69 So. 881 | Ala. | 1915
Appellee recovered damages against appellants for tbe destruction of a lien on six bales of cotton. Appellee claimed through a mortgage executed by one C. A. Walker. Appellants claimed as purchasers from tbe wife of C. A. Walker. There were two material and disputed questions involved on the trial: (1) Whether tbe cotton belonged to tbe husband or to tbe wife; and (2) whether or not tbe wife bad authorized tbe husband to execute a mortgage on tbe cotton.
Tbe husband and wife bad lived on tbe place upon which tbe cotton was grown for a long time, and bad
There seems to have been no paper title conveying the land to either the husband or the wife until after the mortgage was executed, when a deed was executed conveying it to the husband; and subsequently — -and even subsequent to the bringing of this suit — the husband conveyed the land to the wife. The claim is made that the wife originally purchased the lands, or that they were purchased for her by her father, that a deed had been made, though it was never recorded, and was lost, that several years thereafter a deed was intended to be made in lieu of this lost deed, but that, by mistake of the draftsman, it was made to the husband, instead of to the wife, and that it was for this reason that the husband conveyed to her after this suit was brought.
It appears that the cotton in question was grown upon this land, and was produced by the children of the husband and the wife, was carried to the gin by a son, and was ginned as the cotton of the husband and stored in a warehouse as the husband’s cotton, and that receipts therefor were issued in the name of the husband; but it is claimed by appellants that the cotton was sold to them by the husband as the cotton of his wife, and not his own.
The trial resulted in favor of the mortgagee for the amount of the mortgage debt; and we find no reversible error in this record.
“The declarations of one in possession of property, explanatory of the possession, made in good faith, and showing the character or extent of his claim to it— whether in his own exclusive right or as tenant of another, or the capacity in which he claims, as partner, trustee, or agent for another — are admissible in evidence in an issue of disputed ownership, no matter who may be parties to the litigation. — Daffron v. Crump, 69 Ala. 77; Clealand v. Huey, 18 Ala. 343; 1 Brick. Dig. p. 843, § 558; Thomas v. Wheeler, 47 Mo. 363. The theory upon which the law admits such declarations is that they are a part of the res gestae of the possession itself; such possession being the principal fact, and itself prima facie evidence.of ownership in fee simple. — 1 Greenl. Ev. § 109; Perry v. Graham, 18 Ala. 822; 2 Whart. Ev. § 1166. Of course, in all such cases the fact of posses
The trial court gave charges which were certainly as favorable as the defendants had any right to request, and upon nearly every phase of the case presented by the issues and the evidence. For example, he gave the following requested charges for the defendants: “The court charges the jury that, if they, find that the evidence in this case is in such state of uncertainty that they are unable to say that they are reasonably satisfied from the evidence that plaintiff should recover, they will find the issues for the deefndants.”
“The court charges the jury that, if they are reasonably satisfied from the evidence that the cotton sold to defendant was a part of a crop of Mrs. Walker of the year 1913, they will find the issues in favor of the defendants.”
“The court charges the jury that the burden of proof is on the plaintiff to show by the evidence to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury that the property purchased by defendants was cotton belonging to C. A. Walker,
“I charge you gentlemen of the jury that, if the jury are reasonably satisfied by the evidence that Mr. Lasseter made a deed to these lands 15 or 16 years ago, placing the title to same in Mrs. M. E. Walker, then the deed made in 1913 by Lasseter to C. A. Walker conveyed no title to said C. A. Walker.”
Other charges given were entirely too favorable to the defendants.
There was no error in refusing the motion for a new trial. The verdict and judgment rendered appears to us to be correct, and unassailable.
Affirmed.