45 Md. 144 | Md. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The issues for trial in the Court below were, 1st, Is Henry Jones a lawful child of Andrew D. Jones, deceased? and, 2ndly, Did the said Andrew D. Jones leave a widow, and if yea, who? These issues were sent from the Orphans’ Court to be tried, and upon trial the jury found that Henry Jones is a lawful child of Andrew D. Jones,
In the course of the trial several exceptions were taken hy the appellants; four to rulings on questions as to the admissibility of evidence, and the fifth to the refusal of certain prayers offered’by the appellants.
The question raised by the first exception is as to the admissibility of secondary evidence of the superscription or direction of a letter written by the appellee, at Liverpool, to his mother, in Baltimore, in or about the year 1850 ; the question being to whom and how the letter was directed, the letter itself not being produced. The previous evidence had disclosed the condition of the mother, and the fact that she died about the year 1866. Her whole life, with the exception of the last two years of it, had been spent as a slave, and she died at the house of her former master. The letter is not shown to have been of any such importance as to require its preservation ; and as the party to whom it was written has been dead several years, and-there being no personal representative of whom inquiry could be made, it may well be presumed that the letter has been lost or destroyed; and therefore the evidence offered of the address written on the letter was properly received. 1 Taylor Ev., sec. 399.
By the second and third exceptions, the question was presented as to the admissibility, as evidence to the jury, of the personal resemblance0 of the appellee to his alleged father, Andrew D. Jones, deceased; and the Court below allowed the evidence to be given.
In the argument here no authorities on this question were cited by counsel for either party ; but upon examination we find that such evidence has been admitted in the trial of questions of partus suppositio, but in ■ those cases only.
In the celebrated Douglas cause, decided by the House of Lords in 1769, Lord Manseield said that he had always
As to the ruling of the Court below, as stated in the fourth hill of exception, we find no error. It was incumbent upon the parties offering the deposition to prove the hill and answer in the equity cause in which the deposition was taken, in order to show that a cause was depending, as well as to show who were the parties, and what was the subject-matter in issue. Proof of bill and answer is not necessary where the deposition is used against the deponent as his own admission, or for the purpose of contradicting him as a witness; but the deposition was offered for no such purpose in this case. The offer of the deposition should have been accompanied with the proffer to show that it was the deposition of a deceased witness, taken under oath, in a judicial proceeding, involving substantially the same question or matter in dispute as that on trial, to which the plaintiff and defendants were parties, and that the former had the right and opportunity to cross-examine the witness. 1 Taylor Ev., secs. 434 to 438. These requisites were not all complied with in the offer made by the defendants. Though all the original papers were offered, non constat that they would have shown what was necessary to let in the deposition. Besides, it was improper to offer all the original papers belonging to the equity cause, without disclosing of what the papers consisted. It is not all the proceedings in an equity cause that can be offered, in order to let in the deposition of a deceased witness. It is only such parts of the proceedings as show the nature of the cause and the parties to the controversy, that are admitted, and they, not as evidence to the jury, but simply to the Court, to enable it to determine whether the deposition is evidence proper to be allowed to go to the jury. 2 Taylor Ev., sec. 1413.
We come now to the consideration of the prayers oifered by the appellants, and which were refused by the Court below.
The proposition involved in the first prayer is too clear for question, except the assertion which it contains that there is no evidence of the occurrence of any marriage between the parties named, subsequent to the birth of the appellee.
Whatever we may think of the verdict as the result of the whole evidence in the cause, this Court will not say that the entire case, or the consideration of any particular question involved in it, should be taken from the jury, upon a prayer that there is no sufficient evidence to justify the finding for the adverse party, if there he any evidence from which a rational conclusion may be drawn as opposed to the theory of such prayer. Before such a prayer can be granted, the Court must assume the truth of all the evidence before the jury, tending to sustain the claim or defence, as the case may be, and of all inferences of fact fairly deducible from it, as on demurrer to evidence; and this though such evidence be contradicted in every particular by the opposing evidence in the cause. Upon no other principle can the case be withdrawn from the consideration of the jury, who alone are competent to decide on facts of which contradictory evidenoe has been given.
Now, in this case, the appellee fixes the time of his birth to be about the year 1820 ; and the most material part of the evidence offered by him, coming principally from himself as a witness, refers to a time subsequent to 1820. Jf therefore, this evidence was legally sufficient to be submitted to the jury from which they might infer the fact of marriage of the appellee’s mother with Andrew D. Jones, the Court below was right in refusing the prayer. And, on careful consideration of the evidence, we think it was properly submitted to the jury. It is true, where there is no impediment to marriage, and the connexion between the parties was illicit in its commencement, as it must have been in this case, according to the hypothesis of the prayer, it will be presumed to continue to be of the same character ; and, in order to overcome that presumption, it
But while we think the first prayer was properly refused, we are of opinion that the second ought to have been granted.
.As already mentioned, the jury have found that Andrew D. Jones left a widow surviving him, named Frances, formerly Frances Moore. The appellee’s mother died, according to his own showing, in 1866, and there is not the slightest evidence to show, nor is it pretended, that the marriage of Andrew D. Jones to Frances Moore occurred after the death of Henny, the mother of the appellee.
How, or upon what theory, such a verdict was arrived at it is a little difficult to imagine. There was need of an explicit instruction from the Court on this point of the case.
There is nothing in this prayer to which the appellee could rightfully object. It is, of course, very clear that Andrew D. Jones could not have been the lawful husband of two wives living at the same time. If, as a fact, it he found that he married Anne Smith in 1819, and lived and cohabited with her, then, in the absence of direct proof of previous marriage, the presumption is that he was a single man when he married her, and during his marriage with her, of course, he could contract no valid marriage with another woman. The reason for such presumption is very clearly stated in the case of Breakey vs. Breakey, 2 N. C., Q. B., 349, 358, where the Chief Justice of that Court, in delivering his opinion, said: “If Andrew Breakey, after cohabiting many years with this defendant, had, during her life-time, married another woman in this country, .he would, by that act, have destroyed the presumption of his marriage with the defendant, which would otherwise have arisen from the fact of cohabitation. He would have shewn by it, what the law could not have presumed, that he was willing to incur the moral guilt of living with
If, then, it be found as a fact, according to the requirement of the appellants’ second prayer, that Andrew D. Jones was married either to Anne Smith or Frances Moore during the life of Henny, the mother of the appellee, (there being no evidence of any divorce,) all mere presumption of previous marriage with the latter, founded simply upon habit and repute, is at once overthrown, and it then becomes incumbent upon the appellee to establish the alleged marriage of his mother to Andrew D. Jones as an .actual fact, by more direct proof.
The appellants’ third prayer, we think, was properly refused, for reasons stated in considering the first prayer. There was some evidence legally sufficient to be submitted to the jury. And we think the fourth prayer was also properly refused. The form and terms of this latter prayer were calculated to mislead the jury ; and besides, it asserted that there was no evidence of marriage.
The seventh prayer was also properly refused. It embodies the proposition that without the consent of the master the marriage of the slave was actually void. There is no warrant for this in the law of this State. The statute, Act of 1777, ch. 12, prohibited ministers of the gospel from publishing the banns, or celebrating matrimony between servants or a servant and a.free person, under penalty, without the consent of the master. But the statute did not declare the marriage void, nor was that the operation of it. The minister subjected himself to a fine, hut the marriage was valid.
The eighth prayer of the appellants was rightly rejected. It did not require the jury to find what was essential to be
•For the reasons stated, we reverse the rulings of the Court below in the second and third exceptions, and in refusing to grant the second prayer of the appellants, but affirm its rulings in all other respects; and remand the cause for a new trial.
Bulings reversed, and cause remanded.