3 Pa. 496 | Pa. | 1846
This was an ejectment brought for the undivided moiety of a tract of one hundred and seventy .acres of land, on Chartier’s creek. The plaintiff gave in evidence the will of Rachel Jones, dated the 31st of August, 1823, who was admitted to have been the mother of the plaintiff, and of Ellen McKee, who was defendant with her husband, and that Rachel died seised of the premises in question.
“ I will and devise the tract of land whereon I now live, (being the same sought to be recovered in this case,) to my son Ephraim, and my daughter Nelly, to be equally divided between them, to hold*498 to them and their heirs for ever.” Together with a codicil thereto, of a date subsequent to the said will, in the words following, viz.:
“ Having altered my mind with respect to the first item of the foregoing will, I do make the following addition or codicil thereto, 'to wit: I give and devise to mj1' daughter Eleanor or Nelly Jones, the tract of land and plantation on Chartier’s creek, adjoining Mc-Cowan, whereon John Jones now lives, and whereon I lived at the date of the above will, to have and to hold the whole of the said tract of land to her and her heirs for ever.”
The will and codicil were duly proved on the 6th and 13th of November, 1823; the latter by Henry Baldwin, jun. and Daniel Haughey, the subscribing witnesses thereto. It was admitted, that on the 15th of July, 1824, the said Ellen intermarried with Alexander McKee, who, with his wife, defended this action.
The plaintiff then offered and read, subject to any future point in regard to its competency and sufficiency, the deposition of the Hon. Henry Baldwin. Mr. Baldwin swore, « That about the year 1823, When Mrs. Jones and her daughter Eleanor lived on Chartier’s creek, he was sent for, and went to see her, and drew her will, in which she devised the land on which she then was, to her daughter Ellen and her son Ephraim. After some time, Ephraim Jones, who had been acquainted with the will, stated that he was largely in debt for his brother John, as security, and other debts, and if the will stood as it was, the creditors would take his share of the property, and wished me to see his mother, and wished her to will it to Eleanor, who would hold it for his use, as to the one half. By this time, Mrs. Jones had come down to her son Thomas’, at the ferry. I went over and had a conversation with her, stating what Ephraim had said. She agreed to it, and wished me to add a codicil to her will. I then took the will and drew a codicil, or directed one to be drawn. In the codicil she devised the land to Ellen. I then gave it to my son, and requested him to go over and have it executed. Ellen was living with her mother, but I do not recollect having any conversation with her relative to the change in the will; nor did he recollect having any conversation with Ephraim Jones, in the presence of his mother; nor did he recollect of seeing him, at any time during the conversation with his mother, at the house.”
The'plaintiff then called Daniel Haughey, one of the attesting witnesses to the said codicil, -who testified as follows : « In 1823 I lived with James Steele. He kept the Jones’ ferry. This is my signature, as a witness to the codicil, I was called to witness the
Nancy Jones was then called. She proved, that she' was the widow of Mr. Steele, who was the executor of Mrs. Jones. She knew Mrs. Jones, and Ellen, and all the family. They lived close together. Mrs. Jones had lived on the Chartier’s farm, but came near us, on the Monongahela, in while house, near the ferry, where she died. It was not long before her death that she came to live there. Mrs. Jones talked about altering her will. She was in a good deal of distress about the -way she had made it, on account of Ephraim’s partner, John Jones, having involved him in debt. . She was afraid they -would take the place from him, on account of the debt. She said she would .alter her will and leave it all to Nelly; and Nelly was to keep it in charge for her brother Ephraim. I can’t recollect of her speaking of it more there than once, it is so long ago; but I know she was troubled about it, I can’t tell whether Ellen knew any thing about it or not. I can’t recollect whether
Plaintiff’s counsel then proposed to ask the witness, “ whether the intention of Mrs. Jones, as to the alteration of the will, and the object of it, were not well known and talked of in the family of Mrs. Jones, both before and after the alteration was made ?” The defendant’s counsel objected, and the court sustained the objection. In this, the court were clearly right; the offer was too loose. The talk of the family was not evidence to affect either of the parties. The plaintiff’s counsel then offered in evidence the separate declarations of Eleanor McKee, made since her marriage with Alexander McKee, admitting that she held the land in dispute, in trust for the plaintiff. This the court rejected. The admission of the wife will bind the husband, only where she has authority to make them. 1 Espin. 142. Nor can her declarations affect him, where he sues with her in her right. The declarations of the wife, made in the absence of the husband, and affecting the interests of the husband, are not evidence. The policy of the law excludes the husband and wife from testifying, where the rights of either are concerned. Snyder v. Snyder, 6 Binney, 488; Greenleaf’s Ev. sect. 185. The court were right in excluding the declarations of the wife, in the absence of the husband.
Further evidence was given on both sides, which I do not deem material to consider, as the cause goes back on one ground. Several exceptions have been taken to the charge. They are reducible to one head: that on the whole evidence, the case ought not to have been taken from the jury, but submitted to their deliberate consideration. It is not a common case, or a case of one witness. We must bear in mind that an aged lady, living on Chartier’s creek, with her daughter, sends to Pittsburgh for Henry Baldwin, then at the head of the bar, to write her will. It is done at her own dwelling; she devises the plantation she then lives on, and now in controversy, to be equally divided between her son and daughter, the plaintiff and the defendant in this action. Who produced the codicil to this will? Not the daughter, but the son, who is^ engaged in an unfortunate partnership, and afraid he will lose the land. To prevent this, he goes to Mr. Baldwin, and requests him to see his mother to get the will changed; he wishes the farm left to his sister, who would hold it for his use, as to the one-half. Mr. Baldwin goes to the mother, and informs her of the wishes of her son. The old lady agrees to the change, and the codicil is written. Mr. Baldwin sends his son over the river to have the codicil signed. It is done when the mother
The judgment is reversed, and a vériire de novo awarded.