39 Vt. 459 | Vt. | 1867
The opinion of the court was delivered by
I. The defendant, among other things, detailed in the exceptions, claimed that the hemlock bark, in dispute, was his property, because produced by his land. The plaintiff does not question the defendant’s legal title to the lot of land, from which the hark was cut, but insists that Benjamin Comings, who sold the bark to the plaintiff, had a right to peel and appropriate bark from the trees on this land, because Comings and the defendant had verbally agreed upon and bargained for the sale and conveyance of the lot, from the defendant to Comings, and Comings had, on his part, performed the terms of the agreement, and delivered the purchase money, notes and mortgage into the hands of a third person, as directed by the defendant. The defendant on his part neglected to leave a deed for Comings, with this third person as he had agreed, and ultimately refused to convey. The defendant does not admit the agreement, and the performance on the part of Comings, as claimed, but the court told the jury that even if they found these facts in favor of the plaintiff, still this verbal agreement, for the sale and purchase of the lot, connected with the performance of the agreement on the part of Comings only, would not of itself, as a matter of law, authorize Comings, the purchaser, to enter upon the land, and cut or peel the bark. This is the proposition which comes here for revision, and is the only portion of the charge to which the plaintiff objects. The issue of fact, which arose upon the evidence, relating
II. Several questions are reserved with relation to the admission and rejection of testimony. The testimony explaining the circumstances and qualifications under which the defendant was led to sign and swear to his bill in chancery, was not intended to contradict his oath, but to state its original meaning. Though it would have been far better to have taken time to draw the bill correctly, and so as to avoid the necessity of such an explanation, we are not prepared to say, that the party is so committed by the bill, as to be estopped from explaining it, and we think the evidence was properly received. The depositions taken by Mr. Dickerman, as a master in chancery, are objected to, because Mr. Edwards, the partner of Mr. Dickerman, acted as counsel for the defendant in taking them. It is not necessary to say, what would be the decision of the court, if the case showed that the master and the attorney, by the terms of their partnership, shared each other’s fees, for the evidence entirely failed to disclose the nature or extent of their partnership, and we cannot presume that it covered business of this nature. The objection to the depositions as being unstamped, we understand, is not relied on, the omission of the stamps being unaccompanied with any fraudulent design. The testimony from Paine, which was received against objection, was, we think, clearly admissible, as connected with the testimony of Comings, repeated by Dewey.
III. Comings, who had been a witness for the plaintiff on a former jury trial of the cause, deceased before the trial now under revision. The plaintiff was at liberty to reproduce his testimony if he was able to do so in a proper manner. For that purpose the plaintiff proposed to read a copy of the minutes of Comings’ testimony, as taken by the judge, who presided at the former trial. The original minutes being lost, and the copy being an. accurate transcript, as the plaintiff offered to show, the copy would doubtless be admissible, provided the original would have been if produced. The original minutes would not themselves have been receivable, unaccompanied by proper proof of their correctness.
For the error in rejecting this testimony, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.