14 Vt. 99 | Vt. | 1842
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The only question raised upon this bill of exceptions, upon which the defendant relies, relates to the admissions of William Lawson. Were they admissible in evidence ? The defendant had attached the oxen, in question, as the property of Lawson, and he succeeds, sub modo, by the operation of law, to all his rights in them. It has, I conceive, been frequently decided,that such declarations of the vendor made before sale, as would be evidence against himself, are admissible against his vendee; and as to this question, it is the same thing whether he succeeds to the rights of the vendor, by purchase or by operation of law. The ground seems to be, that the admissions come from a privy in estate, and consequently bind the successor. In contemplation of law, they come from the party himself, and of course are not thought to be exposed to the objection of being hearsay evidence. They have been thought to be, not inter alios, but inter eosdem, and, in this view, it would ■ seem to me to be immaterial whether the person making them could be called as a witness or not.
The case of Ivat v. Finch, 1 Taunt. R. 141, evidently proceeded upon this ground. Though, in that case, the declarant was dead at the time of the trial, yet this was made no point in the case, and the admissibility of the declarations rested upon
In Bridge v. Eggleston, 14 Mass. R. 245, the declarations of the grantor, made before the sale, tending to prove that the deed was a fraud upon creditors, were admitted against his grantee. So in Norton v. Pettibone, 7 Conn. R. 319, the admissions of the grantee of the debtor, while owner and in possession, that he purchased to defraud creditors, were admitted against his grantee.
In Jackson v. McCall, 10 Johns. R. 377, the admissions of the ancestor, while in possession, that the land was limited to a given line, were received against the heir.
So it has been held that the admission of the ancestor, as to the contents of a lost deed, were admissible against the heir. 3 Hamm. R. 107. In Binney v. Proprietors &c., of Hull, 3 Pick. R. 503, on the question who was bound, by prescription, to maintain a partition fence, the admissions of
So the admissions of the grantor, that his survey did not include the land in dispute, made before he conveyed, were received against his grantee. So upon a question of fifteen years adverse possession, the admission of a person in the chain of possession, that his possession was not adverse, is admissible against those who follow, claiming the benefit of the prior possession. So where the grantor showed a certain monument, while owner and in possession, as his place of beginning, this was held evidence against his grantee. 4 Serg. & Rawle, 174. 3 Conn. R. 286. 2 Penningt. R. 706.
In Jackson v. Davis, 5 Cow. R. 123, the plaintiff claimed under a given title, and it was held that the defendant, who claimed through a number of successive purchasers in fee, was as much affected by the acknowlegments by any of his predecessors, that they held by a lease from the same source from which the plaintiff claimed title, as he would have been if they had been his own. See also Van Duzen v. Scissam, 3 Johns. R. 499.
In Gibblehouse v. Strong, 3 Rawle’s R.437, the declaration of one, who held the legal estate by a deed in fee, that he held the estate in trust for one who had paid the purchase money, made before he had conveyed, was received to affect his grantee. This too in a case where the legal owner was living and within the reach of process and capable of being examined as a witness.
It was claimed, in this case, that he should be produced and sworn as a witness, but the court thought otherwise, and held his declarations admissible on the general principle that the admissions of the grantor are evidence against his grantee,
Waring v. Warren, 1 Johns. R. 342, puts the case of personal estate within the same reason. De Forest v. Bacon, 2 Conn. R. 633, which was trover for goods, is much like the present. The plaintiff claimed under an assignment in trust from one Judson to pay the debts of the plaintiff and of others. The defendant attached the goods as the property of Judson, upon the ground the assignment was fraudulent, it being claimed that there was no debt due from Judson to the plaintiff. To prove the debt, entries in the shop book of Judson, made before the assignment, were received against the defendant, inasmuch as the defendant claimed under Judson by the attachment. Swift, Ch. J. with whom the other judges concured, says; “ the shop books would have been proper evidence between the plaintiff and Judson to prove the state of the accounts, and of course were proper evidence in this case to show the indebtedness of Judson to the plaintiff.” I had supposed this rule had been acted upon to a great extent, though not with entire uniformity, both in this country and in England. In Woodruff v. Whittlesey, Kirby’s R. 60, the evidence was received without objection, and Walthol v. Johnson, 2 Call’s R. 275. Johnson v. Patterson, 2 Hawks’ R. 183, Coale v. Harrington, 7 Harr. & Johns. R. 147, and Guy v. Hall, 2 Murph. R. 150, are a few among the many authorities in the American courts, for the application of the rule to personal property, irrespective of the fact whether the vendor could be called as a witness or not.
In Harrison v. Vallance, 1 Bing. R. 45, decided in 1822, S. C. 7 Moore, 304, in trover for a deed, it was held that the de
The same rule has been applied to choses in action, and when the admissions are made before the assignment, the rule seems to be of general application, with this exception, that it does not apply to negotiable paper, which has been indorsed, before due, to a bona fide holder in the due course of trade. Greenleaf’s Ev. 220, 221, 222. Shaw v. Broom, 4 Dow. & Ryl. R. 730. Pocock v. Billing, 2 Bing. R. 269. Coster v. Symons, 1 Carr. & Payne’s R. 148. Haddam v. Mills, 4 Carr. & Payne’s R. 486. In Barough v. White, 6 Dowl. & Ryl. R. 379, and Beauchap v. Parry, 1 B. & Adolph. 89, the evidence was excluded on the ground that the paper could not be considered as overdue when negotiated. If it had been, it was conceded the rule would have been otherwise. See Kimball v. Huntington, 10 Wendell, 675. It has appeared to me that where the purchaser is in privity with the rights of the seller, which implies a successive relationship to the same rights of property, and takes subject to the seller’s defect of title, whether applied to lands or personal property, it was most accordant with principle to let in the declarations of the vendor, made before sale and while in possession, not as hearsay evidence, but as coming from a privy in estate, and, consequently, in law, as from the party himself. But it cannot be contended the decisions have been entirely uniform.
The case of Warner & Co. v. McGary, 4 Vt. R. 507, was an action by the indorsers against the payee and indors- or of a note upon a special indorsement, simply warranting the note to be due. The admissions of Turner, made after the note had been sold to the plaintiff, that he signed the note, it is clear should not be received in a suit between the indorsee and indorsor, to defeat the action. There was no privity or identity of interest between Turner and the plaintiff. The plaintiff never had succeeded to his rights by a derivation of title from Turner. The relation of seller and purchaser had never existed between them. And the question must have stood simply upon the ground that they were
This principle may include that class of cages where the declarations of a person in the possession of lands relate to the character or extent of the possession; but I do not well see how it can apply to matter of fraud, whele the admissions of the grantor have been received, as in the case of Bridge v. Egleston, Norton v. Pettibone and Denton v. Perry; or to the admissions of the contents of a lost deed, or to the antedating of a deed, or to the declaration of a person* having a title by deed, that he in fact holds as trustee. Iri few of these cases, if in any, as it appears to me, do the declarations accompany an act which they are to character-’ ize. Cases of this description, and many more that might be named, I think, should be referred to the principle that the admissions of the predecessor bind the successor to the estate. I know of no such rule of law, that, in; matters of fraud, the admissions of the supposed parties to it are admissible against other parties from the necessity of the case, as has been sometimes said. Davis v. Spooner, 3 Pick. R. 234, and Jackson v. McChestney, 7 Cowen’s R. 360, are further illustrations of the principle, that the admissions of those under whom the party claims are admissible . in evidence against him. It is needless to observe that the rule is' not, and should not be, extended to cases in which the admis* sions were made after the declarant had parted with all his interest in and control over the property ; and in Bullard v. Billings, 2 Vt. R. 309, it is held, that it must appear affirm* alively, in order to affect the vendee with the declarations of the vendor, that they were made before sale.
In Carpenter, Admr. of Taylor, v. Hollister et al. 13 Vt. R. 552, which was ejectment, the defendants set up a record title from the plaintiff’s intestate, through one Mackres to’ them, and it was held that the plaintiff could not give in evidence the admissions of Mackres, to a third person,
In the case now before us, Lawson might have been called as a witness by the plaintiff, and my brethren think he should have been, and that his admissions against his interests, made prior to the attachment and while in possession of the oxen, should not be received against the defendant. At first, I was inclined to a different result, but as unanimity of opinion is necessary to a decision in this case, I -concur with them. The rule, that if a person is still living and can be a witness, he must be called, and that his admissions are not evidence against his vendee or successor, though made while in possession and against his title, is certainly sustained by many adjudged cases, and perhaps should be taken as the better opinion, and as the most salutary rule.
In New York, though the decisions are exceedingly conflicting, the eases of Alexander v. Mahon, 11 Johns. 135 ; Hurd v. West, 7 Cowen, 752; Whitaker v. Brown, 8 Wend. 490, and Bristol v. Dana, 12 Wend. 142, are in point in favor of the rule. Fitch v. Chapman, 10 Conn. R. 9, is full to the. same effect. See also, Barrett v. French, 1 Conn. R. 354. Hedger v. Horton, 3 Carr. & Payne. 179.
The result is a reversal of the judgment of the county-court, and the cause is remanded to that court for trial.