much of said money was so invested. Under the pleadings here, if the evidence clearly and satisfactorily shows that any sum of money belonging to the separate estate of the wife was used by Davenport .in the purchase of this property, and the amount thereof, or the proportion which it bore to the entire purchase price, the law would fasten a resulting
Deposition of J. W. Barnett:
“Mrs. Davenport showed me a check for $500 which they (she and her husband) owned together. * * * Mrs. Davenport was a hard working, saving woman; she was a laundress and worked out by the day and gave it to Mr. Davenport to pay on the property and support the family.”
This deposition was taken in Missouri about nineteen years after the marriage of Davenport and the mother. Deponent states that he lived with them for four months after the marriage, but fails to state when this was. The deposition states that while he lived with the Davenports the mother showed him a $500 check which she and her husband owned together, but does not pretend to state that any part thereof went into the property; nor how much of the $500 each one owned; nor how he obtained his knowledge that the mother worked out by the day and gave her earnings to Davenport to pay on the home. His entire evidence in this behalf has the appearance of being hearsay.
Deposition of Pat Ming:
“During our conversation he (Mr. Davenport) told me that when he married Ella Barnett he was in debt and she gave him money that she had previous to her marriage, to help him out of debt for their home.”
This deponent met Davenport in Missouri sixteen years before the deposition was taken. He states he knows nothing about the purchase of real estate by either Davenport or his wife. He was detailing a conversation which had taken place about sixteen years before, and the alleged statements thereof are flatly contradicted by the record, which conclusively shows that Davenport was
Mahala Ming testified:
■ “Mrs. .Davenport was my sister. They purchased and owned their home in Denver, Colorado. They both saved money from their work, and my sister took from Kirkwood, Mo., when they were married about $500, which was put into the home. My sister, Mrs. Davenport, went to Denver in 1891 from Kirkwood, Mo., taking with her $500. She married Mr. Davenport shortly after and helped him to pay their home out of debt, which Mr. Davenport had bought before their marriage. Mrs. Davenport' was a hard working, saving woman. She saved her money and improved the home, and helped pay it out of debt. ’ ’
This evidence is necessarily pure hearsay, except as to the $500 which deponent says was taken by her sister Mrs. Davenport, from Kirkwood. The deposition clearly indicates that she was never in Colorado but once, vis., in 1901 during the six weeks of her sistef’s last illness. With the exception noted, it is clear that this witness had no personal knowledge whatever of a single issuable fact testified to by her. She does not pretend to state that Davenport ever spoke to her concerning such matters.
All of these depositions are by witnesses who were relatives of appellant, and who no doubt gave their testimony as favorably for her as their consciences would warrant.
££We (Mr. Davenport and witness) were talking about Mrs. Davenport, and I asked him if Nellie didn’t come in for her mother’s share of the property, and he said yes; that her mother helped him make the money to get the property with, and he certainly would see that she would have it, * * * if it was not for Nellie and her mother he wouldn’t be able to hold the property.”
If Davenport made the statement attributed to him by this witness, then it is clear that he considered the entire home property as his own, and intended at some future time, by deed or will, to transfer the same to appellant. If Davenport had taken the mother’s money and put it in the property, agreeing and promising to hold it in trust for her, and that it was to be hers, as pleaded in the cross-bill, then it is reasonable to suppose that he would not have made such statements.
Walter C. Scruggs testified:
££Iie (Davenport) told me his wife was going ahead with the property and keeping up the payments, for he wasn’t making a dollar, and ‘her mother worked hard and has put more money in this place than I have. ’ That was about a month before he died. * * * Just about a year * * * about six months before he died * * * I was talking with him again about his property * * * I asked him £How much you got now?’ 'Well,’ he says, £$1,500 in the bank,’ and he says the most of that was his wife’s money that she had made before she taken sick and died, washing and ironing.”
This evidence warrants a strong presumption that the mother put no money into the home property, but on the contrary, whatever money she earned, as well as the $500 brought by her from Missouri, represented the greater part of the certificates of deposit amounting to $1,500.
It must not be overlooked that the distinguished
William Barnett testified that at the time 'he and Davenport bought the property they borrowed money from one Bleed to make part payment thereon; that they paid Beed’s note within two years from the time they bought the property, vis., 1887; and that he afterwards borrowed some money of Davenport, upon the property, in 1891.
Upon this evidence, what amount of money could the trial court say was paid by the mother upon the purchase price of the property, or what amount she invested therein, and when? True, the witness Ming states that the mother took about $500 from Kirkwood, Mo., when she married, and that it was put into the home, but there is no evidence to show at what particular time any money was paid on the home, what specific amount, and where or to whom the same was paid. No circumstances whatever are shown attending the payment of any money by the mother to Davenport, either for the purpose of being applied upon the purchase price, or as a loan on the property. While, the trial court found that the mother may have furnished some money towards the purchase price, it suggested that it was a “guess” as to how much. The evidence wholly fails to sustain the allegations of the eross-complaint, which aver, (a) that prior-to December, 1894, the mother accumulated about $700; (b) that Davenport used the same in the purchase of the one-half interest in the property; and (c) that he agreed and promised at the time of such purchase that such interest should be the property of the. mother, or that he held the title, in trust for her.
It is well settled in law that a valid, recorded deed, conveying real property to the grantee, imports a good title to the premises in such grantee, and all jurisdictions are practically unanimous .in holding that a resulting trust in real property will not be declared to exist unless the evidence in support thereof is clear, positive, satisfying and convincing; indeed, as some courts say, it must be beyond a reasonable doubt, and conclusive. Here the title was of record by warranty deed in James Davenport, and nothing short of the character of proof stated would warrant a decree fastening a resulting trust in behalf of defendant upon any part or portion of the premises. Of the many cases we have examined, we fail to find one even intimating that evidence of the character and quality disclosed by this record is sufficient to establish a resulting trust against real property. That the proof must be of such character and sufficiency as above stated, to establish a resulting trust, is supported by an overwhelming weight of authority. None of appellant’s authorities are in conflict with the rule stated, but many of them spe
In those authorities cited by appellant, holding that a resulting trust had been established, we observe that they all show that the one who created the trust either paid, or caused t'o be paid, the consideration for the conveyance, or surrendered property, or valuable interests, for that purpose, and that such payments, etc., were established by clear and positive evidence showing the amounts, dates, places and circumstances thereof; that is to say, that, if no evidence had been given by the party denying the trust, the court had ample, convincing evidence before it upon which to render a decree establishing the trust. In the instant case there is practically no dispute of defendant’s testimony. The weakness occurs in the uncertain, unsatisfying and doubtful character of the evidence relied upon by her to establish the trust.
The trust sought to be established by defendant is what is known in law as a resulting trust. Many definitions of this character of trust may be found in the books. The following.is taken from Bouvier’s Law Dictionary (Bawles’ revision), vol. 2, p. 914, viz.:
*261 “Resulting Trust. A trust raised by implication or construction of law, and presumed to exist from the supposed intention of the parties and the nature of the transaction. * * #
“A resulting trust must arise at the time the title is taken. No subsequent oral agreement or payment will create it.”
In First National Bank of Denver v. Campbell, 2 Colo. App., 271, 30 Pac., 357, the court, speaking of resulting trusts, says:
‘One thoroughly recognized limitation is, “that the trust must result, if at all, at the instant the deed is taken, and the legal title vests in the grantees. No oral agreements and no payments, before or after the title is taken, will create a resulting trust, unless the transaction is such at the moment the title passes that a trust will result from the transaction itself.” A like limitation is to be found in the character of the proof requisite to the establishment of the trust. Courts are very exacting in the requirement of unquestionable evidence to establish a resulting trust. Whatever is essential to exhibit the equity of the cestui que trust must appear in a clear- arid unclouded light. * * * The was no attempt to show what amount of money was advanced to Johnson at the date of the commencement of the discovery work, what was given him from that time to the filing of the certificate of location, or the completion of the title by the finding of mineral, nor what were the disbursements incident to these things. It is thus impossible by inference, or arguments, to find the necessary proof as to the application of the intervenor’s money to the procurement of the title.” — Smith v. Turley, 32 W. Va., 14, 9 S. E., 46; Warner v. Bowdoin Square Baptist Soc., 148 Mass., 400, 19 N. E., 403; Ducie v. Ford, 138 U. S., 587, 11 Sup. Ct., 417, 34 L. Ed., 1091; Knox et al. v. McFarran, 4 Colo., 596.
In addition to appellant’s contention already noticed,
As to the first ground, appellant’s, position is supported by the great weight of authority. Her contention is to the effect that when a husband pays the purchase money and takes a conveyance in the name of his wife the presumption arises that he intended it as a gift, and -there is no presumption of a trust in such case; while on the other hand, if the conveyance be taken in the name of the husband, the purchase money being paid by the wife, no presumption of an intention to make a gift arises, but the presumption of a resulting trust in favor of the wife at once arises, and the husband will be deemed to bé a trustee of the property thus acquired, for her benefit, unless he is able to overcome such presumption by establishing a different intention. The court below assumed, and maintained throughout the trial, the position that the rule applied to husband and wife equally; in other words, that if the conveyance of the property be taken to the husband, which was paid for by the wife, the law raises the presumption that she intended the same to be á gift. This was an erroneous view of the law entertained by the court, but we are unable to see wherein appellant was •prejudiced thereby. Had the court ruled correctly on the question, it would still have been necessary for appellant to'prove at the trial-the facts constituting a resulting trust,' as pleaded in her answer. ' As we read the récord, no evidencé offered by defendant was excluded by reason of the court’s-views on this question. On the contrary, the record manifests á decided liberality ón -the part of
: The remaining question for consideration pertains to ¡the ruling of the lower court in refusing to allow defendant to testify as to a conversation between her husband and deceased concerning the matters in issue, on the day sxipceeding her marriage. It would appear from the record that the court held defendant to be disqualified under the act pf 1907, page 629, Session Laws of that year, which reads in part as follows:
■ • “In any such action, suit or proceeding, any adverse party or parties in interest may testify as to any‘conversation or admission, or as ’to all matters and things connected with the subject-matter of'said action, suit or proceeding, and which conversation and admission and matters and things aforesaid, occurred before the death and in the presence of such deceased person nnd also in the presence of - any member of the family of- such deceased person over the age of sixteen years, or in the presence of any heir, legatee or devisee of such dpceased person over the age of sixteen years; provided, however, that such member of the family, heir, legatee or devisee, as the case may be, is^present at the hearing of said action, suit or proceeding, or whose testimony is or may be procurable at such trial.”
Appellant contends that under the act she was qualified to testify, claiming that the evidence sought to be elicited pertained to a conversation between her husband
The construction of the statute, respecting the intent and meaning of the legislature in the use here of the word “family” appears to be necessary. Innumerable courts and text writers have judicially defined this word, but no decision can be found which attempts to give it a fixed, definite and invariable meaning when used in statutes. It seems to be generally conceded that it has several meanings. Its broadest one includes all those who are descended from one common progenitor — thus of the same blood. In a less comprehensive sense it means a collective body of persons living together and constituting one household under one head. In a still more limited sense it means father, mother and children. It is also defined as follows: “Family, at law, is a collective body of persons who live in one home, under one head or manager. ” 3 Words & Phrases, p. 2673. It has also received countless interpretations as found in statutes concerning homestead exemptions, and exemption of personal earnings of the head of a family, etc.; likewise when found in wills and codicils. Its meaning has been often adjudicated when found in statutes concerning widows’ allowances, etc. It seems to be generally held that in the absence of a statute specifically defining its meaning its purport and effect are to be determined by the context of the statute and consideration of the subject-matter to which it refers. One court, in Roco v. Green, 1 Tex., 438, has laid down the following rule:
“We deduce from the authorities the following general rules to determine when the relation of a family, as contemplated by law, exists:
“1. It is one of social status, not of mere contract.
“3. Corresponding state of dependence on the part of the other members for this support.”
However, that case was founded upon a construction of a section of the Téxas' state constitution which reserved from forced sale certain designated property, which, by the act, withdrew the same from the estate of a deceased person <£in case a constituent of the family survived.” It was there held that a married daughter with her children, residing with her mother, was not a constituent member of the family, such as entitled her and her children to the homestead upon the death of the mother. Many cases are cited by counsel in their briefs for the purpose of* supporting their views respectively upon this question, but our attention has been called to' none which are in point, or which are of much assistance in determining the question.
It will be noticed that our 'statute of 1907, above quoted, was merely an addition to the law then existing.' As the law existed at the time of its enactment, defendant would not have been a competent witness for any purpose in this case. Under the statute of 1907, is the defendant a competent witness under the facts here shown? We think not. A reasonable inference, as to the purpose of the legislature im enacting, the statute mentioned, would be, that in this class of actions all evidence pertinent to the issues ought to be admitted when such rule would work no injury or prejudice to the estate, or to any party or person interested as heirs or beneficiaries in the result of the proceedings. It is probable that* in this kind of an action any conversation concerning the subject-matter of litigation, had, between deceased and a' third party, in the presence of an heir, legatee or devisee of 'the deceased* or in the presence of a member- of his family* would' not result in injury:tuthe.estate, because, in theory at least,
Our conclusions are that as to the competency of the .defendant as a witness, the statute relied on must be considered in connection with, and controlled by, the statutes- of descent and distribution, -rather than the meaning of the word “family” as deduced from any other statute; and.that the words “member of-the. family” of such deceased, in the sense here used, include only such., persons living with -the deceased,- as would inherit from him by the laws .of descent. Others,; such as heirs, lega-, tees, and devisees, who do not live with .deceased so, astp; constitute members of. his. family, are specially men-tioned in the statute. -The .court, therefore;-.did.not.err, in excluding defendant as a witness.
In view of the able dissenting opinion written by our brother, Bell, we feel impelled to add a word to what has already been said.
The court does not seem to be divided on any legal or equitable principle involved in the majority opinion, but the disagreement arises from an analysis of the testimony and the force and effect to be given thereto. True, the record shows that appellant, as well as her mother and step-father (Davenport) were poor but industrious colored people; but it shows with equal clearness that appellees were also respectable and poor colored people; in addition to which it discloses that appellees were the heirs at law of Davenport under the statutes of descent of this state. The legislature, as the supreme law-making power of the state, might have conferred right of inheritance upon step-children, but it has not done so. The courts do not question the wisdom of laws enacted by the people’s representatives, but they look only to the enforcement of the laws as they find them.
The minority opinion invokes the maxim “There is no wrong without a remedy. ’ ’ The converse is also true, as illustrated in this case. The remedy sought fails, because in a legal sense there was no wrong suffered or shown. We would suggest that the maxim “Damnum absque injuria” is recognized and observed in every court where the common law is practiced, and under its observance untold injuries of a moral or civil nature are suffered in individual cases, for which there is no redress. The maxim can be illustrated. Suppose the mother, prior to her death, had been the record owner of this property and had deeded or devised the same to her
The evidence here well justifies a presumption that Davenport intended his step-daughter to have the $1,500 in interest-bearing bank certificates which he had turned over to her, and which she possessed at the time of his death; but that he desired the real property to go to his lawful heirs. "While the evidence shows that on several occasions he stated he intended to give the real estate to the step-daughter, the fact remains that he never evinced any intention, by act or deed, to do so. , He. had ample opportunity to consummate his alleged intention, and even in his last sickness there were several days. before death in which he could have transferred the property to appellant, either by will or deed. . .,
It cannot be said that this court has in any way over-. looked appellant’s interests, for in a recent decision it has reversed a judgment brought here by her, in order, that she might have the full benefit of a jury trial upon. issues which involve her material property rights. .
Judgment Affirmed.
Bell, J., and Morgan, J., dissent.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I have such implicit confidence in the integrity and sound judgment of my associates that it would be a struggle for me to dissent from their conclusion if I were not convinced that they, unwittingly, do a great injustice to the appellant, Nellie Fagan, through the misapplication of a technical rule of evidence to a state of facts, to which, I think, it was never intended to apply; and, further, my associates and the trial court, as I understand it, agree with me that the result of the judgment carries with it injustice, because of the supposed irnpotency of the court to invade what the majority think an impregnable line of court decisions and precedents, preventing them from doing what they should like to do, if legally possible.-
October 8th, 1891, J ames Davenport, a hard working and saving colored hod-carrier, married Ella Kaseby, an equally hard working and saving colored laundress. The wife brought to the marriage a three-year-old daughter, now the appellant herein, and $500 in cash, and immediately after the marriage, she took up her residence and vocation in the city of Denver, working out as a laundress by the day, saving her earnings, and intensely persisted in her efforts for almost ten successive years, or until October 3rd, 1901, when she died, leaving her husband, the said James Davenport, and her said daughter, then about 13 years of age, as her sole heirs at law. The daughter, immediately upon the death of her mother, assumed the duties as housekeeper for Davenport, and faithfully attended to them for almost eight years, or until about April 8th, 1909, when Davenport died, leaving her in the
Victor Scruggs, who worked with Davenport for a period of about eight years, testified that Davenport told him about four or five months after the marriage that “his wife was going ahead with the property and keeping up the payments, for he wasn’t making a dollar; that was during the panic.” He further testified that the panic lasted about a year and a half, and that when Davenport did work, he did not earn over a dollar and a half a day, and that, in a conversation he had with him after the wife died, Davenport “commenced crying about his wife, how hard she worked and helped to pay for the place, and now, he says, # * * ‘I want Nellie to have this place when I die. * * * She has stayed here and her mother worked hard and has put more money in the place than I have, and I want her to have this place when I die.’ ”
Mr. Dwyer, a shoe man, and a particular friend and neighbor of the Davenports, testified that, shortly after the death of Davenport’s wife, Davenport told him that “her (Nellie Fagan’s) mother helped him make the money to get the property with and that he certainly, would see that she (Nellie Fagan) would have it,” and witness also testified that in a conversation with Davenport about two weeks before his death, Davenport told him that Nellie would get the property; “that she was entitled to it; that Nellie had worked hard since her mother died and helped him, and if it was not for Nellie and-her mother he wouldn’t be able to hold the property.”
Mahala Ming testified that Davenport and his wife “had purchased and owned their own home in Denver,
J. W. Barnett testified that the property was purchased by Davenport before the marriage, “and after the marriage Mrs. Davenport helped pay for it. * * * She was a hard working, saving woman. She was a laundress and worked out by the day and gave it to Mr. Davenport to pay on the property and support the family. ’ ’
Pat Ming testified that “Davenport visited me in Kirkwood * * ' * he told me that when he married •'Ella Barnett (appellant’s mother) he was in debt and she g’ave him money that she had previous to their marriage to help him out of debt for their home.”
The foregoing with other evidence was introduced on behalf of the appellant, and the trial judge, in his announcement, said:
“This is a ease that illustrates that hardships may arise under the law. If there ever was a case that appeals to a sense of moral justice, this one does, on behalf of the defendant here. I think that the evidence shows that this girl, at two or three years of age, was taken into this family, and that her mother brought somewhere about $500, which went into the family funds. The mother worked for years at hard labor, and her earnings went, so far as the evidence in the case shows, in the same way, and the deceased got the benefit of it all, and it is an extremely harsh matter and a great moral injustice that this girl cannot recover what she should be entitled to at least; that is, the proportion of the estate that was created by her mother. It is impossible for the court to determine, from this evidence, just how much of these*274 funds or earnings .went into the property. There is no evidence here of any definite amount having' gone in out of the $500. There is evidence here — plenty of it— to sustain the proposition that she had helped pay for this home. * '# * There is evidence to show that some time prior to this- — some time prior to her marriage — she had $500. The evidence shows that a month after the marriage the deceased made this loan, which is the source of his title to an undivided one-half of the property, and if this $500 could have heen traced into this loan this court would have held that there was an equitable lien there, provided there, had also been an arrangement shown that would rebut the presumption of law that obtains in dealings between husband and wife that these matters are, in the absence of any showing to the contrary, assumed to be gifts, which is a well established principle of law.” (Italics mine.)
If the courts are, in fact, as impotent as the criticisms of the learned trial judge would indicate, then the boasts of the chancellors throughout many generations, that “Equity will not suffer a wrong without a remedy, ” have been but tinkling cymbals, and of no substantial benefit. However, I do not think that the court is as powerless as the learned trial judge concluded in this case. He, unfortunately, labored under an erroneous assumption in holding that it “is well established principle of law” that, rathe absence of any showing to the contrary, the moneys or property of the wife received by the husband are assumed to be gifts. It is,, rather, a well established principle of law that, if a husband, upon whom rests a legal obligation to supply his wife with a home and maintenance, being out of debt, turns over his money or property to her, he will be presumed to have made a gift thereof. However, if the wife, upon whom rests no such primary legal obligation, places her money in her husband’s hands, and he invests it in realty and takes the
I think the trial judge also erred in holding that there is no evidence showing what amount, or when, any of the wife’s money was invested in the' property. Every necessary element of this case may be proven by circumstantial evidence, and, therefore, the trial court had a right to take into consideration the fact that Davenport was in debt when he married; that he was a hod-carrier working for low wages; that he was obliged to live out of his wages; and at times indulged in luxuries, such as intoxicating beverages; that the mother of the appellant brought to the marriage $500' in cash, about thirty days before the $600 loan was made; that, according to one of the witnesses at least, this $500 together with Mrs. Davenport’s subsequent earnings were invested in the property; that no other disposition of this money has been shown; that there is no evidence that any money was invested in the purchase of the property, except the $600 and $800 loans; that Davenport admitted during his lifetime that his wife helped to pay for the property, and had put more money into it than he did; that the property belonged to the appellant as much as it did to him during his lifetime; and that he intended that she should have the whole of it after his death, because of the unremitting toil, of his wife and the appellant in assisting in securing and maintaining the home, and had requested the witness Scruggs to go with him to a lawyer at an early date to will the property to her, but was soon' taken ill, and lived but a few days thereafter.
I think the above stated circumstances establish a
In this manner the first precedents were made, and continued until they had attained a reasonable completeness with respect to fundamental principles and general rules. This accumulation became the store-house whence the chancellors obtained material for their decisions, and both guided and restrained their judicial action. Equity is ever expanding its doctrines so as to cover new facts and relations, and has a power of orderly expansion, which cannot be lost without destroying its very nature.— Pomeroy’s Equity, supra, secs. 59-60. However, in the development of every judicial system, the people have been compelled from, time to time to destroy, by legislative acts, the controlling powers of precedents before such orderly expansion could maintain its continuing-growth.
The New York legislature in 1848 passed a most sweeping act termed “The Eeformed American System of Procedure” with the avowed purpose of destroying the supremacy of a multitude of unjust precedents, and to adopt the general equity theory of parties, and to .apply this system to the single civil action in all civil cases. The principles of this act became so popular that the legislatures of most of the states of the Union, and the British parliament soon adopted the same. Many leading-lawyers and influential benches gave the acts a.most narrow construction, and limited the intended liberal use of the principles. — Pomeroy’s Code Eemedies, 4th Ed., sec. 6. The legislative policy has been, and is, in the jurisdictions adopting the liberal procedure, that the court shall
There are cases wherein statutory prohibitions force..' judges to award or-affirm what they believe to be “harsh- and unjust” judgments, but in this case the judges are not only free from legislative prohibition, but the very spirit of the “Beformed American System of Proceduré” adopted by our legislature demands that judgments shall be in harmony with, rather than in violation of, “ moral justice.” We know of no system which should uphold, such judgments, since the technical rigors of the common-law dominated the courts and the precedents- created
■ It may be thought that the appellant may present a simple claim against the estate for money had and received. This suit was brought May 19th, 1909. All claims against estates are required to be filed within a short time limit to entitle claimants to participate in the inventoried assets. When Nellie Fagan is driven from this court empty-handed, she will not only have lost • all interest in the home, in which her mother admittedly invested the net earnings of almost a life’s toil, to those who have never invested a penny therein, but will be mulcted in a large bill of costs that will probably consume her net earnings for many years, and it is not probable that this simple-minded colored girl will be disposed to hazard another long journey in courts which can give her no assurance of more substantial remedies than mere sympathy, while confessing that her claim is “morally just. ’.’
In fact, the machinery of the courts is so inordinately expensive that those of small affairs cannot expect to reap any real relief therethrough, if only one journey is required, and they may well expect to really lose, though the courts may announce a success, if the journey must bo doubled.
We think it the purpose of equity and the reformed procedure, that the courts shall, from the threshold to the termination of every suit .filed, make it a point of every effort that the controversy be decided and determined on the merits, in a single proceeding, and justice awarded in .the spirit of equity and the liberalized reformed procedure, oblivious of the musty precedents created by the technical rigors of the common law.
i-,-., yye do not believe,- with all due deference to the
Morgan, J., concurring.