41 P. 691 | Or. | 1895
Opinion by Mr.
The defendant requested the court to charge the jury that the property of a married woman is to be deemed the property of her husband, unless she makes and records a descriptive list thereof as provided in section 3000 of Hill’s Code, which the court gave, with the modification that “this presumption, however, may be overcome by any evidence that satisfies your minds to the contrary.” The objection to this instruction as so modified is that the court did not tell the jury that there must be evidence to the contrary to overcome the presumption, but left them to infer that anything which they might consider evidence would be sufficient, if it satisfied their minds. It is claimed the instruction should have been that the presumption declared by the statute from a failure to record a descriptive list of her property by a married woman may be overcome “by any evidence to the
Affirmed.