47 Vt. 637 | Vt. | 1874
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The statute in relation to advancements (Gen. Sts. ch. 56, §§ 12, 13,) declares what shall be evidence of an advancement, and excludes all other evidence. This has become the settled doctrine in this state. Newell v. Newell, 13 Vt. 33; Brown v. Brown, 16 Vt. 197; Heirs of Adams v. Adams, 22 Vt. 51; Weatherhead et al. v. Field, admr. 26 Vt. 665. Hence, with us, the law presumes that property given by an intestate to an heir, is an absolute gift, unless the intention of the intestate to have it charged to said heir as an advancement, is evidenced in one of the four ways named in the statute. By the pleadings, it
The fallacy of this view lies in treating property thus advanced, as a part of a man’s estate before his death. A man’s estate is what he leaves at his decease. During his life, a man may dispose of his property as he pleases. If he make an absolute gift, it will very likely affect,the amount which he will leave to constitute his estate. Yet he has a right while living, to deliver property as an absolute gift. By the delivery of property as an advancement, and the surrender or cancellation of his right to have the property so delivered, reckoned as an advancement, the owner accomplishes by two acts what he may accomplish by one act in delivering the same property as an absolute gift. As the whole necessarily includes all its parts, the right to make a gift includes and carries with it the right to deliver property as an advancement, and then to discharge the advancement. It can make no difference in law, whether the giver accomplishes the same thing by two acts or by one act. The result arrived at is the same. The two acts no more contravene the policy of the law in regard to a man’s controlling the distribution of his property after his decease, than the one. A man who discharges an advancement in his lifetime, affects, it may be, incidentally, the distribution of the property he may leave at his decease; but no more so, and in much the same way, he affects it when he makes an absolute gift. He does not
The second ground of objection to this testimony is, that these declarations are hearsay, and for that reason inadmissible, flearsay testimony is sometimes admissible. The declarations of deceased persons made against their interest or right, are admissible against those who claim in the interest or right of such deceased persons. 2 Saund. Pl. & Ev. 557; Inot v. Finch et al. 1 Taunt. 139. In 1 Greenl. Ev. § 189, it is said: “ The admissions of one person are also evidence against another, in respect of privity between them. * * * When the party, by his admissions, has qualified his own right, and another claims to succeed him as heir, executor, or the like, he succeeds only to the right as thus qualified at the time when his title commenced ; and the admissions are receivable in evidence against the representative, in the same manner they would have been against the party represented.” In Inot v. Finch et al., supra, the action was trespass for taking three mares, the property of the plaintiff, and converting them to the use of the defendants. The defendants justified under a heriot custom, and the question was, whether one Alice Watson, fhe tenant, was possessed of the m&res at the time of her death.
Mrs. Mary Louisa Merrill is one of the heirs of the intestate, and as such, though not a party of record, is directly interested in the result of this suit. If tho plaintiff is charged with the $2,000 as an advancement, her sharef of the estate will be increased. If the plaintiff is not so charged, her share will be proportionately less. Her interests being thus directly affected by the result of this suit, her husband, Bailey W. Merrill, was properly excluded from testifying. Carpenter et ux. v. Moore et als. 43 Vt. 392.
If the intestate made the declarations which the defendant offered to show by Josiah Gilson, in the presence and hearing of Mary Wheeler, it was not a declaration which affected her interest in any manner. Hence she was not called upon either to admit .or deny it. She might or might not have been inclined to have
Judgment affirmed.