22 Tex. 334 | Tex. | 1858
The allegation, on which the recovery is based, is, that the defendant, Price, had in his possession, or under his control, at the time of rendering the inventory, on
This allegation is sought to be supported, by evidence that the defendant was known to have had, on hand, certain sums of money, (not very considerable in amount at any one time, nor in the aggregate amounting to anything like the sum with which he is sought to be charged,) at different periods, extending back to the year 1850, and before his removal from Alabama to this State; and the further evidence of the number of hands he worked, that he was a good farmer, cultivated good land, made good crops, was prudent, economical, and not addicted to the spending of money, and what one of his neighbors, a witness, had made clear of expenses from his farm during the last two years: And upon evidence of this uncertain and indeterminate character, the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, for the sum of $3,067 66, thereby charging the defendant with having actually had on hand, three times that sum, on the 3d of November, 1857, without evidence that the defendant actually had any money on hand at that time, or within any short time before.
If a party is to be charged upon such evidence alone, it is not improbable that many farmers, who, like this defendant, have bought and improved wild lands in this country, might be charged, after the lapse of a few years, with having on hand large sums of money, when, if called on, they would testify that they had found it difficult to commaud actual cash enough to defray current expenses, and avoid going in debt. Possibly, some of the jurors, who tried this case, if they are farmers, would not be willing to be required to account for money on hand, to be ascertained by such a rule of computation as must have been adopted to arrive at their verdict in this case. The witness, on whose testimony the jury must have mainly relied, who, with fewer hands than the defendant worked, had made from his farm, clear of expenses, fifteen hundred dollars a year, for the last two years, was not asked, it seems, whether he had the three thousand dollars in cash on hand. His answer, to
Reversed and remanded.