20 N.H. 393 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1845
By tbe terms of tbe contract between Daniel Fitts and tbe plaintiff, Ebenezer Fitts, tbe latter
Daniel was to stock the farm, and did stock it; and from one of the animals furnished for that purpose is descended one of the cows which are the subject of this controversy, while the other was derived by the exchange of a calf of the same stock, made by the agency of Daniel and Sally acting under his direction. ' The exchange was made when both the animals were calves, and was acquiesced in by the plaintiff, by adopting- the new acquisition, and raising it with the other animals upon the farm.
Upon this state of the evidence the court instructed the jury that the stock, when furnished by Daniel, and placed upon the farm pursuant to the agreement, became so far the property of the plaintiff that Daniel Fitts could not sell it, and “ that the young animals raised from it upon the farm were to be considered part of its produce and income, from which the support of Daniel and his wife was to be derived; and that the surplus, after furnishing such support, belonged to the plaintiff.”
Ve are of the opinion that it would be difficult to give any other rational construction to the contract. A very large portion of the agriculture of the countiy is devoted to the growth of various kinds of cattle, which are as justly and as uniformly regarded as the produce of the farm, as are the corn, hay, and roots with which they are fed. Upon any other principle of construction in such a case as this, conflicts might arise between the adverse interests of the tenant and landlord, which it would be difficult to adjust upon satisfactory grounds. One party might require all the resources of the farm to he devoted to the growth and increase of stock for the fertilizing of the soil, and the more direct emolument of the owner, while the obvious motives of the other would tend in an
To rebut tbis inference, evidence of the sayings of tbe plaintiff was introduced, and. an exception was taken to tbe ruling of tbe court as to its admissibility.
In general, tbe admissions of a party are evidence against him, and sometimes they are conclusive in their effect; as where they are made upon the record, where they operate by way of estoppel. Sometimes when not of record they have tbe effect of precluding tbe party making them from disputing them, as where others have been induced by them to act otherwise than they would have done but for such admissions. Welland Canal v. Hathaway, 8 Wend. 483; Davis v. Sanders, 11 N. H. 259; Tufts v. Hayes, 5 N. H. 453.
In tbe case last referred to, which was trespass against a sheriff for taking tbe plaintiff’s cow, it appeared tbat tbe plaintiff bad made declarations tbat be owned another cow then in bis possession; and it was held tbat tbe declarations must have been made under such circumstances as to give tbe defendant a right to consider both cows as bis property, and as to make a denial of tbe declarations in tbe action inconsistent with good faith and honest conduct, in order to estop tbe plaintiff, and tbat tbe mere fact tbat be made them was insufficient for tbat purpose.
In another case, the plaintiff advanced ¿67,500 to one Knight, who, as collateral security, gave him an order on
The same principle is affirmed in many eases: Hallesten v. Johnson, 4 Wend. 642; Wallis v. Truesdell, 6 Pick. 455; Deniger v. Sauzer, 6 Wend. 436, 437; Davison v. Franklin, 1 B. & Ad. 142; Hall v. White, 3 C. & P. 136; Champlin v. Butler, 18 Johns. 169.
But the estoppel, or disability to show the truth against the admission, prevails only in favor of the party who has been drawn in by the act, or admission, and 'cannot be availed of by strangers, or such as could not have been imposed on.
Thus the plea of nolo contendere does not estop the party from disputing, in a civil action, the truth of the facts charged in the indictment. Commonwealth v. Horton, 9 Pick. 206.
The certificate of A. that he had purchased a vessel of B. was held not to conclude A. in a suit drawing the - sale in question, but that A. might show an agreement at the time that a bill of sale was to be executed in order to complete the purchase. Higgins v. Cheseman, 9 Pick. 7. The same principle is asserted in Stone v. Swift, 4 Pick. 489.
And where the admissions of the plaintiff were not made with a view to influence the conduct of the defendants, and did not in fact influence it, and they did not act upon such admissions, the plaintiff is not estopped. Wallis v. Truesdell, 6 Pick. 457.
The admissions of the plaintiff in this case do not fall within the definition of any that have been held to be conclusive of his rights in the matters to which they relate.
It is equally clear, upon reason and authority, that they are not admissible for the purpose of controlling the effect of the written contract between the parties. Their admis
The effect which could lawfully have been given to the evidence appears to us to have been stated by the court with a latitude sufficiently favorable to the defendant. Austin v. Sawyer, 9 Cow. 39.
There must, therefore, be
Judgment on the verdict.