Ferrall v. Kent

4 Gill 209 | Md. | 1846

Martin, J.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

This was an action of replevin, instituted in Prince George’s county court, to recover from the defendant five thousand pounds of tobacco. To the declaration the defendant pleaded non cepil, property in the defendant, and property in a stranger, on which pleas issues were joined.

At the trial of the cause, the plaintiff below proved, by Thomas H. Kent, that in the year 1839, he rented of the defendant her farm, for the years 1840 and 1841, on the following terms: — He was to give the defendant one-half of every thing that was made; he was to carry all the crops to market, and to pay her one-half of the proceeds after they were sold; that under this contract he worked the farm for the year 1841, and made, among other things, about twenty thousand pounds of tobacco.

The plaintiff further proved by the witness, that in December 1841, he executed the paper, set out in the bill of exceptions, of the 24th of December 1841; that it included the crop of tobacco made by the defendant in 1841, to recover a part of which the present action is brought, and that it was left by him in the possession of the defendant’s agent, and he retained possession of no part of it after the execution of the instrument of writing referred to.

*212In this condition of the case, the defendant prayed the court to exclude from the jury the said bill of sale, as inadmissible evidence to prove title in the plaintiff to the tobacco in question 5 and the court being divided in opinion, it was insisted by the plaintiff, that the paper must be read to the jury. The court, however, determined, that by reason of a division of opinion, the paper could not go to the jury, and refused to permit the same to be read. From this opinion the appellant appealed, and it forms the subject of the only exception taken in the cause.

It is apparent from the record, that the paper thus offered in evidence, was not read to the jury. Objection was taken to its admissibility, by the counsel for the defendant, in the form of a prayer, as soon as it was offered, and upon this question the court was divided in opinion.

That this is a correct view of the case, is placed beyond controversy by the language of the court. They say distinctly, that the paper could not go to the jury, and declare, that it was not to be read. In this state of the question, the court below decided correctly, that by a division of opinion, the evidence was lost. The tule is, that when testimony is objected to, it cannot be admitted, unless sustained by the judgment of the court.

If the paper had been read to the jury, without objection, and upon a prayer by the defendant to strike it out of the cause, the court had been divided in opinion, the aspect of the question would have been changed, and the evidence could not have been excluded.

As we think the cpurt below committed no error in the opinion expressed by them, it becomes necessary to consider the question, whether the evidence itself was admissible, to prove title in the appellant to the tobacco in question?

This question is free from difficulty. It is plain, we think, that the contract between Thomas H. Kent and Alice Kent, created the relation of landlady and tenant, and vested in each of them a joint interest in the crops. This being so, assuming that the bill of sale transferred to Dennis W. Ferrall the part of Thomas H. Kent, in the crop of tobacco made by him in *2131841, it would have constituted a tenancy in common between Ferrall, as the grantee of Thomas II. Kent, and Mrs. Kent; and under such circumstances an action of replevin could not he maintained. 1 H. & G., 322.

Upon this ground also, we think the evidence offered by the plaintiff below was inadmissible, and that the judgment of the county court must be affirmed.

JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.