55 So. 147 | Ala. | 1911
The bill of exceptions was presented and signed within the time prescribed by section 8019 of the Code of 1907, which said section, and not the practice act of the city court on the subject of signing bills of exceptions, is in force.—City of Montgomery v. Wyche, 169 Ala. 181, 53 South. 786. The motion to strike the bill of exceptions is overruled.
A judgment in ejectment was never final at common law. Either party failing might bring a new action,, and the former judgment was not a bar to the last suit. This rule has been changed by the statute in this state to the extent that two judgments in favor of defendant between the same parties in which the same title is put in issue is a bar to any action for the recovery of the land, or any part'thereof between the same parties or their privies, founded on the same title. Section 3858 of the Code of 1907; Williamson v. Mayer Bros., 117 Ala. 253, 23 South. 3. Section 4002 of the Code of 1907 makes judgments between parties and privies conclusive, •as to the matter directly in issue, until reversed or set aside. This section appears in the Code with section 3858, and the two should he so construed as to give each of them a field of operation if it be practicable and reasonable to do so. Section 3858 deals specially with judgments in ejectment, and section 4002 declares the effect of judgments generally, and should therefore be construed as dealing with all judgments not specially provided for in said Code. “Generalibus specialia dero gant.”—City of Montgomery v. Wyche, 169 Ala. 181, 53 South. 786.
It is insisted by appellants’ counsel that the former, judgment which is sought to be used as a bar to the present action was not a judgment in ejectment, and that it was conclusive on the parties as to the issue involved in said former trial. The former action was
Where the question of insanity is a fact in issue, a nonexpert witness may give his opinion that a person is sane or insane only when it is shown that he has had long and intimate acquaintance in contradistinction to a casual acquaintance and occasional conversations and interviews with the person.—Dominick v. Randolph, 124 Ala. 557, 27 South. 481; Burney v. Torrey, 100 Ala. 172, 14 South. 685, 46 Am. St. Rep. 33. The witness Shaw testified that he knew John P. Fowler in 1892, that he was at the quarantine station with him for 10 months, would see him every day, and talked to him very often (not casually or occasionally). There was no error in permitting this witness to testify as to the mental condition of said John P. Fowler.
The vital question in this case was the sanity of John P. Fowler when he made the deed of December 26, 1888, to George and Cornelius Fowler. Cornelius Fowler, one of the grantees to the deed, had testified as a witness for the plaintiff, and upon cross-examination did not remember whether John Fowler was or was not conscious on December 26, 1888, the date of the deed. He was a grantee in the deed which recited the expenditure of money by the grantees for the benfit of the grantor and love and affection as the consideration, and he, within a few months thereafter, conveyed his half interest to George Fowler for a nominal consideration. The
While the declarations of George Fowler and of Cor nelius Fowler'in disparagement of their title might be admissible against them or those holding under them, yet what Cornelius may have said as to how George acquired possession of the land could not be admissible if made after Cornelius conveyed his interest in the land to George.—Mahone v. Williams, 39 Ala. 213. The question does not show whether the statement. sought was made by Cornelius before or after he conveyed his interest in the land; and the trial court will not be put in error for sustaining the plaintiff’s objection to same.
It may be that the value of the property at or near the time the -deed in question was made would be a factor in determining the capacity of the grantor at the time' the deed was made, but the witness Norris disclosed lit-
The witness Mrs. Pilgrim, among other things, testified that Mrs. Pritchard, the defendant, attempted, to induce her to testify that her father was crazy. This evidence, unexplained or uncontradicted, was calculated to he of prejudice to this defendant, and the trial court erred in not letting Mrs. Pritchard deny the conversation or explain what she said if they had one. Moreover, Mrs. Pritchard had testified as a witness and the testimony of Mrs. Pilgrim affected her credibility. It was strictly in rebuttal to matter injected into the issue by the plaintiff’s witness.
Mrs. Martin also testified to seeing John Fowler upon a visit to Ft. Morgan, while Mrs. Pritchard was there, and to illustrate his sanity said “that he could call Mrs. Pritchard and knew her.” The trial court erred in not letting Mrs. Pritchard contradict this evidence, and the action in denying her this right cannot he justified upon the theory that it was not in rebuttal.
All of the oral charge is not set out, and, while an incapacity to make a deed is not confined to actual insanity as distinguished from non compos mentis, the word “insane,” by section 1 of the Code, is made to include all persons of unsound mind, and we must assume that the court instructed the jury as to what would constitute- mental incapacity to make a valid deed.
The law presumes that every man is sane until there is evidence to the contrary.—Barnewall v. Murrell, 108 Ala. 379, 18 South. 831. The burden of proof is upon the party attacking a conveyánce to show the incapacity of the grantor at the time it is made, and insanity prior to that time does not raise the presumption of in
The oral charge was correct in the abstract, but, after correctly stating the rule, the court charged that the burden was on the “defendant, to show insanity at the very time the instrument purports to have been executed.” This much of the charge, in effect, ignores any proof of previous permanent insanity, and assumes there was none, and puts the burden on the defendants to show mental incapacity on the very day the deed was made; when this they did not have to do if they established prior insanity of a permanent nature. In other words, this much of the charge ignored the proof of prior permanent insanity, and, in effect, put the burden upon the defendants of showing insanity the day the deed was made notwithstanding there was proof of prior insanity of a permanent nature, and which, if true, relieved the defendants of proving the mental condition of the grantor at the very time the deed was executed.
The judgment of the law and equity court is reversed, and the cause is remanded. . •
Beversed and remanded.