94 Kan. 6 | Kan. | 1915
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is in form an action in ejectment to recover title and possession of a two-hundred-and-forty-acre tract of land in Greenwood county. . The defendant in his answer denies the allegations of the petition and admits his possession.of the real estate. Beneath the surface of these pleadings the real issue is the validity of a conveyance from the plaintiff, Emelia New, to E. C. Schultz, the wife of James Schultz, formerly an attorney at Eureka, and a conveyance by E. C. Schultz and husband to the defendant, J. A. Smith, the claim of the plaintiff being that her deed was procured by the fraud of James Schultz, and that J. A. Smith took with knowledge or with notice of sufficient facts to have put him upon inquiry leading to knowledge of such fraudulent transaction. When the case was r.eached for trial the defendant’s counsel, in his statement to the jury, said, among other things, that.his client,.Smith, took his deed in good faith, having paid good money for it, and went into possession,
The defendant offered in evidence the record of all mortgages that were on the real estate when deeded to Mrs. Schultz and to the defendant; also assignments, releases and forclosure proceedings concerning them, and offered to show that such mortgages were paid by the defendant. These were excluded from consideration on the theory that he was bound by his former election to stand on his claim of title.
It is earnestly contended by the defendant that he not only had a right to have this evidence received and considered, but that his payment of the mortgages with his own money gave him the right to be subrogated to that extent and to be treated as a mortgagee in pos-sesion. To this the plaintiff replies that having pro-i cured thé land by fraud, or rather that having taken it with notice of the fraud by which Schultz procured it to be conveyed to his wife, the defendant is barred from consideration as a mortgagee in possession.
The matter of election must be determined by the rightfulness of the order requiring it in the first place, for it was then made under complusion and protest, and hence the defendant could not be held bound by it on a subsequent trial on the mere ground that having once elected he must stand by such election. The very
As to the admissibility of the transcript of the evidence, aside from the competency of the witness,..it should be observed that when this testimony was originally offered Mr. Schultz was present as one of the attorneys in the case, although he did not testify. Mrs. New had then testified about her interviews with Mr. Schultz at one of which she had signed and acknowledged a paper which turned out to be a deed, and about other transactions with him when he acted as her attorney. This was followed by a cross-examination by her counsel, covering in detail her dealings with Mr.
The question remains whether or not this testimony was incompetent because it related to a transaction had by the plaintiff with a deceased person “where either (formerly the “adverse” party) party to the action claims to have acquired title directly or indirectly from such deceased person.” (Laws 1911, ch. 229, § 1.) The defendant claimed'to have acquired title from the wife of the deceased, but as the husband joined in the deed he could well claim to have acquired title either directly or indirectly from him. When this testimony was originally given it did not relate to any transaction or communication had with a person then deceased and hence it was not barred by the statute invoked by the defendant. At the subsequent trial the testimony by the witness was excluded by reason of this statute, and then it became as unavailable as if Mrs. New had been absent in another state or helpless on a bed of sickness, the situation thus approaching very nearly the one presented in The State v. Steiuart, supra, so nearly, indeed, that the same rule must be held to apply. Authorities are cited which would lead to a different conclusion and which go to the extent of holding that Mrs. New should be deemed to have been actually testifying when her former testimony was read, but we are not persuaded or convinced by their reasoning. In Collins v. McGuire, 76 App. Div. 443, 78 N. Y. Supp. 527, it was held by the appellate division of the supreme court of New York that the competency of a witness depends upon the facts as they exist when his testimony is given. A defendant had testified on his own behalf to personal transactions had with the plaintiff, who died before being called as a witness, and his administrator was substituted and it was sought to strike out the evidence under a statute similar to ours, but the motion was denied and this ruling was affirmed, following Comins v. Hetfield, 80 N. Y. 261. It is suggested
It is insisted that the court erred in sustaining an objection to questions in substance whether or not the defendant when he bought the land believed that the plaintiff had in good faith parted with all her interest in it. It was competent to show his motive, belief and state of mind, and no one could know so well as he what they were. (Baker v. Railway Co., 85 Kan. 268, 116 Pac. 816.) But he was permitted to testify that he did not then know there was any claim made by Mrs. New of fraud or failure of consideration, and that he had never heard anything about any controversy as to how Schultz got the deed. No offer was made to show what was indicated by these questions and no affidavit or showing thereof was produced in support of the motion for a new trial, and it can not be said that material prejudice appears as to the ruling-in question. (Clark v. Morris, 88 Kan. 752, 129 Pac. 1195; Caldwell v. Modern Woodmen, 89 Kan. 11, 130 Pac. 642; Cheek v. Railway Co., 89 Kan. 247, 131 Pac.. 617; McIntosh v. Oil Co., 89 Kan. 289, 131 Pac. 151; Treiber v. McCormack, 90 Kan. 675, 136 Pac. 268; Leavens v. Hoover, 93 Kan. 661.
We have examined the instructions given and refused with reference to the complaints made concerning them and to ascertain whether the jury were properly charged, and while now and then an expression might-have been bettered or properly omitted, it appears that the issues were fairly and sufficiently presented and no
Litigation resulting from the homicide of Joseph New is no new thing in this court. (Dobbs v. The State, 62 Kan. 108, 61 Pac. 408; Smith v. Becker, 62 Kan. 541, 64 Pac. 70; Dobbs v. The State, 63 Kan. 321, 65 Pac. 658; New v. Smith, 68 Kan. 807, 74 Pac. 610; New v. Smith, 73 Kan. 174, 84 Pac. 1030; New v. Smith, 86 Kan. 1, 119 Pac. 380.)
In order that this litigation may be ended, and in view of the circumstances shown, the amount due the defendant on account of the mortgages paid by him should be ascertained and satisfied before the plaintiff is let into possession. If there is a claim for rents, and profits there is no reason why proper pleadings-and proceedings can not be filed and had to close the entire controversy.
Finding no material error except in the one respect indicated, the case is remanded with directions to modify the judgment in accordance herewith.