15 Tex. 400 | Tex. | 1855
No doubt is entertained of the right of a defendant to except to the petition for insufficiency in substance, as well after as before answering to the merits. Regularly, issues of law should precede in their order upon the record, those of fact; and so it has been repeatedly ruled. But there is no decision of this Court, which holds that exceptions going to the substance of the petition may not be entertained by the Court, after an answer to the merits. The contrary has been expressly decided. (Fowler v. Stoneum, 11 Tex. R. 478 ; Watson v. Loop, 12 Id. 11.) It has also been decided that, where exceptions were not well taken, so that, if entertained, they must have been overruled, the refusal to entertain them will afford no ground for reversing the judgment. (Hubbell v. Lord, 9 Tex. R. 472.) The question therefore is, whether the exceptions were well taken, and, if considered, should have been sustained. And we are of opinion they were not well taken, or maintainable in point of law; and, consequently, that the defendant sustained no injury by reason of this refusal of the Court to entertain them; that the striking them out, instead of overruling them, as the Court should have done, was a mere irregularity in practice, which affords no ground for reversing the judgment.
The petition seeks to set aside and annul certain deeds of conveyance from the plaintiff to the defendant, and to recover
As respects the objection that it is not directly averred that the plaintiffs alleged feebleness of body and mind existed on the very day on which the deeds were executed, the 7th day of August, although it is not expressly and directly so averred, yet we think it certainly and conclusively appears by the averment that such was the case. If “ for some time anterior to the 7th day of August last (1850) and up to within a few days past,” referring to the time of pleading, (the 10th day of September when the petition was sworn to,) such was the state of body and mind of the plaintiff, it is, at least, morally, if not demonstratively certain that it was so on that particular day. That day was evidently mentioned in that connection, for the purpose of fixing that as the day on which the fact alleged existed. The only possible ground of raising a doubt as to the certainty of its existence on that day is the expression “ a few days past.” And when a certain day is thus named in contradistinction to a few days past, it cannot be supposed that those
Again, as to the admissibility of evidence to support the averments in the petition; it is a rule of evidence, which has been expressly recognized by this Court, that “ any fact may “ be submitted to a jury, provided it can be established by “ competent means, which affords any fair presumption, or in- “ ference as to the question in dispute.” (Id. 584.) We therefore think the petition was sufficient and the evidence properly admitted to prove the truth of its averments. It was no objection to the admissibility of the evidence that all the circumstances by which it was proposed to prove the allegations of matters of fact, were not stated minutely and at length in the petition. That would require a degree of prolixity and tediousness of detail in pleading, which would be intolerable ; and would tend to the imminent danger, if it did not superinduce the certainty, of variance between the allegations and the proof in almost every case. Such certainty in pleading has never been required; but needless prolixity has been justly deprecated and characterized as an abuse, whenever it has attracted judicial observation. All that is required is that there could be such certainty as to apprise the opposite party of the material, issuable facts, for the proof of which it is proposed
The Court did not err in refusing to permit the* defendant to read in evidence that portion of his answer which was not in response to the interrogatories propounded to him by the plaintiff. This point was decided in the case of Autrey v. Cannon. (11 Tex. R. 110.)
To undertake to revise separately, and in detail, all the various rulings of the Court, complained of, upon instructions to the jury, would be, we think, an unprofitable consumption of time. For we do not perceive that it could result in any benefit to the appellant; there being nothing in those rulings, that we perceive, which, when taken and considered in connection with the general charge of the Court, the instructions given at the instance of the defendant, and relative to the true issues in the case, presents any ground of error, for reversing the judgment. There was no averment that the plaintiff was insane at the time of executing the deeds ; and there was no issue presented by the pleading as to his sanity. That question was wholly foreign6 to the issue. The rulings of the Court upon it are therefore immaterial, and do not require revision. Nor is the finding of that issue by the jury material, if in fact, they meant by the expression “ not of sound mind, caused by excessive use of ardent spirits and pecuniary embarrassments,” to be understood as finding that the plaintiff was, at the time, laboring under such a deprivation, of reason as amounted to insanity, in legal contemplation. In any view, the finding is immaterial, as it was not an issue in the case, and the finding of the issue as to the fraud for the plaintiff necessarily carried with it the same legal consequences as to the rights of the parties, as if the issue of insanity had been properly presented and determined for the plaintiff. There were however some instructions asked by the defendant and refused, which perhaps require notice.
The first instruction refused denied the plaintiff's right to
The concluding part of the second instruction refused, is as to the effect of the defendant’s answer to interrogatories, and asserts “ that one witness could not disprove any fact stated in the answer responsive to the interrogatories; nor could eir-
The third, fourth, fifth and sixth instructions refused relate to the question of the plaintiff’s sanity, and might well have been refused as inapplicable to any issue in the case.
The seventh seeks to bring in question the sufficiency of the averments of the petition, to let in proof of. fraud. The petition, we think, was in this respect sufficient, and the instruction rightly refused.
The eighth seeks to refer to the jury the question of the legal sufficiency of the averments of the petition charging fraud. The Court might well refuse an instruction which proposed to refer such a question to the decision of the jury; or the effect of which would be to require them to decide what had bee
The ninth instruction was rightly refused, because it required the jury to find a special verdict, which a party has not the right to require.
The tenth, eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth instructions, in so far as they contained matter which was material and proper, were given substantially in the general charge of the Court or in other instructions given at the instance of the defendant.
It is not perceived that in the general charge of the Court, or in the instructions given at the instance of the plaintiff, there is any error in any matter which is material or can have operated to the prejudice of the defendant; and upon the whole, we think the instructions to the jury were not unfavorable to the defendant, or in any manner prejudicial to his rights.
Various objections are urged to the verdict and judgment rendered thereupon, in form and substance, the force of which is not very apparent; but which, not being taken in the Court below, or specified in the assignment of errors, it is not necessary to consider. The error in the decree specially pointed to in the ninth assignment has been already disposed of in another connection; and a particular ground of error having been assigned, the assignment must be considered as having-reference to that and none other.
As to the alleged excessive damages, it has been settled by the repeated decisions of this Court, that in actions of this nature, the jury may give exemplary damages: and in doing so, of course, they were not restricted to the amount of damage, which the proof shows to have been actually sustained by reason of the fradulent acts of the defendant.
In fine, as it seems to us, the only question in the case of any real doubt or difficulty, is as to the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the verdict on the issue of fraud. That, however, where it is a question of fraudulent intent, it is peculiarly the province of the jury to decide; and Courts very seldom dis
The defendant McAnnelly not being a party, to this appeal, of course the affirmance of the judgment as to the appellant will not affect him.
Judgment affirmed.