Appellant was the plaintiff in the lower court, and brought this action against appellee by a complaint in one paragraph in which it is alleged that appellee was at the time of the death of appellant’s intestate her husband; that in the month of October, 1876, plaintiff’s intestate died, leaving surviving her this appellee, her husband, and five chil
The facts as above detailed are substantially as found by the court; they are fairly within the issues presented and are sustained by the evidence. The rule that the Appellate Court of this State will not weigh the evidence must be strictly adhered to. A deviation from the firmly established rule would lead to almost innumerable appeals and virtually mean to litigants at least two trials upon the merits of every controversy.
Reasons numbered twelve, thirteen, fourteen, and fifteen of appellant’s motion for a new trial, relate to the alleged error of the lower court in excluding certain evidence offered by appellant upon the trial of the cause. If error at all, it was harmless error to refuse that part of the testimony offered by appellant which might have tended to prove that appellee received the moneys herein sued for, because the same facts were established by other and uncontradicted evidence, and its refusal could not have been prej
Upon the facts found by the court, the conclusions of law could not have been different. Joshua Cart-right had a perfect right to give to appellee, his son-in-law, the money and property in controversy. It was the property of said Cartright, and not the property of appellant’s decedent. In the case of Lewis v. Stanley, 148 Ind. 351, the Supreme Court of this State, speaking by Howard, J., say: “The father may thus make the advancement in the manner he thinks best, and, even if the daughter should object, still he might, by will or otherwise, thus fix the portion to be given to her. The property belongs to the father to do with as he deems best; and it does not follow because the advancement is so made the land does not belong wholly to the husband. There is nothing in the findings or the evidence to show that any trust, in favor of Comfort E. Stanley was created by the deed to her husband.” And so in this case, there is nothing in the findings or the evidence to show that the receipt of the money by appellee created a trust in favor of appellant’s decedent.
Special finding numbered four is as follows: “The court further finds that there was at the time said money and property was so delivered by said Cart-right to the defendant, no expectation on part of either of said Cartright or of plaintiff’s intestate that the defendant should pay any part of said money or deliver any part of said property to the plaintiff’s intestate. And that it toas meant and intended hy said Cartright and plaintiff’s intestate that the defendant should keep and use said money and property as his own.”