44 So. 552 | Ala. | 1907
The principal question in this case is whether the deeds introduced in evidence by the plaintiff were ever delivered by the grantor. The plaintiff and defendants were children of the alleged grantor. The plaintiff claimed title to the land in question under deeds offered in evidence. The defendants claimed as heirs. When this case was here on a former appeal (146 Ala. 213, 40 South. 752) the law governing the question of delivery was then stated, and we refer to what was then said as applicable on the present appeal.
As relevant and bearing on the question of delivery of the deeds, it was competent to show . by the witness Napier, a justice of the peace who prepared the deeds and took the acknowledgement, all that was said and done at the time of the signing of the same by the grantor, as well as what was then said by the witness to the grantor relative to the making of the deeds. — Napier v. Elliott, supra; Fitzpatrick v. Brigmam, 133 Ala. 242, 31 South. 940.
It was error to permit the plaintiff as a witness in her own behalf, against the objections of the defendants, to testify as to conversations and transactions between the witness and the deceased Joseph Hughes, the maker of the deeds offered in evidence, relative to the execution and delivery of the same. — Code 1896, § 1794; Boykin v. Smith,, 65 Ala. 295; Dismukes v. Tolson, 67 Ala. 386; Bibb v. Sunter, 79 Ala. 351; Miller v. Cannon & Co., 84 Ala. 59, 4 South. 204.
It was competent to prove by the witness Joiner that on the day of the death of Joseph Hughes, he (witness) saw the plaintiff go to the trunk of Joseph Hughes and take out a package of papers and place the same in her bosom. This was a competent circumstance to go to the jury in rebuttal of the plaintiff’s testimony as to how she came in possession of the deeds, and also as affecting the question of a delivery of the deeds.
Reversed and .remanded.