90 Neb. 616 | Neb. | 1912
The plaintiff made an exchange of real estate with the defendants, and in that exchange received from the defendants a warranty deed conveying a tract of land in
The record recites the following: “The plaintiff now offers in evidence the decisions of the supreme court of the state of Missouri in the following cases” — naming Rees v. McDaniel, 115 Mo. 145, Hahn v. Dawson, 134 Mo. 581, Frank v. Goddin, 193 Mo. 390, and other decisions of the supreme court of that state. The defendants objected to the offer “as incompetent, immaterial and irrelevant, and no foundation laid, and nothing in the petition to warrant the introduction of this kind of evidence, this issue not’ being tendered by the pleadings, and hearsay evidence.” The objection was overruled, and the defend
It is contended that the evidence was incompetent because the law of Missouri was not alleged in the petition. The issue being tried was whether the tract of land conveyed by the deed contained the number of acres represented. The land was described by government divisions and fractions thereof. The evidence showed that these subdivisions lay next to the river, and that the land lying outside of the river and within these subdivisions did not comply with the terms of the deed and the representations of the defendants. The defendants then offered evidence tending to show that if the lines of these subdivisions were extended to the thread of the stream they would include the number of acres specified in the deed. The plaintiff in rebuttal. offered the evidence as above recited. In.this condition of the pleadings and evidence, we think it was not an abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court to allow this rebutting evidence. The ultimate fact to be established was the quantity of land actually conveyed by the deed. If the defendants had no title to that part of the land lying in the river they could not convey it. If, under the law of Missouri, the defendants could not have title to this land, that was a fact relevant to the question in issue, but was not itself directly in issue. This was substantially the same condition as existed in Barber v. Hildebrand, 42 Neb. 400, in which it was necessary to show title in land as a fact relative to the issue being tried. The action was to recover commission as a real estate agent, and there was no allegation in the pleadings as to the title of the land, nor as to the law of Iowa, but the court held that evidence in regard to the
We think also the evidence was competent and properly admitted. Section 420 of the code provides: “The unwritten law of any other state or government may be proved as fact by parol evidence, and also by the books of reports of cases adjudged in their courts.” The record shows that decisions of the supreme court 'of Missouri as found in well-known books of authority were received in evidence by the court. These decisions show that'in Missouri the defendants could not own the land lying in the bed of the river. It is true that the bill of exceptions is defective in not containing these decisions. It would, however, be highly technical to assume that the trial court did not see and predicate his decision on these authorities, or to refuse to take notice of the authorities referred to as containing the law of that state.
It being established then that the defendants did not have title, and could not and did not convey to the plaintiff the amount of laúd agreed upon and described in the deed, it follows that the plaintiff has been damaged and is entitled to recover in this action.
It is objected that the evidence is not definite and certain as to the number of acres for which the plaintiff is entitled to recover, nor as to the value of the land. There is substantial evidence, however, as already indicated, that the land actually conveyed to the plaintiff was from 175 to 200 acres less than the amount agreed upon, and the evidence as to the value is that the parties considered and agreed in their exchange that the land to be conveyed to the plaintiff was of the value of $50 an acre. The court did not consider this land to be of equal value with that actually conveyed, but apparently estimated the plaintiff’s damages from a consideration of all the lands conveyed and agreed to be conveyed.
Affirmed.