20 Or. 538 | Or. | 1891
— The points argued on the appeal will be noticed in the order in which they were presented.
A map of section 7, drawn by two surveyors and testified to by them to be correct, was used upon the trial before the jury without objection; but before the plaintiff closed his case, this map was offered in evidence and allowed by the court, to which an exception was taken. Counsel for appellant argue in their brief: “A diagram or map would be a continual or constant witness always in the presence of the jury. It is the testimony of the witnesses that is the evidence, and that alone; you cannot manufacture evidence by giving a diagram or picture of anything; it can be referred to only for the purpose of demonstration.” This reasoning is not. supported by authority. On the contrary, the rule constantly observed in practice in this state, as well as the one more in consonance with reason, is the other way. It was held in Hoey v. Furman, 1 Pa. St. 295, 44 Am. Dec. 129, that the draft of a survey, proved to be correct, is admissible in evidence, as explanatory of what the surveyor testified he had done in making the survey. The following cases authorize the introduction of maps and diagrams in evidence: Stouter v. Manhattan Ry. Co. 6 N. Y. Sup. 163; Goodwin v. McCabe, 75 Cal. 584; Tillotson v. Prichard, 60 Vt. 94, 6 Am. St. Rep. 95; Armendaiz v. Stillman, 67 Tex. 458; Archer v. New York & E. R. R. Co. 106 N. Y. 589; Brown v. Gallsburg P. B. & T. Co. 132 Ill. 648. In the two following cases photographs of the locus in quo were admitted in evidence : Dyson v. R. R. Co. 57 Conn. 9, 14 Am. St. Rep. 82; Archer v. R. R. Co. 106 N. Y. 589.
The next error assigned is the refusal of the court to give instructions numbered 1, 2, and 3, asked by the appellant. The first instruction refused is as follows: “In this case
The second instruction, which was refused by the court, is as follows: “Under the law applicable to cases of this kind, a grantee cannot be put in a better condition than his grantor was at the time of executing the grant, and if Maulding sold the land in controversy by warranty deed to the defendant and put defendant in possession of the same and described it by metes and bounds in the deeds, then and thereafter Maulding had nothing in said land to convey and the plaintiff took nothing by operation of any deed which he received from Maulding purporting to convey the same lands which he had subsequently [previously] deeded to the defendant. And I leave it to you to say whether as a matter of fact Maulding did deed by prior conveyance the land in controversy to the defendant.” This instruction was inapplicable to the case made by the defendant’s pleadings; besides, it is not universally true. A grantee who takes under a warranty deed and for a valuable consideration without notice of any latent defect in his title, or of any outstanding equity, or of some fraud of his grantor, is always in a better position than his grantor. In such case he takes the estate discharged of the equity with which it was encumbered in the hands of his grantor. Whether the plaintiff stood in such relation to the property, we cannot inquire because the question is not before us. And for that reason the instruction was inapplicable and was properly refused.
The third instruction which was asked by counsel and refused by the court is as follows: “I instruct you that if the lands in controversy were intended to be conveyed, and were conveyed, by said Maulding to the defendant by a prior conveyance, and you find from the testimony that the defendant and Maulding, who was his grantor, was in the peace
Let the judgment appealed from be affirmed.